I was reading this story in the Seattle times about an Elector who said he would likely not vote for Hillary Clinton as he preferred Bernie Sanders.
http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-new ... r-clinton/Note that this story was written on Nov 5th, before the states voters elected Hillary Clinton.
This prompted me to do a little reading about the electoral process, and what obligations the Electors are under to cast their vote for the candidate their state voted for. What I think I found is that, they aren't!
Apparently, it's still technically possible that on Dec 19th, when the 'real' election happens, the electoral college could defect enough votes to get Hillary elected. There is a term for this, called "Faithless Electors". Apparently the last time this happened (2004), an elector refused to vote for John Kerry, and instead voted for his running mate (John Edwards). In this case though, it was mostly symbolic, as Bush already had enough electoral votes to win.
So, what prevents these electors from being bribed, threatened, or just personally corrupting the election process? It seems like there is a high potential for shennanigans here, even though it happens very rarely.