Answer :
Sometimes the Electoral College votes do not reflect the popular vote. It is the number of Electoral College votes that determine who is elected president and not the percentage victory int he popular vote that determines victory.
The correct answer is A) sometimes the Electoral College votes do not reflect the popular vote. It's the number of Electoral College votes that determines who is elected president.
The number of Electoral College votes a presidential candidate has is compared to the number of popular votes a presidential candidate has in that "sometimes the Electoral College votes do not reflect the popular vote. It's the number of Electoral College votes that determines who is elected president."
First, remember that the electoral college is not a place or an institution but a process that is formed every four years in each presidential election. The Electoral College is formed by 538 electors. It is needed a majority of 270 electoral votes to have a winner in the presidential election. So one candidate can win in the popular vote, as happened to Hillary Clinton in the US presidential elections of 2016, but lose in the Electoral College.