I don't understand the comments being interjected about electors being an elite group that serve to, essentially, protect the public from the public. The role of the electors in the Presidential elections began changing two hundred and twenty-five years ago with the rise of political parties. In 1796, John Adams of the Federalist Party won the presidential election and Democratic-Republican Party candidate Thomas Jefferson finished second. Under the rules that meant Jefferson was named vice president. Thus the president and vice president were from different political parties. In 1800 Thomas Jefferson again ran as the Democratic-Republican Party candidate with his running mate Aaron Burr for vice president. Jefferson and Burr tied in the Electoral College vote but the EC only voted for president. If Burr had won the EC Burr would have been elected president despite his party selecting him to be the veep. Congress had to decide the 1800 election but the system as set up was obviously not working and changes began at that time.
But all of this ignores the reality that today -- not 200 years ago -- a state's electors are
required to vote for whichever candidate wins the popular vote in that state. A minor problem is the occasional -- very occasional -- rogue elector who refuses to vote as instructed. The bigger problem, the
real problem, is that states are awarded electors based on the number of Congressional seats they hold. A large state like New York State, with a population of 19.5 million (2019) has 29 electors. Idaho with a population of 1.8 million has 4 electors. Each elector in New York represents some 672,000 voters, while in Idaho each elector represents 450,000 voters. Thus the small states have proportionally more power in the EC. A small state vote carries more weight in the presidential election. Which is exactly why people are complaining the system is not fair -- that it violates the one person, one vote rule -- and are advocating switching to a strictly popular vote to elect a president. It explains why, by winning the right combination of states, trump was able to win the 2016 election despite losing the popular vote to Hillary Clinton by almost 3 million votes.
The political problem is, to change the system the smaller states -- many of which have Republican majorities -- would be asked to give up some of the power and influence they now have in presidential elections. How are you going to convince them to do that? Let's hear how the ISF pundits would pull that one off.