Quote:So this is better? A candidate could get 75% of the vote in that state, and get none of it's deligates. Way to give every vote equal weight.
Under the law, which was enacted by the House last week, all 12 of the state's electoral votes would be awarded to the candidate who receives the most votes nationally.
Quote:
“The one prevailing evil of democracy is the tyranny of the majority, or rather that party, not always the majority, that succeeds, by force or fraud, in carrying elections.”
R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:Hard left state you say? And should a Conservative candidate get a majority of the popular votes nationally, that Conservative would win the hard left state. It may circumvent the will of the people of that state, but in favor of enforcing the will of the sum of the nation. This move - being pulled in a hard left state as you say - is therefore to the advantage of the right. As is, you can loose the popular vote and still win the electoral vote. Suppose a right wing candidate is ahead on the popular vote, but would be behind on electoral votes(because this state's votes go to the left wing canditate). After a measure like this - the right winger would win where otherwise he could lose. This move is to no advantage of the left under any likely scenario.Quote:So this is better? A candidate could get 75% of the vote in that state, and get none of it's deligates. Way to give every vote equal weight.
Under the law, which was enacted by the House last week, all 12 of the state's electoral votes would be awarded to the candidate who receives the most votes nationally.
Leave it to a hard left state like MA to pull something like this.
bk3k wrote:R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:Hard left state you say? And should a Conservative candidate get a majority of the popular votes nationally, that Conservative would win the hard left state. It may circumvent the will of the people of that state, but in favor of enforcing the will of the sum of the nation. This move - being pulled in a hard left state as you say - is therefore to the advantage of the right. As is, you can loose the popular vote and still win the electoral vote. Suppose a right wing candidate is ahead on the popular vote, but would be behind on electoral votes(because this state's votes go to the left wing canditate). After a measure like this - the right winger would win where otherwise he could lose. This move is to no advantage of the left under any likely scenario.Quote:So this is better? A candidate could get 75% of the vote in that state, and get none of it's deligates. Way to give every vote equal weight.
Under the law, which was enacted by the House last week, all 12 of the state's electoral votes would be awarded to the candidate who receives the most votes nationally.
Leave it to a hard left state like MA to pull something like this.
Although an imperfect way to accomplish this, what this does is to give more power to the popular vote. The electoral college itself should be done away with. Popular voting wasn't practical in the days of our forefathers. Today we have instant communication. There is no reason we cannot have a DIRECT VOTE. The electoral college is a sham of democracy. Real democracy(or should I say democratic republic) would involve the president being chosen by a majority of citizens, rather than electorates(aka party elites).
If every state did this, you effectively WOULD elect a president based off of the popular vote alone. I'd still rather it be direct, but this is as close as you could get without a constitutional amendment.
As for you saying "Way to give every vote equal weight" - well this idea probably does so better than you think. As is, not all votes carry equal weights. That is the very reason they have "battleground states" at all.
Lets say you are in a far left or far right state. Lets also say that you vote with that majority. 99% of the population voting one way means NOTHING more than if only 51% had voted that way in many states. In this case you have 48% of the voters in that state whose votes mean NOTHING. That is an extreme but not impossible example. Some states do split the delegates, and while that reduces the problem(aka reduces the percentage of votes that get disenfranchised), it doesn't totally fix it either.
Keep in mind that a candidate can loose the popular vote and still win the electoral - it has happened in recent history as you know. Also remember that while Obama did defeat McCain by a decent but not overwhelming amount in the popular vote, he BLEW AWAY McCain in the electoral college. Seeing as how it is the electoral college who decides who wins, you still wanna tell me that the voters all are given equal weight now?! You maybe see what could happen in 2012?
I'm glad that you want every vote to have equal weight, but you are going about it wrong. You should be WELCOMING this kinda move in every state in the US. This weakens the electoral system. If this comes to all states, candidates won't be able to pick and choose which states are important anymore. They will have to consider EVERY citizen important, and go around hearing ALL our concerns.
bk3k wrote:My point was not that this would give advantage to any party in particular, but that only the left would impose a policy such as this in the name of fairness, when in fact, it is unfair to it's own voters.R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:Hard left state you say? And should a Conservative candidate get a majority of the popular votes nationally, that Conservative would win the hard left state. It may circumvent the will of the people of that state, but in favor of enforcing the will of the sum of the nation. This move - being pulled in a hard left state as you say - is therefore to the advantage of the right. As is, you can loose the popular vote and still win the electoral vote. Suppose a right wing candidate is ahead on the popular vote, but would be behind on electoral votes(because this state's votes go to the left wing canditate). After a measure like this - the right winger would win where otherwise he could lose. This move is to no advantage of the left under any likely scenario.Quote:So this is better? A candidate could get 75% of the vote in that state, and get none of it's deligates. Way to give every vote equal weight.
Under the law, which was enacted by the House last week, all 12 of the state's electoral votes would be awarded to the candidate who receives the most votes nationally.
Leave it to a hard left state like MA to pull something like this.
Although an imperfect way to accomplish this, what this does is to give more power to the popular vote. The electoral college itself should be done away with. Popular voting wasn't practical in the days of our forefathers. Today we have instant communication. There is no reason we cannot have a DIRECT VOTE. The electoral college is a sham of democracy. Real democracy(or should I say democratic republic) would involve the president being chosen by a majority of citizens, rather than electorates(aka party elites).
If every state did this, you effectively WOULD elect a president based off of the popular vote alone. I'd still rather it be direct, but this is as close as you could get without a constitutional amendment.
As for you saying "Way to give every vote equal weight" - well this idea probably does so better than you think. As is, not all votes carry equal weights. That is the very reason they have "battleground states" at all.
Lets say you are in a far left or far right state. Lets also say that you vote with that majority. 99% of the population voting one way means NOTHING more than if only 51% had voted that way in many states. In this case you have 48% of the voters in that state whose votes mean NOTHING. That is an extreme but not impossible example. Some states do split the delegates, and while that reduces the problem(aka reduces the percentage of votes that get disenfranchised), it doesn't totally fix it either.
Keep in mind that a candidate can loose the popular vote and still win the electoral - it has happened in recent history as you know. Also remember that while Obama did defeat McCain by a decent but not overwhelming amount in the popular vote, he BLEW AWAY McCain in the electoral college. Seeing as how it is the electoral college who decides who wins, you still wanna tell me that the voters all are given equal weight now?! You maybe see what could happen in 2012?
I'm glad that you want every vote to have equal weight, but you are going about it wrong. You should be WELCOMING this kinda move in every state in the US. This weakens the electoral system. If this comes to all states, candidates won't be able to pick and choose which states are important anymore. They will have to consider EVERY citizen important, and go around hearing ALL our concerns.
R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:Otherwise, the Constitution needs to be amended to remove the Electoral College all together. The purpose of states' rights is not to subvert the Constitution.
R.W.E. of the J.B.O. wrote:Do you even own a J-body?Does everyone on JBO?
s e wrote:The current system of electing the president ensures that the candidates, after the primaries, do not reach out to all of the states and their voters. Candidates have no reason to poll, visit, advertise, organize, campaign, or care about the voter concerns in the dozens of states where they are safely ahead or hopelessly behind. The reason for this is the state-by-state winner-take-all rule (not mentioned in the U.S. Constitution, but now used by 48 states), under which all of a state's electoral votes are awarded to the candidate who gets the most votes in each separate state.
Presidential candidates concentrate their attention on only a handful of closely divided "battleground" states and their voters. In 2008, candidates concentrated over two-thirds of their campaign events and ad money in just six states, and 98% in just 15 states (CO, FL, IN, IA, MI, MN, MO, NV, NH, NM, NC, OH, PA, VA, and WI). Massachusetts (the 13th largest population state, with 12 electoral college votes) and 19 of the 22 smallest and medium-small states (with less than 7 electoral college votes) were not among them. Over half (57 of the events were in just four states (Ohio, Florida, Pennsylvania and Virginia). In 2004, candidates concentrated over two-thirds of their money and campaign visits in five states; over 80% in nine states; and over 99% of their money in 16 states, and candidates concentrated over two-thirds of their money and campaign visits in five states and over 99% of their money in 16 states.
Two-thirds of the states and people have been merely spectators to the presidential elections.
Another shortcoming of the current system is that a candidate can win the Presidency without winning the most popular votes nationwide. This has occurred in one of every 14 presidential elections.
In the past six decades, there have been six presidential elections in which a shift of a relatively small number of votes in one or two states would have elected (and, in 2000, did elect) a presidential candidate who lost the popular vote nationwide.
True Conservative wrote:what you miss is the representative republic does not mean that the popular vote is what matters. what matters is the sum of the voted on a state by state basis.The thing that makes it a Republic has NOTHING to do with the states vs the people voting for the president. It has everything to do with the fact that we have elected representatives to make decisions for the people to live under. If the people select the president directly - it is still a Republic. All that means is that the president is chosen the same way Congressmen and Senators are. BTW those Senators where originally chosen by the states rather than by the people - does that bother you?
True Conservative wrote:it goes back to state rights versus federal rights. The states created the federal government, not the other way around.Funny you should mention that. The Constitution was made to replace an existing form of Government in the US. It replaced the Articles of Confederation. Our forefather did this, realizing that a system of Government - where states have too much power under a weak Federal Government - was almost unworkable and could not stand the test of time. While people look to the Constitution in order to preserve state rights, they apparently don't realize exactly what the Constitution is, or why it came into being. Its very ratification is the biggest erosion of states' rights that this nation has ever experienced.
True Conservative wrote:This means a popular vote is not the decider, it is the input from each independent state.The President is elected by the Electoral College, who derives their power from the states. The states - as with all levels of government - derive their just powers from the consent of the governed(aka the people). This is the very foundation of how our government has always worked. The president being elected by the people directly - only cuts out the middlemen(or dare I say - cuts out 2 layers of bureaucracy).
True Conservative wrote:The Constitution was written this way for a reason.That reason being that in a world where communication was carried by horse, electing one figure from the votes of every person across the nation would be utterly unworkable. That is no longer the case in a world of instant communication.