PLEASE ANSWER ASAP WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST!!!!
Together, these maps prove that: Map 1: Map titled 'County Level Results, 2000' High concentration of Republican votes in the North West. Map 2: Map titled ‘Electoral Vote Counts by State, 2000.' States appear in a color and with a number on them as follows: Alabama – red, 9; Alaska – red, 3; Arizona- red, 8; Arkansas – red, 6; California – blue, 54; Colorado – red, 8; Connecticut – blue, 8; Delaware – blue, 3; Florida – red, 25; Georgia – red, 13; Hawaii – blue, 4; Idaho – red, 4; Illinois – blue, 22; Indiana – red, 12; Iowa – blue, 7; Kansas – red, 6; Kentucky –red, 8; Louisiana – red, 9; Maine – blue, 4; Maryland – blue, 10; Massachusetts – blue, 12; Michigan – blue, 18; Minnesota – blue, 10; Mississippi – red, 7; Missouri – red, 11; Montana – red, 3; Nebraska – red, 5; Nevada – red, 4; New Hampshire – red, 4; New Jersey – blue, 15; New Mexico – blue, 5; New York – blue, 33; North Carolina – red, 14; North Dakota – red, 3; Ohio – red, 21; Oklahoma – red, 8; Oregon – blue, 7; Pennsylvania – blue, 23; Rhode Island – blue, 4; South Carolina – red, 8; South Dakota – red, 3; Tennessee – red, 11; Texas – red, 32; Utah – red, 5; Vermont – blue, 3; Virginia – red, 13; Washington – blue, 11; West Virginia – red, 5; Wisconsin – blue, 11; Wyoming – red, 3 Public Domain
a: county-level votes for a state have no relationship to the candidate whom the electors of the state select
b: a state’s electoral votes go to the candidate who wins the popular vote in the majority of the state’s counties
c: the winner of the popular vote in the state’s largest county will be selected as winner by the state electoral votes
d: winning the electoral votes from one state does not mean that a candidate won all the popular votes from the state