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Remember that the Constitution needs to be amended to remove the two-party-system default. “Most votes” iirc is the phrase. Specific to FPTP elections.
Fixing the two party system in the house can be done piecemeal by states, because states run their own house elections.
Fixing the two party system in the presidency requires either an amendment or an interstate pact.
Because what the constitution says is that if no single candidate gets a majority in the electoral college's FPTP election, then the president is whichever candidate the US house prefers.
Source? What part is that in?
Election laws are currently largely controlled by state or local governments. That's why Maine and Alaska were able to change to use RCV recently.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelfth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
It’s not a states thing.
The 12th amendment did not impose any specific requirements on how states should allocate electoral votes. Electoral votes are entirely different than normal votes. The 12th amendment is referring to electoral votes not normal votes that you and I cast. States aren't even required by the constitution to have an election. They aren't required to hold a popular vote or election to determine how their electoral votes are awarded in presidential elections either. Instead, it is up to each state to determine its own method of selecting electors who will cast the electoral votes on behalf of the state.