I have stumbled upon this site:http://www.nationalpopularvote.com/Which is lobbying for us to change to the national popular vote in the presidential election. yeah, cool, nothing we haven't heard before, right? But...
5/14/2008 11:17:56 AM
One can only hope the electoral died a quick death. It is really outdated.
5/14/2008 11:21:35 AM
Nebraska already proportionally splits its electoral college, and has for years. While the intent may be to move towards an electoral college, all it really does is waters down the state's influence. Why would a candidate spend time campaigning for one more vote from a proportional states than trying to win the block of votes in a competitive state?The electoral college is not outdated, and here is why: elections are run at the state level. While there are certainly Federal guidelines, the election is a state responsibility. As long as that is the case, there is a strong argument for keeping vote tallies segregated between states. Think about it this way: if shenanigans happen again in Florida under the electoral college, a tight election and Florida's electoral votes would be tainted (there still should be recourse in the courts). On the other hand, if a corrupt or mismanaged election in one state counts 50,000 or 100,000 illegitimate votes under their rules, that would contaminate the popular vote tally and be mixed in with the votes of all other states.You may argue that that we need to go to nationalized elections, but as long as they are primarily the perogative of states, something like the electoral college fits.
5/14/2008 11:49:39 AM
After much thinking on teh subject; I support an electoral college where each state must splits its electors proportionally representing the popular vote more so then a direct election. With 250 million people i beleive the electoral college acts as a filter for voting irregularties, fuck ups, corruption, and other skewing factors.The winner takes all system has several bad aspects which i don't agree with.1.) Places emphasis on the so-called "swing states" which get more attention then other states.2.) Nearly disenfranchisizes those that favor the minority party within one of the polarized states (conservatives in California; liberals in South Carolina) fpr the presedential election.3.) Waters down public opinion in favor of the aristocratic consensus[Edited on May 14, 2008 at 11:55 AM. Reason : a]
5/14/2008 11:52:22 AM
Your opinion is great, really is.But if what I was questioning in the first post really is true then we are no longer in the electoral college system, it's nothing more than a vestigial organ.
5/14/2008 12:17:59 PM
^No state would ever do that independently though b/c the argument can be made to voters that they're squandering their influence. That's why even the states enacting the popular vote legislation include a trigger stating it doesn't take effect until X number of other states sign on (the North Carolina Senate adopted a similar bill last year with the same language)And as more states enact the legislation, and we get closer to that tipping point where it becomes "active", new states will be increasingly less likely to implement it b/c they don't want to be the ones bearing responsibility in the public mind if it turns out to be a disastrous idea
5/14/2008 6:56:44 PM
holy shitTGD is back
5/14/2008 7:29:47 PM
Why would you be less likely to do it if it's closer to the tipping point? I mean, come on, bandwagon.
5/14/2008 9:24:36 PM
good thing for the dems tthat they didn't do popular vote in the primaries!! lol, b/c hillary is winning popular now.
5/14/2008 9:28:12 PM
to win a popular vote, you only have to be ahead at the moment people vote.We also don't have an accurate count for that. Polls are inaccurate and we don't have a net count of x people voted for hillary in the primaries.
5/14/2008 10:20:16 PM
Popular vote:Obama 16,680,827---47.6% Clinton 16,710,298---47.7% SpreadClinton +29,471 +0.08%"head at the moment people vote."<-what the fuck are you trying to say
5/14/2008 10:28:35 PM
5/14/2008 10:32:55 PM
An interesting proposal to mend the electoral college from Arthur Schlesinger Jr. His idea is to award two extra electoral votes for the popular winners in each state. This would put an extra 102 votes into play while still maintaining the individual states as political units.
5/15/2008 12:08:41 AM
5/15/2008 12:49:08 AM
47.6 vs. 47.7 is pretty close. The degree to which I trust the polling method for these numbers dwarfs the difference. In other words, as far as I'm concerned, no one is winning the "popular opinion".But that's the thing, and election isn't a poll. I support a popular vote over some fucked up system for similar reasons to what HUR was saying there. But despite the quick shifts in public opinion, you must give people credit for taking the time to get out there and vote.Even if you were loosing 98% of the time and you come just a few thousand votes ahead when votes are cast, that's still a respectable choice by the voters. They physically went to the polling station and slightly more people voted for one candidate than for the other. That's about the fairest way you can do this.
5/15/2008 11:38:51 AM
It will not go into effect this nov. There are provisions in the law that make it go into effect when there are enough states and for the election following that one.
5/15/2008 11:46:37 AM
5/15/2008 12:24:38 PM
Well, let me know when it does become law because I need to get down to my district and start stuffing the ballot box. Afterall, the party that controls the state controls the election process and riggin' the system, which would be rediculous today since the vote is going to go that way anyway and winning by even more votes would be a waste of time. But, if we use the popular vote, I suspect the voting population of most states on paper would suddenly shoot up as democrat run-states find it hard to turn democrats away from voting due to something as silly as not being registered.
5/15/2008 12:43:14 PM
^Is that why North CArolina, which is controlled by Democrats is making the electoral college in North Carolina vote for the Democratic nominee?
5/15/2008 1:05:18 PM
I'm glad this country isn't a democracy. The electoral college is designed to protect us from the tyranny of demagogues and others who would trample our Constitution on the whim of the mob. The founding fathers were wise not to put the reigns of power directly in the hands of the public.Our populace is somewhat more educated now than it was then and our technology is better, but human nature hasn't changed.
5/15/2008 1:09:19 PM
^ that makes no sense.please cook me up an example where someone could get away with something bad in a complete majority election that could not be done with the electoral college.Seriously, I can't think of anything. Maybe somebody wanted to... implement national healthcare, which sounds good to a normal citizen who is too stupid to know that it would really destroy the nation. Oh, but the system will stop that irresponsibility right. It will not.I'm 100% for region based representation in the national government. Someone's gotta look out for, say the Raleigh area, in the national arena - and we have those people in the house and senate (even different levels of locality). But that doesn't mean we should group the votes together in some crazy way for a genuinely national election.
5/15/2008 4:36:01 PM
5/15/2008 7:11:50 PM
5/15/2008 8:46:28 PM
1) THAN, not THEN. Jeez, people.2)
5/15/2008 9:03:15 PM
5/15/2008 11:11:51 PM