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#71
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#72
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#73
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![]() "rw" wrote in message m... That's exactly what I'm proposing would be a fair outcome w.r.t. our archaic and divisive and undemocratic electoral system. Do I think it will happen, at least in my lifetime? No way. I'm afraid we're stuck with it, until the revolution. That doesn't mean the present system doesn't suck. Well the present system may suck, but a pure majority system is likely to be just as divisive. I live in a state with an extremely strong rural/urban divide. 3 to 8 metropolitan counties can, and often do, dictate the fate of all 36 counties. We have a ballot iniative system that allows state laws and even state constitutional amendments to be enacted directly by a majority of the electorate, without going through the legislature or approval of the Governor. In the past few years I have seen several measures enacted which had little or no impact on the voters in the metropolitan areas where they carried (sometimes by not extremely heavy margins in those areas) - " Sounds like a good measure and doesn't affect me." - but which had heavy negative impacts on the voters in the sparcely populated rural areas which voted strongly against them. So, as bad as curbs on the will of majority may be, I am not entirely comfortable in doing away with them. -- Bob Weinberger La, Grande, OR place a dot between bobs and stuff and remove invalid to send email |
#74
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![]() "rw" wrote in message m... That's exactly what I'm proposing would be a fair outcome w.r.t. our archaic and divisive and undemocratic electoral system. Do I think it will happen, at least in my lifetime? No way. I'm afraid we're stuck with it, until the revolution. That doesn't mean the present system doesn't suck. Well the present system may suck, but a pure majority system is likely to be just as divisive. I live in a state with an extremely strong rural/urban divide. 3 to 8 metropolitan counties can, and often do, dictate the fate of all 36 counties. We have a ballot iniative system that allows state laws and even state constitutional amendments to be enacted directly by a majority of the electorate, without going through the legislature or approval of the Governor. In the past few years I have seen several measures enacted which had little or no impact on the voters in the metropolitan areas where they carried (sometimes by not extremely heavy margins in those areas) - " Sounds like a good measure and doesn't affect me." - but which had heavy negative impacts on the voters in the sparcely populated rural areas which voted strongly against them. So, as bad as curbs on the will of majority may be, I am not entirely comfortable in doing away with them. -- Bob Weinberger La, Grande, OR place a dot between bobs and stuff and remove invalid to send email |
#75
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Wolfgang wrote:
"Mike McGuire" wrote in message Good God, you people will swallow anything. The abolition of the Electoral College doesn't "favor" anyone but individual voters. With or without the electoral college, places where there are more people have more votes. With or without the electoral college, states with larger populations exert more influence becasue there are more people voting. The underlying principle behind democratic elections is that everyone who is eligible to vote gets one vote, and whichever candidate gets the majority of the votes wins the election. Insofar as the Electoral College supports that fundamental tenet, it is entirely superfluous. We just don't need it. If it does anything other than facilitate the democratic electoral process, it subverts the very core of Democracy. And that is EXACTLY what it does. Wolfgang It ain't going happen. What I wrote was not a discussion of the rightness or wrongness of the electoral college, but rather a discussion of the probabilities of a change. The situation where change might seem most likely is when there is a difference between the electoral vote majority and the popular vote majority. That happened in 2000. Now the usual (but not the only way) a constitutional amendment is proposed is by a 2/3 vote of both houses of congress. Given the polarization that existed then, and continues, that would have been highly improbable. Any time that difference situation occurs in the forseeable future, I would expect a similar polarization to stand in the way, never mind the likelihood that there would be at least 13 states in opposition. The reason for the electoral college is the fundamental compromise that got the constitution ratified by the original 13 states, which were all but sovereign nations at the time. The less populous of them were not willing to be overwhelmed in a simple plebiscite arangement, so they got the electoral college and they got two senators per state regardless of population while the larger states got house representation based on population. This is all pretty basic stuff, and it's the context in which a change would be considered. So I'll stand by my expectation, it ain't going to happen. Mike |
#76
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Wolfgang wrote:
"Mike McGuire" wrote in message Good God, you people will swallow anything. The abolition of the Electoral College doesn't "favor" anyone but individual voters. With or without the electoral college, places where there are more people have more votes. With or without the electoral college, states with larger populations exert more influence becasue there are more people voting. The underlying principle behind democratic elections is that everyone who is eligible to vote gets one vote, and whichever candidate gets the majority of the votes wins the election. Insofar as the Electoral College supports that fundamental tenet, it is entirely superfluous. We just don't need it. If it does anything other than facilitate the democratic electoral process, it subverts the very core of Democracy. And that is EXACTLY what it does. Wolfgang It ain't going happen. What I wrote was not a discussion of the rightness or wrongness of the electoral college, but rather a discussion of the probabilities of a change. The situation where change might seem most likely is when there is a difference between the electoral vote majority and the popular vote majority. That happened in 2000. Now the usual (but not the only way) a constitutional amendment is proposed is by a 2/3 vote of both houses of congress. Given the polarization that existed then, and continues, that would have been highly improbable. Any time that difference situation occurs in the forseeable future, I would expect a similar polarization to stand in the way, never mind the likelihood that there would be at least 13 states in opposition. The reason for the electoral college is the fundamental compromise that got the constitution ratified by the original 13 states, which were all but sovereign nations at the time. The less populous of them were not willing to be overwhelmed in a simple plebiscite arangement, so they got the electoral college and they got two senators per state regardless of population while the larger states got house representation based on population. This is all pretty basic stuff, and it's the context in which a change would be considered. So I'll stand by my expectation, it ain't going to happen. Mike |
#77
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#78
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#79
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rw wrote in news:418e4dc3$0$31225
: In the 2000 election Gore won the popular vote by about 500,000 votes, but lost the election to Bush by the Electoral vote count. In the 2004 election Bush won the popular vote by about 3,500,000 votes, but if Kerry had gotten about 140,000 more votes in Ohio he would now be the President-elect by virtue of a majority of Electoral votes. Isn't it time to reform this stupid, broken system? Electoral-vote.com has a nifty review of the problem, and a variety of suggestions that have come up over the years to deal with it. One of the easiest seems to be to simply leave all the rules in place, and increase the size of the House to bring the College more in line with the popular vote. This has the advantage of not requiring messing w/ the Constitution, and it leaves the College in place as a check, which may not have been its original purpose, but it can certainly function that way. Scott |
#80
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rw wrote in news:418e4dc3$0$31225
: In the 2000 election Gore won the popular vote by about 500,000 votes, but lost the election to Bush by the Electoral vote count. In the 2004 election Bush won the popular vote by about 3,500,000 votes, but if Kerry had gotten about 140,000 more votes in Ohio he would now be the President-elect by virtue of a majority of Electoral votes. Isn't it time to reform this stupid, broken system? Electoral-vote.com has a nifty review of the problem, and a variety of suggestions that have come up over the years to deal with it. One of the easiest seems to be to simply leave all the rules in place, and increase the size of the House to bring the College more in line with the popular vote. This has the advantage of not requiring messing w/ the Constitution, and it leaves the College in place as a check, which may not have been its original purpose, but it can certainly function that way. Scott |
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