West Virginian Mayor Might Defy Popular Vote 308
gleam writes "A maverick Republican mayor in West Virginia is reportedly considering not casting his vote in the Electoral College for Bush, even if Bush wins the popular vote there. South Charleston Mayor Richie Robb says, 'I know that among some in my own party, what I'm discussing would be considered treasonous, but I'm not going to cheerlead us down the primrose path when I know we're being led in the wrong direction.' It wouldn't be the first time a West Virginian Elector defied the popular vote: In 1988 an Elector cast her vote for Michael Dukakis's running mate, Lloyd Bentsen, even though Dukakis won the state's popular vote."
Stand behind the president? What? (Score:2)
This is a telling statement. Shouldn't Capehart be more concerned about this guy representing the popular vote, in other words, the voice of the majority of people of West Virginia...instead of standing "behind the president?"
tcd004
Re:Stand behind the president? What? (Score:2)
Re:Stand behind the president? What? (Score:3, Insightful)
If Bush doesn't win the popular vote there, then the Democrat electors will cast the votes in the electorial college.
There are two sets of electoral college voters... one for each party.
As an outsider... (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, your above comment. What would happen if an independant candidate won a state? Who would be the electoral college voter?
Re:As an outsider... (Score:2)
Re:As an outsider... (Score:3, Informative)
Every candidate who is on the ballot provides a slate of electors. So whoever wins sends their people to the electoral college.
-Esme
Re:As an outsider... (Score:5, Insightful)
Also note that today's Republican Party is a third party. They killed off the Whig party a long time ago. It is not impossible for that to happen again. If the Democrats don't shed their radical leftists*, it may happen again really soon.
(Bi-Partisan note: Part of the reason the Republicans are doing so well is that they analysed their failures during the Clinton era and marginalized some groups like the Christian Right that were detrimental to them. (Criticisms that the Republicans are controlled by them are now out of date.) Hopefully, after Kerry tanks the Democrats will do some housecleaning and re-align with the center a little better. I could never vote for Kerry, but if they put forth someone who doesn't have to pander to the loony left, I might consider it. (Bi-Partison note the second: Yes, I would say the Republicans shook off their loony right. "Loonies" here are people who consider a person or position 100% evil with no chance of facts changing their mind.))
Re:As an outsider... (Score:3, Informative)
*Did you mean your note on "Loonies"? Maybe your definition of radical differs from the one generally well understood in most politcal or social theory, but "radical" theory is not required at all to have to do with changing one's mind or considerations on evil. It
Re:As an outsider... (Score:3, Informative)
I define "loonies" as I did, as I also define "liberal" and "conservative" damn near everytime I use them, because there are so many definitions of the words that when you see them in isolation, they are worse than meaningless. On my blog, I have alternately used
Re:As an outsider... (Score:2)
Anyway.
Re:As an outsider... (Score:5, Informative)
One example, politicalcompass.com [politicalcompass.com] puts Kerry nearly center on a graph of left/right and also of authoritarian/libertarian, with GWB further right and authoritarian than Kerry.
A differnt type of world leader, such as Ghandi and Nelson Mandella fall left and libertarian.
In that light, Kerry's the more "centered" to the world, which GWB is the radical. The far left in the Dems are probably quite a way over on the graph, but could be either authoritarian or libertarian depending on their views.
Of interesting note, virtually no world leaders fall in the Libertarian/Right quadrant - a rare person indeed.
Re:As an outsider... (Score:3, Informative)
politicalcompass.ORG [politicalcompass.org]
Oops.
Re:As an outsider... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Stand behind the president? What? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Stand behind the president? What? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Stand behind the president? What? (Score:2)
Wild prediction (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
Re:Wild prediction (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
This happend in West Virginia in 1988, and it was postulated that this might happen in 2000, because Gore won the popular vote.
Only about half of the states bind electorates to their candidates -- through their state constitutions.
Part of the reason for the electoral college is because us "common folk" [cstation.info] ar
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
If you read the Constitution, you'll find that state legislatures are responsible for determing which slate of electors goes to the electoral college. They have traditionally done it by a popular vote, but they can do it any way they like.
This is yet another reason why Bush won Florida in 2000. The FL legislature declared its intention to set aside the popular vote results because of the controversy
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
I realize that, but in the information age, the rationale for the electoral college is antiquated at best, and has NOTHING to do with states rights. The current implementation of it in most states is little more than a gross perversion of what the founders intended.
Turning an argument about the electoral college into a states' rights argument is patently absurd.
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
Huh? It's ENTIRELY about states' rights. States elect the president, not people.
If Minnesota's state legislature decided to, THEY could choose the electors, and forego an election altogether. Or they could let the governor decide. It's up to the state.
There is NOTHING in our constitution about the people electing a president. Indeed for the first few elections many states did not let the people vote for pre
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
Who would you rather surrender some of your power to, the states or the political parties?
Consider: an election is supposed to be about the people having a say in their government. But that "say" they have in government is limited to those names that appear on the ballot, and control of what that ballot looks like is currently in the hands of the political parties. Are you a Republican who'd rather see Cheney as president? Too bad. A Democ
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
I may or may not be considered a Democrat and I fer damn sure am not voting for Bush but at the same time I don't think this guy has the right to go against the wishes of the majority (assuming they even win of course
That said I think the whole electoral process is a crock and half. I understand that it was put in place to "protect the rights of the states" but I don't see how a popular vote real
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
The electoral college - and particularly its all or nothing stakes - forces the candi
Re:Wild prediction (Score:3, Interesting)
This happens every four years. Somebody who's unfamiliar with election law and history comes along and says, "I ain't votin' fer that one no matter what my constichency say." And then he gets yanked according to the "faithless elector" law and makes a big squawk for about 20 minutes. Then everybody forgets for four years.
I don't get it. (Score:2)
If the elector's role is not just electing the president and involves other things then since this particular elector has _announced_publicly_ he might not vote for Bush, arguably if the people still vote for the elector it means they want him in for the other things he does, and they're not bothered if he doesn't vote the party line.
A
Re:I don't get it. (Score:3, Insightful)
We don't vote for the electors, we actually vote for the presidential candidates. The popular vote within a state determines which party's electors are then sent to the electoral college.
Yes, it made more sense two hundred years ago when news and electors traveled by horse. However there are still some benefits to the indirect election of a president. Smaller
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
Lack of any beliefs or willingness to stand up for them seems to be one of the fundamental problems with US politics.
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
It's too bad that you never took a government or a political science class. Or cracked a book, evidently. Or know thing one about American governance or politics.
Please recognize the limits of your knowledge. You don't hear me telling you who to elect as your next grand high moose herder, or whatthefuckever.
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
In fact, 24 states have no repercussions for an elector voting against the winning ticket.
There's also some discussion about whether faithless elector laws are even constitutional.
-gleam
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2)
Granted, that's kinda how Bush got in office. But two wrongs don't make a right. The electoral college is ridiculous. Popular vote should always determine who's president.
Re:Wild prediction (Score:2, Insightful)
I also think that the President should never be chosen by simple popular vote in a nation of almost 300 million people divided into 50 different states which each have interests that are sometimes in conflict with one another. Popular vote alone would produce a President of The Northeast and Southwest Coasts in charge o
Hmm.. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hmm.. (Score:2)
The Electoral College in Action (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Electoral College in Action (Score:2, Funny)
Total nonsense. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is exactly what the electoral college is designed for...
I am really getting sick of people spouting this BS in articles like this lately.
The electoral college system was designed because 200 years ago, it was the only logical way to do things. You didn't have cars, planes, or busses. All you had was horses.
Imagine a country-wide vote in 1800. Imagine the mountains and mountains of paper that would all have to be delivered to Washington by horseback. Imagine the number of postman involved, any one of which could easily be picked off, or bribed. Imagine how long it would take to count.
The electoral college was developed so that you only had to send one person / state to Washington. The individual states could each count the votes in their state, then they know what to tell their guy to vote for. it is the only thing that made sense logistically.
Nowadays, however, all the reasons for it are gone. Your argument is rubbish - why are the electoral college voters more suited for judging character than the populace as a whole? I wouldn't trust most of the politicians I know with keys to my house, let alone keys to the country's vote.
Checks and Balances (Score:4, Insightful)
It's just another layer of "check and balance" that's been built into this system. I'm not surprised that you (and I imagine many like-minded people) want to throw it out as I'm sure it seems arcane, but you must more carefully consider it. A lot of people said the same thing about US Senators, that the people should be trusted to choose them directly instead of letting the legislatures choose them. Are we better off now with direct election of Senators, or worse off?
I'd tend to say that we are worse off now. Senators operate largely on the same basis as the House: whoever brings home the most bacon gets re-elected. It also means the legislative body represents the interests of the people only and not of the states. While the Founders were distrustful of power and authority, there were also distrustful of allowing direct control of all government by the people as a whole.
I think you need to do a little reconsidering of your position. After having read on several of the Founders, I doubt they were more concerned with election fraud than direct elections.
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:3, Insightful)
In most every other democracy in the that has a two-house system, the upper house is appointed - not elected, and members serve for life (or until they retire).
While the idea of an unelected house may seem un-democratic, it has many attributes that make it a much better "buffer" than an elected upper house. Since the body appointing the members is of a pa
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
The problem with Senators in the US is that they are elected. Thus, they really serve no purpose at all. They are just another copy of the lower house.
While the idea of an unelected house may seem un-democratic, it has many attributes that make it a much better "buffer" than an elected upper house. Since the body appointing the members is of a particular party, they will appoint people who favor their views. however, since a member of Senate serves for life, over the long term, rather than have on
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
Moreover, ensuring that the legislative branch is elected rather than appointed is an important check on the executive branch, since the executive branch chooses the justices of the Supreme Court (the judicial branch). Since the Senate must approve the choice of justices that the executive branch makes, it's important that the Senate is not chosen by the executive branch as well
You are missing the point. The fact that the executive branch chooses the legislative branch is all but irrelevant in a House of
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:3, Interesting)
Instead of appointing Senators, how about only allowing taxpayors to elect them. If the net of what you
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
As I said in the post, if you're doing almost any kind of job, you're paying taxes. They might be FICA (Social Security and Medicare), but you're
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
Being a tax payor means that you are doing something for the economy - you're earning money at some level. Whether it's flipping hamburgers, farming, programming, or living off of interest from a trust fund or a life's savings - you're doing something that has benefitted the economy.
If you're not paying taxes, you're not. You're either cheating and not
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
Look back up earlier in the thread - that guy was advocating the lifetime appointment of senators - this is at least a bit better.
I'm also just saying that this should be confined to the US Senate - would have nothing to do with the house.
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
Those whose sole income comes from municipal bonds, federal savings bonds, or t-bills.
Those who can afford to structure their income
Small business people who have a bad year and have no income or a loss.
Those whose entire income is from disability or social security payments.
People who make less than $450 in self employment income (and nothing else)
Those who make less than $5000(?) in unearned income.
(in many years) Farmers whose net assistanc
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
You just don't want groups who you don't agree with to get a vote which isn't what the US is about. But I bet they would love you in china or cuba.
Re:Checks and Balances (Score:2)
Having an appointed Senate would have no effect on this. The argument over whether or not the US Senate should be appointed by state legislature or appointed by popular vote is really more about whether you lean more towards a pure democracy or a more republican system of government.
Wh
Repeal the 17th Amendment? (Score:3, Informative)
Popular election of Senators may be a bad idea.
"How", you say? "How dare you!", some of you scream. Well, how long have we been complaining that real statesmanship is missing from Congress? The Senate was supposed to be the wise check on the popular passions of the day when the Constituion was written. The Senate was not supposed to be anti-democratic. It was not meant to block the will of the House, those p
Re:Repeal the 17th Amendment? (OT) (Score:2)
John McCain. Most everyone I know loves John McCain, even the staunch Democrats (like myself).
Still, I have to agree that the current political climate makes it damn hard for a politican to get away with sticking with his convictions and speaking his mind rather than rolling over and doing what is demanded by party and fashion. (McCain is another great example of this.)
Re:Repeal the 17th Amendment? (Score:2)
I can think of a couple dozen from both parties, and would not put either of the two you named on that list.
A couple "moderate" power brokers pissing in the pools of their own parties could not possibly shine as brightly as a Barry Goldwater or a Hubert H. Humphrey.
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:2)
This is the same kind of reason why we even have a President, which is to make the ignorant masses think we have a king.
I'm just sayin'... is all.
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:2)
Democracy is nothing more than mob rule. The founding fathers wanted a REPUBLIC. A nation of semi-autonomous united states. Within the states, direct popular votes were expected. It was on the FEDERAL level that power was to be limited. Everything the founders did from the bill of rights to the electoral college, to the appointing of senators by stat
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:4, Informative)
I really suggest you read the Federal Papers before you make yourself look uneducated. There was no single reason the electoral process was chosen. Distance and communication was one. Another was to avoid foreign powers having an effect on the election of the President. They used words like "prostitue the vote" and assumed an Elector would be better educated then the general public and could avoid foriegn manipulation. Yet another reason was to balance the small states vs the large states. Don't belive me, then take a look at the information from the US Government on the electoral college. Also note that the electoral college is made up of the number of Senators and Represenitives.
Nowdays one of the reasons for the electoral college is gone, but not all of them.
Then why... (Score:3, Insightful)
Then why wasn't the system codified to require the elector to merely report the majority vote for the state, and not allow him/her the option to ignore the will of the people?
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:4, Insightful)
As it's been taught to me, and from what I've read of the Constitution and other important documents from the Founding Father's, the critical reason for the Electoral College is that we are a collection of states. It is split for exactly the same reasons we have both the House and the Senate, where in the House each state gets votes according to their population, but in the Senate it was one state, two votes.
The reason for the split (and also the reason that both the Vice President and President can't come from the same state), is that the original colonies we're afraid that the most populace (I believe Virgina and Pennsylvania at the time) would dominate Rhode Island (which by the way, isn't the original name of the state), Connecticut, Delaware and Maryland. They wouldn't have ratified the Constitution. It was a political compromise (just like requiring that all of the appropriations of money start in the House of Representatives is). If we didn't have an electoral college any guy who promised huge benefits to a few densely populated states would win out, and abuse the other smaller states.
It's still protecting us today, because otherwise carrying California, Texas, New York, Massachusates, and a handful of other very densely populated areas would be all you had to do. In fact, to see this, go find the chart for the election results by county from 2000 (I can't find a link, but I remember roughly what it looked like). It looked almost exactly like a photograph of the US at night from space. All the really dark areas won Bush, all the really light areas were for Gore. It was an absolute landslide in for Bush in those terms. However, Gore carried the most populated areas. The founding father's feared such a diacotomy, it'd end up with a government who had no interest in representing a large group of people's interests, because they weren't popular enough. South and North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Nebraska, Iowa, Mississippi, New Mexico, and probably a few other states, would be vastly under represented precisely because they we're a minority.
The Founding Father's felt that the state was the proper unit to give authority to. We are a collection of States who band together for protection and bargining rights when dealing with foreign nations, and to facilitate resolutions to internal conflict. That's what the Federal Government original was designed to do. Read up on the Federalist system sometime. State's have authority.
I'll point out, that it's just as easy to bribe an electoral voter as it is a postman. Remember, that at the time the Founding Father's setup the government, there were not all the states that currently existed. I'd be shocked if it would have taken more then 3-4 weeks to travel the length and breadth of the country then, even on horse back. Remember people used to travel from the east coast to the West Coast on horseback in about 6 months (you could only travel during warm weather, and hence and to get across the Rockies within a relatively specific time frame). There wasn't a state west of West Virgina at the time. It's also why states have from the first week of November until Dec 18, of the year to get the electoral college votes to Washington D.C.
Kirby
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:2)
Does anyone really believe that anymore? I sure don't.
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:3, Informative)
Alaska
D.C.
Delaware
Montana
South Dakota
North Dakota
Vermont
and Wyoming
all get +16 electors base almost entirely on their Senate representation and not their population. 16 electors is like the smaller states getting Indiana and Oregon for free. D.C. however, can't have any more electors than the least popula
Re:Total nonsense. (Score:2)
Checks and balances.
Re:The Electoral College in Action (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously though, since I've never been entirely clear exactly how electors are chosen, I just became interested enough to look it up [fec.gov]. Interesting that we as common voters are not casting our votes for president and vice president. We are casting them for electors. And the ballot has choices between "Electors for X" and "Electors for Y", whose names have been submitted by the various political parties.
It is the electors' prerogative to vote their consciences. At the same time, if Mayor Robb was chosen as a Bush elector by the Republican Party, I assume it was with the understanding that he would vote for Bush. Either he's changed his mind since becoming an elector, or else he became a Bush elector without ever intending to vote for Bush. Either way, I'm not sure I agree with his decision to go back on the "understood" agreement that he would vote for Bush. But it is his decision.
Actually, I like the way Maine and Nebraska choose their electors. Instead of each party choosing a slate of electors that everyone in the state votes for, there are two statewide electors plus one elector chosen from each Congressional district. I think the electors would be much more representative of the overall will of the people if they were chosen this way, instead of on a statewide basis.
Re:The Electoral College in Action (Score:2)
Re:The Electoral College in Action (Score:2)
But if it goes to percentage, it will almost always be 5-4. Which means if you win Colorado, you get 1 more vote than if you lost it. So its worth becomes 1 instead of nine.
Re:The Electoral College in Action (Score:2)
Not a bad idea overall, but remember that many states have districts that are gerrymandered to disproportionatel
Re:The Electoral College in Action (Score:3, Insightful)
So the next Hitler only has to bribe the voters in the electoral college and not the whole population? Interesting.
A deeper meaning? (Score:3, Interesting)
Hahah I said may not count - I almost forgot about last election!
Re:A deeper meaning? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think this will open any more eyes; any such closed eyes are probably on corpses. Everyone else is required to understand their government as part of high school.
Re:A deeper meaning? (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe you are mistaken. Presidents elected with a popular minority are not the result of electors ignoring the "recommendation". It is a results of the winner take all nature of determining which elect
The Electoral College (Score:5, Interesting)
The electors are charged with voting for the President - the President is elected by this group of people (much like the Holy Roman Emperor was elected by a select group of German/Italian nobles). The people technically vote for electors.
Electors are "pledged" to vote for who the people they represent voted for - but they aren't required. This (electors voting for someone other than the person the popular vote chose) has happened several times in the past, although it has never affected the outcome of the election.
Several reasons have been postulated for the Electoral College system. One, it's a check on the stupidity of the people - make sure a dicatorial demagogue isn't elected. Another reason was that the Founding Fathers didn't trust the communications of their time. For example, if, after the popular election, it was found out that the President-elect was a serial killer, the electors could change their vote.
Re:The Electoral College (Score:2)
I think they were more concerned with resolving a tie.
Re:Why we have The Electoral College (Score:2)
Damn. /. is really broken (Score:2, Insightful)
1. I'm not in US, I don't really understand or care, really, who these people are. But I'm open to accept that Americans probably care about their politics. And they probably want it on their
2. A smart
3. I go to my preferences and check off both "Politics" (did anyone notice there are two?
4. As usual, politic
I call bullshit. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I call bullshit. (Score:2)
Re:I call bullshit. (Score:2)
I've been too lazy to report this as a bug; are others seeing this? I'd really like it better if the feature worked.
Re: (Score:2)
More should (Score:3, Interesting)
I believe electors should not be allowed to decide who they will vote for before the national election. Each party can put electors on the ballot, but each elector runs separately. It would increase representation. It would allow you to vote mostly democrats, but vote against the anti-gun democrats, if that is how you wish to vote!
After the polls close the electors gather together and come to an agreement (by the deadline in the constitution or it goes to congress). Since each electors is independent, electors can compromise on someone in the other party, but with important beliefs to shared with the other. (for example, a anti-abortion democrat)
The electoral college is there because a good leader may have to piss people off.
Issue in 1776 (Score:2)
"...a representative owes the People not only his industry, but his judgment, and he betrays them if he sacrifices it to their opinion."
Edmond Burke of the British Parliament
Quoted by Dr. Lyman Hall (GA), and thus was the Declaration of Independence signed, contrary to the vote in Georgia
The way it was intended (Score:3, Informative)
Article II, section 2, clause 2: Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be entitled in the Congress: but no Senator or Representative, or Person holding an Office of Trust or Profit under the United States, shall be appointed an Elector.
The legislature of a state chose the electors, not the people! The popular vote is just as important as the world-wide popular vote. It is irrelevant. All the states have delegated that responsibility to various systems. I believe Rhode Island and Maine appoint electors according to the proportion of the vote.
The electors assembled in their own states and chose two people to be president, one of which must not be from their state. (That's why Cheney moved to Wyoming and claimed residency there - he could not be voted as the second because he was a Texas resident.) They had to send the number of votes for each person, signed and sealed, to the federal government. Whereupon the president of the senate opens the envelopes and reads the votes. The one with the majority is the president. The second place is vice-president, and president of the senate. If there is a tie and both have majority, then the house decides who is president and who is vice-president. If no one gets a majority, then the house chooses one from the top five candidates. In the case the house is tied, the senate breaks the tie.
That's how the president was chosen at first. In fact, in the first election, nobody ran for president. However, George Washington won overwhelmingly. It was said that each of the electorates actually debated and took seriously their duty to choose a president. How I wish we elected representatives to choose the most important office in the land! And how I wish those people would debate and choose outside of the visibility of the people and legislatures the president!
Eventually, we got rid of the "second place is vice-president" rule by amendment because it always meant that the president of the senate was in opposition to the president, and the government was constantly gridlocked due to that.
When the Florida debacle occured, the Florida state legislature could've stepped in and changed the law permitting them to appoint electors without regard to the people's voice. That was their right under the constitution. Then they could've appointed their own electoral college and then sent them off to vote whichever way they pleased. However, because so few Americans have even read the simple document that our nation is built on, they refused to do so for fear of open rebellion. Instead, they allowed the courts to settle the matter.
Now, go read that document! You have to understand what is in it and what is not, and it is an easy read for techies like us. If we forget what checks and balances are in there, and why they are there, we are doomed to end up like France, Germany, Russia, or China one day.
Cases of faithless voting (Score:3, Informative)
The first clear case of the faithless elector happened in 1820, where one of James Monroe's electors voted for John Quincy Adams instead. Monroe carried every state in the Union, so the outcome was not affected.
In this century, there have been 7 faithless electors. The first was in 1948, when Strom Thurmond was running for president on the Dixiecrat platform. Preston Parks, a Truman elector for Tennessee, voted for Thurmond, who was a distant third in the popular vote. W.F. Turner, an elector for Adlai Stevenson, voted in 1956 for a local judge from his home district.
The first appearance of a faithless elector in a close election happened in the 1960 race between Nixon and Kennedy. An Oklahoma Kennedy elector named Henry D. Irwin voted instead for Harry F. Byrd, a senator from Virginia. Byrd ran as an independent and gained in addition all the 8 electoral votes from Mississippi and 6 of the 7 votes from Alabama. Reportedly Irwin, a southern Democrat, objected to Kennedy's civil rights policies. Although this election was very close, Irwin's vote did not affect the outcome.
In 1968 however, the independent candidate's appeal and his corresponding electoral votes almost did change the outcome. Lloyd Bailey, a North Carolina Nixon elector, voted instead for George Wallace, who ran as an independent. In this case, Wallace gained a total of 46 electoral votes, which came close to preventing either Nixon or Humphrey from getting the number needed to win.
In 1972, a Nixon elector named Roger L. McBride voted for the Libertarian candidate John Hospers. The publicity McBride received culminated in his own run for President in 1976, also as a Libertarian.
A Ford elector from Washington, Mike Padden, voted in 1976 for Ronald Reagan. Reagan has lost the party's nomination to Ford. The most recent case was in 1988, where Margarette Leach, a Democratic elector from West Virginia, voted for Democratis Vice-Presidential candidate Lloyd Bentsen instead. She said, "it was nice to make a mark on history... I wish every year somebody... would make a statement and it would be heard."
What happens when an elector is faithless? It turns out that only about half of the states have laws binding their electors to vote for the popular vote winner in their state. But wait, the situation is even worse. In the states that do bind their electors, either there is no penalty, or the penalties range from a fine ($1000 in Wisconsin) to conviction of a fourth-degree felony (New Mexico). And, although there are clear documented cases of faithless electors, no faithless elector has ever been punished. Of course, no faithless elector has ever changed the outcome of an election. So far.
This is a good thing (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2, Informative)
Unfucking-believable.
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:3, Insightful)
The man in the story said that he's going to use the power he has in the election to make the choice he believes is right.
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
Edmund Burke once said, "Your representative owes you, not just his industry only, but his judgement; and he betrays instead of serves you if he sacrifices it to your opinion."
Thing is, electors are not representatives. They are not elected. Their only purpose in the system is to carry news of the way their state (or district, in those states that do it that way) voted in the popular election.
He's not "standing up for what he believes in." He's suborning his role in the system to try to asse
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
Here's an idea: Find some anti-Kerry news and submit it. Then, when the editors have rejected every anti-Kerry article you've been submitting for weeks on end, you can bitch that they're biased. It could be that the only reason there are all anti-Bush stories is that's all that has been submitted so far.
As for those that are bitching about the Politics section bei
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
DAldredge says [slashdot.org] that he's submitted some, and AC here [slashdot.org] claims to have submitted several pro-Bush articles, along with one that has to do with the recent Venezuelan elections. I can't see the rejected submiss
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
Re:The Tally for Today (Score:2)
Look at the swift-boat liars^H^H^H^H veterans adds. One side is substantiated by the record and everyone else including some of those that now changed their story. The other is unsubstantiated bs.
You don't give unsubstantiated BS the same airtime you give sound stories.
Like someone else said, the facts are biased against bush.
It's like the daily show said... (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, the facts are biased against Bush. (Score:2, Informative)
By Graydon Carter / Independent
1 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security issued between 20 January 2001 and 10 September 2001 that mentioned al-Qa'ida.
104 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned Iraq or Saddam Hussein.
101 Number of Bush administration public statements on National security and defence in the same period that mentioned missile defence.
65
Re:It's like the daily show said... (Score:2)
Re:It's like the daily show said... (Score:2)
Re:First (Score:2)
Re:What if it was Kerry? (Score:2, Insightful)
It will likely kill the electoral college, it will further decrease voting turnout and it will be a serious albatrose around the neck of the elected president