Re: Decision 2016
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Your posts keep tallying by state, but the whole point of one person = one vote is that the state borders wouldn't matter. |
Re: Decision 2016
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Politicians already campaign in population centers. When they come and campaign in WI they make visits to Madison, Green Bay, Eau Claire, and Milwaukee. They aren't campaigning in Antigo or Phillips or other rural towns. The point is a national popular vote would encourage campaigns to go to population centers everywhere. The Republican might actually show up to San Fransisco and try to draw up some support and encourage the voters there. The electoral college just makes the voters in some states have way more of a say than the voters in other states. I cannot see a good reason I in WI should have more say about who the next president is than Dysole does, but that is the simple truth of the current system. A national popular vote would mean every single individual has the same power to influence who the next president will be. And I would argue that would be good for a democracy. The electoral college adds unnecessary obfuscation to the entire election process and all it manages to do is benefit the voters in swing states. |
Re: Decision 2016
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The article did address the California issue and its comparison was that Trump won 'appalachifornia'. The problem is that it's not an apples to apples comparison- 'appalachifornia' is conglomeration of *14* states. This only proves how ironic the statement I highlighted actually is. Trump had to take 14 states just to equal a single blue state. That's all I was pointing out, not whether or not I agree with it or disagree with it, nor should you assume that I'm in favor of the electoral college because it helped "my guy this time". Raider30 |
Re: Decision 2016
People from some places would balance out the votes from some other places. Given one person one vote, the location of the state line is irrelevant.
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Re: Decision 2016
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If we had a national popular vote, it would be equally correct to say that Clinton's supporters in Wyoming, West Virginia, and Idaho provided the key votes, as it would be to say the voters in California did, because all the votes would count the same. This seems kind of obvious, once you say it, but it bears repeating. Quote:
I do wonder how differently this subject would be discussed if Kerry had won the EC and lost the popular vote (which came fairly close to happening). |
Re: Decision 2016
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- Raider30 |
Re: Decision 2016
In most elections of chief executives - I would guess that all 50 out of 50 governors, I would guess most county-level executives - the election is one person, one vote. Everyone in Baltimore County votes once for County Executive; the winner is the one with the most votes. Everyone in the State of Maryland votes for governor; the winner is (surprise!) the one who gets the most votes. That's the way it normally works.
Even in congressional races, it works the same way. Members of the House are the ones who got the most votes in their districts; members of the Senate are the ones who got the most votes state-wide. You're asking about the two houses of Congress? Well, the framers set it up so there are two. The Senate, in which every state has two representatives, and the House, in which the numbers are proportional to population. Even those guys, though, only get to serve because they were elected by the home jurisdictions in a one person/one vote system. The EC is kind of dumb. I mean, I'm not trying to change it, and it doesn't help one party over another. But it's just a peculiar relic, that sometimes puts its thumb on the scales one way or the other. |
Re: Decision 2016
I still think the problems of electoral college swinginess and therefore the importance of swing states is much better solved through proportional allocation of current electoral votes. This eliminates any concern of candidates running up the national popular vote in one particular area of the country and keeps candidates campaigning for all 50 states.
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Re: Decision 2016
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And a win for anyone requires lots of votes from other places, obviously Hillary doesn't win JUST from California but I thought the whole discussion in this tread about the EC was pointing out how it makes votes disproportionately count. Would this even be a discussion if Trump had lost MI, PA, WI, and OH for 64 votes but had won CA and WA for 67? I doubt it or at least it wouldn't have carried on for quite so long. Or perhaps if the situation were reversed and Trump won the popular vote but lost the EC? Again I doubt it, or at least it wouldn't have carried on for quite so long(except for maybe Trump himself would have complained vociferously I think we can all agree. Raider30 |
Re: Decision 2016
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How is counting each individual vote as one vote "disproportionate"? It's really odd to think that. The total voting power of California would be proportional to the number of voters in California. Seriously, take a step back and think about what "proportional" and "disproportionate" actually mean. Quote:
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Nobody cared that the Electoral College strongly favored Barack Obama both years, because he won the popular vote too. the EC being slanted towards him just kept the EC from being close. Similarly, nobody cared when the EC favored Kerry, because GWB won by enough to overcome his Electoral College disadvantage. People only care about the Electoral College when it differs from the popular vote. This makes sense, because we all intuitively understand that the popular vote means something. There's a reason why we use it to decide every other election, after all. Quote:
No, there would be super loud complaints. They might be tempered slightly when coming from those who had argued the opposite way 16 years ago, but by and large it would be the same story. If anything Trump would make it even louder. He had been priming his supporters to protest the election as "rigged", after all, until he won. It would be easy for him to fit the EC into that narrative. |
Re: Decision 2016
I just encountered an interesting study. I find the results of this study, if true, depressing, and (depending on how cynical I presently imagine myself) I find them both surprising and unsurprising. Key quote from abstract:
"small payments for correct and "don't know" responses sharply diminish the gap between Democrats and Republicans in responses to "partisan" factual questions": http://www.nber.org/papers/w19080 I hope everyone here is more intellectually honest than the subjects of the paper's experiments. |
Re: Decision 2016
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To be fair I don't necessarily know what impact it would have for certain either. But I think we can safely say it would not incentivize campaigns to actually campaign across all the states. In particular I suspect this would heavily disadvantage small states that have only 5 electoral votes or less roughly. The reason is simple--in those states it would take some truly staggering vote margins to change the outcome. Let's just focus on Wyoming for a moment. It has three electoral votes. Just looking back quickly it seems that the Republican candidate typically gets about 60-80 percent of the vote while the Democrat gets 20-40. Of course third party and what not throws this off a bit, but it doesn't impact my point. Even though that is a shift of quite a lot percentage wise, in a state like Wyoming that wouldn't have any impact on the allocation of electoral votes--the Republican would always get 2 and the Democrat 1. In comparison, California with its 55 electoral votes will matter far more for you actually stand to pick up 5 or more votes depending on the exact margin. It's much easier to pick up 2 percentage points over your opponent and therefore gain an electoral vote than it is to gain 33 percentage points to gain one electoral vote. Therefore your system will instead shift the fight to very populous states I would predict. It may slightly widen the number of states that matter and it will shift around what states matter, but I think issues would still abound. |
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