Senate
Senate
Only the Senate is elected by the entire state. The House is elected by residents of their Congressional District.
Under the original framework, only members of the House of Representatives were directly elected by the people, with members of the Senate chosen by state legislatures, the President by the Electoral College, and the judiciary by the President and the Senate.
Each state in the US has 2 senators. They are elected in each state by the entire population of that state.
A U.S. senator represents the people of their state on a national level. They are elected to serve the interests and needs of their constituents and make decisions on legislation and policy that impact the entire country. Each state has two senators, who are elected by the voters of that state.
They get Elected by the inventory
yes, they are elected by voters. NO - until adoption of the Seventeenth Amendment members of the Senate were "chosen by the legislature" of each respective state.
Most of the time, the governor of a state is elected by the people on the first Tuesday in November. It would have to be a special circumstance for a governor to be appointed. 99.99% of governors are elected.
Each member of congress is elected by the people of his/her state. Each member of congress is elected by the people of his/her state.
The Senator represents the entire state the Representative is elected in the district they live in.
When an elected official is "elected at large" that means that they are elected by the entire body of voters rather than by individual districts. In other words, every eligible voter in the entire state can vote on each Senator. Representatives in the House, on the other hand, are not elected at large. Individual districts within each state vote for which Congressman will represent them in the House. A voter living in district 1 cannot vote for a Representative running in district 2. There are exceptions where a state can have a congressman at-large, for example, Delaware, where the entire state votes for the representative. Because Senators are "elected at large," however, districts don't matter.