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Election Integrity · Status as of April 2026

National Popular Vote
Interstate Compact

An agreement among U.S. states to award all their electoral votes to the winner of the national popular vote — active only once member states collectively hold 270 or more electoral votes.

NPVIC - Analysis & Context

NPV Interstate Compact - Analysis & Context

1
Overview What Is the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact?

Today, when you vote for president, you are technically voting for a slate of electors people pledged to cast their state's official electoral votes for your chosen candidate. Every state except Maine and Nebraska uses a winner-take-all system: whoever wins the most votes in a state, even by a single vote, receives all of that state's electoral votes. The candidate who first reaches 270 electoral votes wins the presidency regardless of how many total votes they received nationwide.

This means it is mathematically possible (and has happened five times in U.S. history) for a candidate to win the presidency while receiving fewer total votes than their opponent. The most recent examples were 2000 (George W. Bush over Al Gore) and 2016 (Donald Trump over Hillary Clinton). This is by design and reflects the checks and balances built into the system by the Founding Fathers.

The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (NPVIC) is an agreement between states that aims to change this outcome without amending the Constitution. Each member state passes a law pledging to award all of its electoral votes to whichever presidential candidate wins the national popular vote, not just the vote within that state. The critical catch: the pledge only activates once enough states have joined the compact to collectively control at least 270 electoral votes, guaranteeing the popular vote winner also wins the Electoral College.

As of April 2026, 19 jurisdictions holding 222 electoral votes have enacted the compact, 82% of the 270 needed. If additional states holding 48 more electoral votes join, the agreement would automatically take effect and the candidate with the most raw votes nationwide would win the presidency in every subsequent election, regardless of the Electoral College map.

Supporters argue this ensures every vote carries equal weight no matter where a voter lives, and pushes candidates to campaign nationally rather than focusing exclusively on a handful of competitive swing states. This flawed argument fundamentally rewrites the rules of presidential elections through a legal workaround, and doing so circumvents what our nation's founders deliberately designed.


2
A Republic, Not a Democracy: The Founders' Case Against a National Popular Vote

The framers of the Constitution had direct experience with the instability of purely democratic governments and deliberately rejected a national popular vote for president. Their reasoning was a foundational political philosophy based on skepticism of unchecked majority rule, respect for state sovereignty, and a commitment to what they called a republican form of government.

"A pure democracy can admit no cure for the mischiefs of faction. A common passion or interest will, in almost every case, be felt by a majority of the whole; and there is nothing to check the inducements to sacrifice the weaker party."

- James Madison, Federalist No. 10 (1787)

In Federalist No. 10, Madison drew a sharp distinction between a "pure democracy" where citizens govern directly by majority vote, and a "republic," where elected representatives and structural checks moderate the raw will of the majority. He argued that pure democracies are historically short-lived and prone to the "violence of faction," in which a passionate majority rides over the rights of minorities and dissenting states. The Electoral College was one of several mechanisms designed to prevent exactly that dynamic at the presidential level. This "violence of faction" is in full display today, as seen in the Virginia redistricting vote, where a popular vote resulted in redistricting that would leave nearly half of the state unrepresented.

I
The Constitutional Convention explicitly rejected direct popular election. When James Wilson of Pennsylvania proposed electing the president by direct popular vote at the Philadelphia Convention in 1787, the motion overwhelmingly failed. Delegate Elbridge Gerry of Massachusetts objected that the people were "too little informed of personal characters" to make a sound national choice and were susceptible to being misled by a "few active demagogues." George Mason of Virginia agreed, comparing a direct national vote to referring "a trial of colours to a blind man." The Convention ultimately settled on the Electoral College as a compromise that would balance popular input with the judgment of informed state-selected electors.
II
Hamilton defended the Electoral College as a check on populist demagoguery. In Federalist No. 68, Alexander Hamilton explained that the Electoral College was designed so that "the sense of the people" would operate in the selection of the president, but that the final decision would rest with men "most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station." He was particularly concerned about a charismatic figure who might exploit popular passions to seize power, warning against "the desire in foreign powers to gain an improper ascendant in our councils" through manipulation of a mass electorate. Hamilton called the Electoral College "excellent" precisely because it interposed deliberation between raw popular sentiment and the nation's highest office.

"It was equally desirable, that the immediate election should be made by men most capable of analyzing the qualities adapted to the station... A small number of persons, selected by their fellow-citizens from the general mass, will be most likely to possess the information and discernment requisite to such complicated investigations."

- Alexander Hamilton, Federalist No. 68 (1788)
III
The system protects smaller states and geographic diversity. A central purpose of the federal structure, and of the Electoral College specifically, was to prevent the most populous regions from permanently dominating the rest of the country. At the Convention, Roger Sherman of Connecticut warned that without protections for smaller states, larger ones would simply "combine" to impose their preferences. The Connecticut Compromise gave smaller states disproportionate weight in the Senate; the Electoral College extended a version of that logic to presidential elections by allocating electors based on congressional representation rather than raw population alone. A pure national popular vote would concentrate decisive electoral power in a handful of the largest metropolitan areas, rendering geographically vast but less populous states functionally irrelevant to presidential outcomes.
IV
Madison warned that the Constitution provides a process for this kind of change, and it is not a compact. Article V of the Constitution establishes the amendment process precisely so that fundamental changes to the structure of government requires consensus, two-thirds of Congress and three-fourths of states, not a narrow majority.

"That useful alterations will be suggested by experience, could not but be foreseen... It guards equally against that extreme facility, which would render the Constitution too mutable; and that extreme difficulty, which might perpetuate its discovered faults."

- James Madison, Federalist No. 43 (1788), on the constitutional amendment process

The broader tension at the heart of the NPVIC debate is one the founders understood well: the difference between a government that responds to the will of a numerical majority and one that balances majority sentiment against minority rights, state sovereignty, and durable constitutional structure. The framers chose the latter deliberately, and with eyes open to the risks of the alternative. Whether the compact represents a legitimate evolution of that system, or a subversion of it, remains a significant constitutional question.

Sources: The Federalist Papers (Hamilton, Madison, 1787–1788); James Madison's Notes on the Constitutional Convention (1787).
NPVIC — Map & Data

NPV Interstate Compact Status

As of April 2026
19
States + DC Adopted
222 / 538
Electoral Votes Committed
48
More EVs Needed
270
EV Threshold to Activate
2007
Year First Enacted (MD)
Progress toward 270 electoral vote threshold
0 EVs 222 EVs committed (41%) 538 EVs total
Wave: 2007–2008 (Founding) 2009–2011 2013–2014 2018–2019 2023–2024 2026 (Most Recent) Not a Member
Jurisdiction Date Enacted Electoral Votes Wave
Note: No state has withdrawn from the compact. The compact takes effect only when participating jurisdictions collectively hold ≥270 electoral votes. Electoral vote counts reflect the 2020 Census reapportionment.