why do you think we should or shouldn't still have this bullshit system of voting I don't feel like discussing it because I'll make myself go into a self-induced rage over how much I hate the concept of voting, especially with respect to American politics (and this is why I never post in the Soap Box)but I do want to see what your thoughts are on the matterI'm interested to see if there are actually valid reasons to still having the EC, because as far as I can tell, there really is absolutely no reason it should still be in existence :-\ (especially since the 2000 election)Thank you, brothers,BB
7/22/2016 1:56:36 AM
k
7/22/2016 7:21:56 AM
If it weren't for the electoral college, your Presidents would win their elections by campaigning only in New York, California, and Texas. Every goddamn candidate in every goddamn Presidential election would spend their entire time pandering to the states with the most people, because that would be the most efficient use of their time and money.PROTIP: Proponents of a pure popular vote forget that populations live in states and shit.
7/22/2016 7:31:45 AM
hmmman interesting point, thx :3
7/26/2016 1:33:06 PM
it still seems like the elections could be held with the popular vote though, and then tax-money/resources etc. could still be divvied up the same way (according to the population of each individual state)'cause I mean, the popular vote still reflects the entire country, whether or not it makes sense with respect to particular regionsit only just seems more fairI suppose "seem" is the operative word in this post :3
7/26/2016 3:14:36 PM
7/26/2016 7:43:45 PM
the electoral college gives undue weight to places like North Dakota. Cities get the shaft from federal policy already because of the Senate. The electoral college makes it even worse.
7/26/2016 8:09:33 PM
i kinda think it would be cool if we enforced the constitution then we wouldnt care who won
7/26/2016 8:13:09 PM
^^But those places have their needs too. I actually read that part of the reason it exists is because when our country formed the founding fathers wanted to be able to sit around with a group of educated people and pick the best candidate instead of letting the people pick. That would help avoid someone winning the presidency on pure emotion like this year.I'M GOING TO LOCK THE BORDERS!!!!!!!!!!!TRUMP IS RACIST!!!!!!!!!!!!!I'M GOING TO BAN MUSLIMS!!!!!!!TRUMP IS RACIST AND WILL DESTROY THE WORLD!!!!!!!!!!
7/26/2016 8:23:13 PM
BAN THE INTERNET!!!!
7/26/2016 9:44:27 PM
It's a protection for small states and makes sense.People don't understand that the point of american democracy is supposed that it is supposed to be hard for people to get something done unless there is an overwhelming consensus that it's the right thing to do. This isn't a parliamentary system where whoever gets the most votes and forms a government gets to just make the entire policy entirely for the next four years. A well armed minority is there to in principle to prevent tyranny. In this past this forced centrism, compromise, and begrudging cooperation. Unfortunately, the parties found a way to break the system and move further to the fringes and just become obstructionist.What we really should do is keep the EC and get rid of running mates. Go back to the original intent that the First most votes is president and second is vice president (Would suck this time around). Split the administration and the "losing" side wouldn't be quite as disgruntled and maybe being forced to work together would bring about some more moderate planning from both sides.
7/28/2016 4:24:52 PM
if only we had a parlimentary system - shit could get done. it took the 3 fucking weeks to get a new prime minister after one of the most monumental votes of the 21st century. we can barely get two conventions completed in that time.just like semiautomatic weapons with 30 round magazines, the founding fathers couldn't foresee a 2 party political system hellbent on fucking the "other guys" over instead of governing.[Edited on July 28, 2016 at 4:51 PM. Reason : ,]
7/28/2016 4:49:41 PM
7/28/2016 5:12:14 PM
and before someone gets pissy about the [political parties] here is the text.
7/28/2016 5:15:33 PM
7/28/2016 5:20:01 PM
7/28/2016 9:01:37 PM
I think it'd be kinda cool if we could all just get along, without the constraints that rival political parties inherently bring about
7/28/2016 9:37:46 PM
7/29/2016 9:28:27 AM
I used the wrong expression there and I apologize. Not a government shutdown, but a parliamentary one due to the lack of a governing coalition. That happens more often, and while it allows "government" in the sense of bureaucratic activity to function, it necessarily ceases "government" in the sense of having a functioning, elected legislative. I was thinking specifically of Belgium's extended rule by an interim government a couple of years ago.And you said nothing about rigid partisanship, because of course that's key to a parliamentary system.
7/29/2016 9:48:05 AM
I said nothing of the partisanship because I don't believe it is any worse than our current state. in fact, the partisanship in the united states is much more detrimental because of our bicameral congress and a separately elected president. when legislators say "wait till the election to let the people decide," like the GOP is doing over the Supreme Court process, they really mean "let's see if we can win all 3 control points." because without all 3, they're really not getting what they want out of letting an election decide what happens next. in a parliamentary system, that actually happens. those what win and form the coalition govern as they are wont to do and those that lost push back through criticism. but the will of the public election is carried out.parliamentary is not perfect. Italy and Greece have proven that enough time over to make it stick. but it would stop the gridlock-as-a-policy that has become status quo in our government in the last decade
7/29/2016 10:12:36 AM
I think a parliamentary system is kinda designed to be all or nothing. You either have a ruling party/coalition steamrolling their agenda or you have to reform and try again.With ours, at least in theory only the important less debateable stuff is supposed to move through easily (declaration or war, etc) and anything too extreme is almost impossible to happen. Once again, it is supposed to be hard for the federal system to get things done, that is an aspect of our american desire for limited government. Unfortunately this has been taken to an extreme with complete obstructionism on even super important matters like appointments and the like.Personally I think we are overdue for some amendments (we are in one of the longest spans without an ammendment in the countries history) to smooth out some rough edges but that the overall structure is working as intended just a little too well.1. Term limits: Make politics less of a career and more of a calling to service.1a. Supreme court should be a long(15-20yrs) but not lifetime appointment. Would make people less worried about an appointment being on the bench 50 years.2. If congress does not vote on an appointment within a time frame the appointment is accepted, or the ability of the supreme court to compel a vote or hold congress in contempt for dereliction of duty.3. Redefine and restrict the ability of the executive branch to use military force without congress' approval in a better manner that reflects our current reality.4. Outlaw running mates, straight ticket voting, party affiliation on ballots, and force states to issue EC votes by proportion or district and not as winner takes all. You can't outlaw parties but you can at least remove it somewhat as a component of our actual election mechanics and make people have to think about it more.Just some ideas I'm sure there are holes in but just coming up with some ideas.
7/29/2016 11:38:31 AM
7/29/2016 12:26:56 PM
^I think the key difference here is the GOP isn't the ruling party of the executive branch and is not able to completely implement their own agenda, just to impede the other party's.In the parliamentary setup, the PM is the executive and comes from the ruling party. The executive and judiciary are effectively subservient and derived wholly from the legislature. For us the Executive is independent of the legislature and often from a different party from the congressional majority.Also I would argue our states exercise a higher degree of sovereignty than most constituent members of parliament systems and that is a factor too on the distribution of power.I'm not arguing that our system hasn't found a way to break itself pretty badly, but for our desired type of limited government and checks and balances this is a better approach than the parliamentary setup. Now if you say you want a stronger more active federal system then that's fine and may be suitable for that setup but then we are talking about a different goal entirely than was originally devised.[Edited on July 29, 2016 at 3:24 PM. Reason : ]
7/29/2016 3:24:27 PM
The Senate under-represents the corresponding popular vote by about 7%, the House under-represents this by about 5%, and 2 of the past 3 presidents didn't have the support of the popular vote.Numerous states, including North Carolina also have state governments that are wildly un-representative of the people they govern.Worse yet, the Electoral College winner-take-all system drives further polarization by dictating states are either Red or Blue, when most states are firmly purple.There was a whole revolution over "Taxation without representation" but it seems every level of government now under-represents what most Americans want. This doesn't seem sustainable...
3/29/2019 10:14:21 PM
I'm 100% convinced that House apportionment needs to be revisited. We've had 436 representatives for the past 90 years. During that time our population has more than doubled. The whole system is predicated in part on the idea that the House is a, well, Representative body. Let us make it so. I gather this means we'd need 900+ reps, which I know would be difficult from a logistical perspective. But, well, tough shit. Make the house meet at the old soccer stadium or something.
3/30/2019 12:14:11 AM
^ hell lets go back to the original 1 rep per 30k people. they could meet and vote online
3/30/2019 7:36:34 AM
I had never thought of that...that is kinda brilliant. At this point, each representative presides over more people than the President did in the beginning. Having tens of thousands of them would make them far harder to roll into the system. You couldn't offer all of them future employment. But it would probably render the body unruly and dysfunctional? Maybe? The party leadership already rules, they'd remain agenda dictators, but I'd predict a lot of rebellions in the legislature against the leadership. There'd be a lot more surprise vote outcomes. All told, I LOVE THIS IDEA. Not 30k people, but maybe 4000 representatives!
3/31/2019 8:02:26 PM
^^^^ Nothing about the EC mandates a winner takes all system. If states would just split their congressional electors up by their internal popular vote, most of the "problems" with the EC would vanish. You'd probably get better voter turnout, too. But, oddly, you don't see California, NY, Mass, or Illinois even considering splitting up their votes in order to give their conservative-leaning residents an actual vote in Presidential elections... The places complaining the loudest seem content to squash the voices of those in the minority in their states.
4/2/2019 12:18:05 AM
^ it’s liberal states that are passing laws to ditch the EC, including California, but they only kick in when theRest of the states do it.MAkes no sense for a state to do it unilaterally.Literally no primarily red state has passed such a law.https://www.nationalpopularvote.com/state-status
4/2/2019 1:51:03 AM
4/2/2019 9:43:32 AM
^^^not to go into reproportioning again but that only works if we make the electoral votes even by population.1 vote per 200k people or somethingActually now that I think about, this would be very complex, figuring out rounding and how to split in 50/50 races. So much simpler to just award to popular vote winner.
4/2/2019 10:12:45 AM
The details in that post took a back seat to self-righteousness.
4/2/2019 10:25:33 AM
Mine or hch's?
4/2/2019 10:52:24 AM
^^^^^ I'm not talking about splitting votes by the national winner. I'm saying if NC votes 60/40 for somebody, give 60% of their congressional EC votes to that candidate and 40% to the other. That not a single blue state is doing so, despite clamoring about wanting fairer representation, shows that they would rather give Dems a 150 vote head start than give the conservative minority in their states an actual voice. It shows that the current bitching about the EC is nothing more than partisan sour grapes and a disdain for rural voters.
4/2/2019 12:00:22 PM
I know exactly what you you are saying, I just think it doesn't go far enough.And every presidential candidate around shows disdain for rural voters, they don't campaign in most rural states bc most of those states reliably vote one way.Rural voters currently have much more say and representation than urban voters. The current system shows disdain for urban voters.Edit: i guess you were pointing at Moron but still. No red states do what you're saying either. If a state did what you suggested, they would have to also do what moron said and not enforce until every state passed a similar law. [Edited on April 2, 2019 at 12:28 PM. Reason : R]
4/2/2019 12:26:34 PM
4/2/2019 12:26:43 PM
^^ you seem to be missing the point that California and New York have already passed laws like that but they don’t kick in until the rest of the states do it too.And your logic is entirely backwards. The winner take all system was specifically designed to be unfair to black people, but because conservative politicians are worried their racism will no longer have this entrenchment they’re resisting doing the right thing.If California for example did proportional representation unilaterally, that would be giving a huge gift to white supremacists and Republicans. The most logical thing to do is push for all states to make the switch at the same time.[Edited on April 2, 2019 at 12:29 PM. Reason : ]
4/2/2019 12:29:11 PM
I think you're missing a carat?
4/2/2019 12:36:00 PM
^^ You seem to be missing the point that I'm talking about state vote results, not national ones. As far as I know, Califormia has not voted to divide their EC votes based on their state vote results. You also seem to be under the impression that the EC mandates winner-takes-all. It does not.And California giving actual representation to their non-liberal citizens would show that they are serious about making sure their voices are heard, and not just guaranteeing Democrats a 60+ vote head start. Boiling it down to being " a gift to white supremacists and Republicans" proves that your motivation scare nothing but partisan sour grapes.
4/2/2019 1:26:35 PM
Hey burro i have a question. Have you considered that this plan might be partisan sour grapes?
4/2/2019 1:28:09 PM
^^ It can't be partisan "sour grapes," because the current system is inherently wrong, and tilted towards "red state" ideology (which is itself a creation of the winner-take-all system).It's like if your house is burning down, and someone told you calling the fire department was anti-fire bias, it's anti-having-your-house-burn down.It only would bias democrats now because it's been designed, for corrupt, anti-democracy purposes, to be anti-Democrat.The solution to solve the problem is for all states to switch at the same time. 1 state switching makes the problem worse. You're arguing that California should make the system even more broken, which is just asinine.[Edited on April 2, 2019 at 1:39 PM. Reason : ]
4/2/2019 1:38:33 PM
4/2/2019 2:08:20 PM
4/2/2019 2:48:47 PM
^ Which is precisely why I say this is all partisan. If the right thing to do is to give people adequate representation, then refusing to do so until all others also do it shows that you don't actually care about giving people adequate representation. Candidates not treating states like monolithic blocks of voters is a good thing, not a bad thing. If California were to do this, it would show leadership and allow them to put legitimate pressure on other states to do so. Instead, it's clear that their main concern is to push power to left-leaning urban centers, not to actually represent all of their citizens.Meanwhile, moron is over here reading too much Mother Jones and Vox to understand what the EC was actually designed to do. He's got this insane notion that a system designed before political parties even existed was meant to disadvantage a particular party that formed decades later, much less its incarnation two centuries later. He even thinks that northern, anti-slavery states switched to winner-takes-all elections before the Civil War in order to enforce white supremacy. He thinks that the EC was designed to reduce the voting power of people who weren't even allowed to vote in the first place. It would be laughable, except that he seriously thinks this. He's got some cute little theories, but damned if facts and history aren't getting in the way.As an aside, I wouldn't mind revisiting Congressional representation, as it's clear that 400 people can't adequately represent 350million+ people. I don't know what the right ratio is, but 1:1MM clearly isn't adequate, and it's only leading to hyper-partisan races. I certainly wouldn't go down the originally intended road of allocating electors by district at this point, but expanding Congressional representation, coupled with state-vote-divided electors would go a looooooong way towards fixing the problems in our Presidential election, without destroying any semblance of giving a damn about the concerns of less populated states and regions (which, btw, moron, despite what Mother Jones and Rachel Maddow tell you, was the ACTUAL purpose of the Electoral College).
4/2/2019 3:16:11 PM
[Edited on April 2, 2019 at 3:32 PM. Reason : Oops ]
4/2/2019 3:28:34 PM
But what you're describing isn't giving people adequate representation? It's taking away representation from Calis democrats. Having winner take all means 1 person, 1 vote. It's really the only way for everyone to have equal representation in a presidential electionThe SYSTEM is undemocratic. What you propose might make California itself more democratic but it would make the SYSTEM even less so. If the electoral system is to change, the country needs to change it together, not one state at a time. [Edited on April 2, 2019 at 3:33 PM. Reason : E]
4/2/2019 3:29:51 PM
Con:It allows a deranged, brain worm-infested racist to use actual US citizens who aren’t counted for electoral college purposes as a cudgel to try and score petty electoral points in a state the same size as the territory in question.
4/2/2019 3:37:22 PM
4/2/2019 3:46:22 PM
4/2/2019 4:09:09 PM
^^^^ How doo you figure that a state dividing its electoral votes based upon how its citizens actually voted is not adequate representation? Yes, it takes massive over-representation away from Cali Dems, but gives it to Cali Repubs, who have never had ANY representation whatsoever.The EC was never meant to be "democratic." It was meant to be republican, as it is was choosing the leader of a republic. Championing "1 person, 1 vote" suggests that you don't realize this. If you want the US to move to a direct democracy, that's a fine argument to make, but don't come in here complaining that a system to elect a republic's leader isn't functioning as a direct democracy should, cause that's just silly. You might as well complain that parts for a Ford Mustang don't fit properly in a Camaro.^ You can't just gloss over the fact that less populated states (that I poorly shorthanded as "rural," which is far more applicable today than it was then) refused to sign on to a system which would run roughshod over them. It was specifically designed to ease their concerns. If that's not a major design intent, then what the hell is? I wouldn't call the EC vote winner winning the election a "hiccup." It was the whole point.And yes, California's desire to ensure that its EC votes continue to go completely to Democrats is absolutely partisan. It's not "looking after their own interests." If they wanted to that, they would also look after the interests of the roughly 30% of its citizens who aren't Democrats. As it stands, almost 4.5million voters in 2016 had essentially no representation in the presidential election, other than to piss their vote away, yet there seems to be no move among California's leadership to change that. It's no different than NC Repubs gerrymandering away Dem votes in the state.[Edited on April 2, 2019 at 4:25 PM. Reason : ]
4/2/2019 4:10:39 PM