The legislature recognizes that our founding fathers created the electoral college as a check on the more populous states to prevent them from imposing their will on smaller states. The electoral college obligates presidential candidates to appeal to the varied interests of all states and not just the interests of large, monolithic population centers. Requiring such widespread appeal is necessary to ensure that the diverse geographical, agricultural, and cultural voices in this country are represented.
The legislature finds that assigning presidential electors based on the national popular vote will result in presidential candidates campaigning in populous states while ignoring the voices of voters in states with smaller constituencies. This will have the effect of diminishing Washington state's influence in presidential elections. Assigning presidential electors based on the national popular vote will also outsource Washington state's electoral votes to the will of the nation as a whole, instead of giving effect to the will of its own voters. In effect, the agreement to assign presidential electors based on the national popular vote is an end run around the United States Constitution, and it effectively abolishes the electoral college for partisan purposes.
The legislature therefore intends to withdraw from the interstate agreement to elect the president by national popular vote.
In the year in which a presidential election is held, each major political party and each minor political party or independent candidate convention that nominates candidates for president and vice president of the United States shall nominate presidential electors for this state. The party or convention shall file with the secretary of state a certificate signed by the presiding officer of the convention at which the presidential electors were chosen, listing the names and addresses of the presidential electors. Each presidential elector shall execute and file with the secretary of state a pledge that, as an elector, he or she will vote for the candidates nominated by that party. The names of presidential electors shall not appear on the ballots. The votes cast for candidates for president and vice president of each political party shall be counted for the candidates for presidential electors of that political party
The following acts or parts of acts are each repealed:
(2) 2009 c 264 s 1 (uncodified).