9/1/2006 2:06:26 PM
why do you want to change the constitution?
9/1/2006 2:06:50 PM
because it might help our democracy?
9/1/2006 2:07:31 PM
modifying search and seizure rights might help our democracy toobut you were pretty adamant about your stance on that issue]
9/1/2006 2:08:55 PM
^^^ Because I know everything.Now that you have what you want, I'll answer for anyone else who might be curious. Because I feel this would put the consequences of elections exclusively in the hands of voter action, instead of sharing it with a tremendous amount of voter inaction.In the last election, fully 60.3% of Americas eligible voting age population participated and 39.7% did not. The implication of this that's rarely discussed is that slightly fewer people (30.6%) elected the president than did not vote at all. I take the capitalistic view that if that many Americans self-select for disenfranchisement, it's because they didn't see enough of an incentive to vote. Given that voting is the way one would achieve representation, I'd say representation is probably _that_ incentive.I'd like to alter the political system to favor candidates who do incent Americans to vote, and in a way that allows their votes to apply to the candidates they intend.I strongly question the efficacy of a representative government that doesn't blink at the fact that more of its citizens stay home or could care less, than elect the leader of the entire nation.Why do you discourage changing the Constitution?[Edited on September 1, 2006 at 2:26 PM. Reason : .]
9/1/2006 2:10:03 PM
but i don't think that would help our democracy. i think this change might (it may not. i honestly dont' think i know enough about political history to know if something like this has been tried before and if it would possibly work).
9/1/2006 2:10:41 PM
You certainly know enough history--I hope--to know whether something like this has been tried in America.
9/1/2006 2:12:37 PM
i was speaking more internationally. i honestly think it would help with apathy and don't really see our voting process turning into chaos. and this way it would still be administered by the states.
9/1/2006 2:14:15 PM
so you dont want to change the constitution to beef up national securityjust to give a democratic presidential candidate a better chance to win an election
9/1/2006 2:14:17 PM
why would this help democrats win over others?also: i'm against increasing the governments powers of search and seizure because i see a lot of potential (and history of) abuse of that power.
9/1/2006 2:15:46 PM
^^ No. I already told you. It's because I know everything.
9/1/2006 2:27:15 PM
Gamecat just so you knowThis thread isnt gonna change the 04 electionThanks
9/1/2006 2:34:08 PM
I actually wonder if it would encourage turnout... Look at the incentives: If I live in North Carolina where it is pretty certain that the Republican's will win the state and thus all its electorial votes, why should I, a Democrat, vote? His vote will not turn the election in North Carolina, all it would do is increase the number of electorial votes for the state of North Carolina and by extension the Republicans. The result I would expect is to see minority voters in every state shy away from voting at all for fear of boosting Electoral College seats going to the opposition. This would devastate local elections if people were not allowed to avoid being included in the statistics by leaving national sections blank. It would also set seats in stone as even if in a decade or so Democrats become the Majority in North Carolina they won't know because a large fraction is not voting to avoid beefing electorial votes for a traditionally Republican state. I suggest you put more thought into it, your idea is ripe with perverse incentives.
9/1/2006 2:34:16 PM
9/1/2006 2:49:33 PM
I'm sure Gamecat has agreed with all of the honorable Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's ideas before now
9/1/2006 2:51:05 PM
I'm sure that's of such obvious relevance that you could demonstrate it in a sentence or two.
9/1/2006 2:53:51 PM
Ah, misunderstood your part 2, so your idea is not as stupid as I understood it to be. Instead, what we are left with is a convoluted means of arriving at a popular vote election. Ignoring rounding error, I don't see how your system will ever return a result that didn't match the popular vote result.
9/1/2006 3:09:14 PM
Two possible modifications come to mind.1) Number of electoral votes is based on turnout in the previous election not the current election. Would seem to help offset vote rushing (i.e. candidate A is wining as easter polls close so campaigners on west coast step massive campaign to boost they're electoral votes before the end of the day to generate better results for candidate B.2) The max number of electoral votes recieved is capped via the current method for determining electoral votes and is only achieveable with at least a 90% turn out for the state.
9/1/2006 3:20:20 PM
Problem there: In the first election, a state has lower turnout. They won't come out this time because their votes don't count as much and people rarely think 8 years in advance.
9/1/2006 3:35:00 PM
it only makes sense if it's for that election.and yeah, it basically is a convoluted popular vote, but one that's still controlled by states. and one where state results do matter to an extent. we could still assign two electors to each state by default and then the ones on top of that would be based on turnout.
9/1/2006 3:48:03 PM
^ I like that idea, and agree that it ought to be based on current election.Also, the vote tallies ought to be done by machine, and completely undisclosed to all campaign officials and news media until the polls close in Hawaii. If the Pentagon can find a way to keep the SR71 under wraps for decades, I think we can find a way to keep vote totals in particular states under wraps for a few hours.
9/1/2006 3:49:22 PM
9/1/2006 3:56:38 PM
I'd say you could stretch the definition of "national security" on that one; since it elects the Commander in Chief and all (a big stretch, I know). If you made disclosing the results prematurely a crime under national security statute, I bet it'd dry up real quick.And we're not talking about a huge limitation of the press. We're talking about suspending the press disclosing one type of information, and only for a matter of a few hours. The NY Times held off on the NSA program for a year--at the administration's request. I'd imagine the news organizations would be willing to cooperate for a few hours if the FCC was staring them down on Election Day.[Edited on September 1, 2006 at 4:13 PM. Reason : ...]
9/1/2006 4:10:40 PM
9/1/2006 4:14:09 PM
Popular vote is a great idea!
9/1/2006 4:15:45 PM
9/1/2006 4:18:03 PM
With popular vote, the majority of people who actually vote could include dead people!
9/1/2006 4:31:19 PM
why dont we get rid of gerrymanderingnew can of worms
9/1/2006 4:45:07 PM
Gamecat, I guess I'm just good at maths. ok, so, lets analyze your system with a metaphore. Here we have a made-up country with two states, one large one small (40m vs 10m citizens). Now, this system has 100 electoral college seats, an election is held and breaks out this way:Candidate:__1____2State A:___10m__2mState B:____2m__6mOk, per stage 1 we apportion the votes: State A had 12m voters, state B had 8m voters. 100 / (12m + 8m) = 5 EC seats per million voters. So State A gets 60 EC seats and State B gets 40 EC seats. Stage 2, we determine EC results:Candidate 1 received 83.333% of the votes in State A and 25% in State B, getting 50 votes from State A and 10 from State B for a total of 60 EC seats. Candidate 2 received 16.666% of the votes in State A and 75% in State B, getting 10 votes from State A and 30 from State B for a total of 40 EC seats. EC seat proportion: Candidate 1 received 60% of the EC seats, Candidate 2 received 40%. Now, compare this to a popular vote:Candidate 1 received 12m votes out of 20m votes cast, or 60%. Candidate 2 received 8m votes out of 20m votes cast, or 40%. How did this happen? Simple, the whole EC college in your idea is nothing but constants that cancel out in the final calculation.
9/1/2006 4:47:38 PM
Here is the Maple solve:numEC is the total number EC seats. StateA1 is the number of EC seats for candidate 1 from State A. StateB1 is the number of EC seats for candidate 1 from State B.
9/1/2006 5:21:18 PM
this is a wonderful ideabye bye two party system and 60% incumbant reelections
9/1/2006 5:34:25 PM
^ Eh? It would still be a first-past-the-post election system which means two parties. If you want more than two parties then you need a proportional representation system such as are found in parliamentary systems.
9/1/2006 5:41:20 PM
So what is the purpose of the electoral college as it currently stands. In what situations is it desireable for the person elected president to be the person who did not win the popular vote? Then assuming such situations are desireable, is it possible to have a system that allows for such situations that doesn't encourage either a two party system or "battle ground" states?
9/1/2006 6:23:32 PM
the inability of this country to change will mean its death.
9/1/2006 7:10:05 PM
9/1/2006 8:12:55 PM
9/1/2006 8:17:40 PM
Gamecat, I'm sorry, but it still would not matter whether there are two or 20 candidates. All the introduction of additional candidates does it make it more difficult to get a majority, which a plurality election does not require. If I get 10% of the votes nationally then, ignoring rounding, I will get 10% of the EC seats. And in case you did not know, a plurality system will still tend towards only two-parties. If I know historically the Republican candidate sometimes wins, I could ideologically settle for a Republican victory, I am a Libertarian, but the Libertarian party never wins, then by voting for the Libertarians that is one less vote for the Republicans and the Democrats are one vote more likely to win. Our electoral system only has two parties because only one person can win. If you want more parties then you either need a second round of voting (as in France, the second time around you are only allowed to vote for one of the two most popular parties from the first round) or a system of proportional representation (your party got 30% of the votes so you get 30% of the seats in Parliament, there is no President).
9/1/2006 10:26:31 PM
the notion that election fraud is currently not a problem is 100% wrong.
9/1/2006 10:30:42 PM
9/1/2006 11:45:59 PM
^ Not at all. The electoral college system is not what is making it a two party system, it is the winner takes all component which is making it a two party system. I just explained as much above. Even if we did do away with the electoral college and went with a pure popular vote we would STILL have a two party system because a vote for the Libertarians (instead of the Republicans) is one less vote the Democrats need to win.
9/2/2006 7:34:28 AM
If you are trying to change the Constitution in order to basically have popular votes elect the President, why not really support that idea and eliminate the Senate? The Senate, with its each-State-gets-two-votes, allows less populous States have the same power as more populous States. If we want the majority to rule, the Senate must go. And I disagree that popular voting would encourage a two-party system. I think you'd have a lot of smaller parties forming in order to prevent majority parties from winning. This would force the majority parties to accept the more radical ideas of the smaller parties in order to get their support.
9/2/2006 10:25:40 AM
9/2/2006 11:28:29 AM
So, if we want third parties to have a legitimate chance on a national scale, is parliamentary elections the only way to go?
9/2/2006 11:39:44 AM
No, there are many techniques, I recommend Wikipedia's article:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_system#Ranked_voting_methodsAnd I'm not saying a 3rd party can never succeed in a popular electoral system (if one of the major parties falls apart). But if you want a system that consistently has more than two parties you will need something other than a popular system. But I do not necessarily feel 3rd parties make a system better.
9/2/2006 1:53:00 PM
9/2/2006 11:06:50 PM
I'm confused, you are arguing that a popular voting system would be different from today's electoral college system, right? I am arguing there would be very little difference between the two, particular when it comes to 3rd parties, which you demonstrated by pointing out that under a popular voting system, as under our EC system, 3rd parties only play a spoiler role under both systems. 3rd parties are not elected consistently to government, they never win an election, all they get to do is occasionally punish a major party with defeat. This is not a good system because even if all the people in the 1992 election that voted for Perot would have voted for Bush had Perot not been on the ballot, it doesn't matter in either the EC or the popular systems, Clinton wins the election because although the non-democrats are in the majority they have split their votes between two candidates. People hate losing elections this way, and that is why in popular systems 3rd parties quickly return to their marginal status, they don't often make the same mistake (and in a popular election voting for a 3rd party is always a mistake). Now, a ranked election system would eliminate this conflict of interest and allow me to vote for Perot without guaranteeing Clinton victory by splitting the conservative ticket. It is in this way that people do not end up being punished for voting for 3rd parties, therefore 3rd parties can not only stick around year after year they might actually win once in awhile.Now, this is only looking at the final election dates. It is my opinion that we already live under a ranked voting system, those that say we do not fail to take into account the primary process. To put it clearly, early in 1992 Ross Perot ran for the nomination of the Republican Party and through a democratic vote he lost the nomination to Bush. If it had ended there, what we had was a two-tiered voting system designed to eliminate unworthy candidates up front, leaving the American public with two candidates to choose from in November. With only two candidates there is no possibility of split-vote miscarriages, so either a popular or EC system will discern the public's wishes in November, no problem, but only because the prior year was dedicated to the primary conventions to get the election down to two candidates. My question is, why does everyone choose to pretend the primary process does not take place? In January of '04 there were 10 candidates for President all with an equal chance of victory, 9 of them Democrats. Through '04 the liberals of America held up-front elections to discern which of these 9 was the most popular and they discerned it down to Kerry. [Edited on September 3, 2006 at 9:23 AM. Reason : .,.]
9/3/2006 9:11:07 AM
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9/4/2006 10:17:38 AM