Electoral College Abolition Amendment and IRV Bill 329
scoobrs writes "Two bills, H.J.R. 109 and H.R. 5293, were introduced in the US House by Congressman Jesse Jackson, Jr. (D-IL). The first is a constitutional amendment abolishing the electoral college. The latter is a bill providing for instant runoff voting in all federal elections by 2008."
Thanks! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Thanks! (Score:5, Informative)
The electoral college does need to remove winner take all...but this aint gonna solve that.
And why, oh why, did they choose IRV? Possibly one of the worst systems they could have chosen. Alright, you could make an arguement that it might be better than the current system, but its vastly inferior to concordent(which is unfortunately complex) and my personal favorite, Approval Voting.
On the bright side, Im glad people are taking note of this, though I fear this will be used as a reason to ignore other pushes for election reform.
Re:Thanks! (Score:4, Informative)
I think the electoral college works fine, and the state-level winner-take-all approach forces candidates to appeal to a broader base of voters in most states (New York and California being anomalies in which very large urban areas completely dominate the whole state).
Likewise, I see nothing wrong with the present voting system. It's simple, and it works. While I don't disagree that this can limit national support for third party candidates in marginal situations, I am also fairly convinced that the existing style of voting works plenty well provided that there is broad enough support for the third party in the first place. Which is to say, if a third party candidate were to provide a platform that was interesting to a broad enough number of Americans, I am pretty sure that they could win the Presidency. Especially if they can cough up the funds to campaign effectively.
Re:Thanks! (Score:3, Insightful)
Perot was a bit of a nut, but I think the Reform Party might have gone somewhere if he hadn't been seen as sapping strength away from the '92 Bush Sr. ca
Re:Thanks! (Score:2)
While it's simple, your claim that IRV removes tactical voting is a lie.
Yes, it means that if you /really/ do prefer Nader, you can put him as your number 1, and still not give a vote to Bush by putting Kerry as your number 2. But if you EVER expect Nader (or another 3rd party candidate) to have a realistic chance of winning, IRV can
Re:Thanks! (Score:2)
Dependance on the Republicrats to endanger their own duopoly is nothing short of foolish, and certainly its difficult to argue that a third party needs to get 15% on polls, massive amounts of signatures in each state, huge amounts of cash, etc.... You may advocate a grass-roots effort. Thats exactly what the green and libertarian parties are
Runoff (Score:2)
Instead of having multiple parties choosing sides to form a majority after a general election, we have the multiple factions choosing one of two sides before a primary elec
Re:Thanks! (Score:2)
Actually, on second though, I'll be urging my congressman to vote for IRV. Not because I like it, or think its a good system. I don't believe they'll pass it, but I do want support expressed for alternate voting systems. I'll be sure to mention approval voting in my call(s) as well.
Re:Thanks! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Thanks! (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm for George Bush, and this year it looks like there is a strong chance of him losing the elec
Re:Thanks! (Score:2)
Yes, that would be good. It would make things very fair, and still increase the incentive for each person to vote.
But it won't happen! No one will agree to redraw the states into new, even shapes. And since that won't happen, the current system means that residents of Utah and Massachusett have exactly ZERO chance of their votes mattering. Without the EC, their value
Re:Thanks! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Thanks! (Score:2)
BUT the IRV is at least well intentioned and I think with enough pushing it could be changed to require Condorcet or Approval. (If we are going to spend a ton of money we might as well go all the way and use Condorcet)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
IRV is worse than popular (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:IRV is worse than popular (Score:2)
Re:IRV is worse than popular (Score:2)
I wasn't referring to elections of the Electoral College, I was thinking of Congress (the election of which Congress can control without a constitutional amendment). If certain federal laws weren't in the way, the states themselves could decide to use new voting methods or even set up multi-seat districts [fairvote.org] without having to drag states that don't want to a
IRV is NOT worse than popular (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:IRV is NOT worse than popular (Score:3, Insightful)
Rating one candidate *higher* can actually make them lose. This should *never* happen, it's exactly the opposite of what a voting method should do.
I'll give you sources if you can't find them on your own.
Eventually, because of these problems, the two major politcal parties are justgoing to be saying "Put our candidate absolutely first or else you're going to be plagued byt hese problems and your vote won
Re:IRV is worse than popular (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm trying to imagine sitting down with your "average voter" and explaining how "A defeated B, B defeated C, C defeated A, and due to these complex and technical rules of ambiguity resolution, B is really the winner." She'll decide that the system is just picking the guy the ballot counters wanted, and never voting again.
Re:IRV is worse than popular (Score:2)
Anyway several people have done a better job down in the discussion and I tried to compare it to Approval voting (the other method that seems to be popular).
Re:IRV is worse than popular (Score:2)
It's only more complicated on the back-end.
So yeah, it's hard to explain how it works, but the UI is nice, and that was enough for Windows.
Why IRV? (Score:5, Informative)
I mean, why would you want to go with a voting scheme, that makes possible situation that adding votes for a candidate causes him to lose, and converselly, removing votes for a candidate causes him to win?
Why not go directly with "aproval" or even "condorcet"?
Robert
PS Go, read the above link to find out what's exactly wrong with IRV.
Re:Why IRV? (Score:5, Interesting)
Reformists are fixated on IRV because that's what the public will actually agree to. Systems like Condorcet's Method voting [electionmethods.org] are technically superior but use a lot of math and are complicated to explain. If you can't explain it in a thirty second sound bite you won't get able to get enough popular support to get it passed.
The other reason to support IRV is that IRV is a stepping-stone to Condorcet's Method. Current voting procedures and equipment are not able to support IRV or Condorcet's Method. Once we implement IRV we will have the procedures and voting equipment necessary to use any number of superior vote counting schemes, including Condorcet's Method. So by introducing IRV we will have built the framework to allow a move to Condorcet's Method. Then all we have to do is convince the public to support Condorcet's Method--and since we already have the equipment, no one can complain that it will be too expensive to switch.
Re:Why IRV? (Score:5, Interesting)
Rank your candidates in order of preference, just like IRV. You are allowed to have ties.
If a candidate would beat any other candidate in a one-on-one race, that candidate will win.
If there is a group of candidates such that any candidate in the group would beat any candidate outside the group in a one-on-one race, then a candidate in that group will win.
That's about 20 seconds. (10 seconds if you leave out the last sentence).
I agree that IRV should make the process of switching to Condorcet simpler, though, and at least it's better than plurality.
Re:Why IRV? (Score:4, Interesting)
2) "Just like IRV" means that you require the whole thirty second soundbite explaining IRV to happen first, so you exceeded your thirty seconds that way. Actually I think IRV will fail based on that criterion too - thirty seconds is longer than any quote I've seen on the news from any of the presidential candidates, or on any other topic for that matter. I can't remember seeing anything as complex as IRV *ever* explained on the news.
3) Approval voting: "Just like today except you get to vote for as many candidates as you like". That's less than a *5* second soundbite. Why go to all the trouble of explaing IRV in the first place, when (a) it sucks and (b) approval is so much simpler to explain?
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2, Insightful)
IRV may fail mathematical tests, but I haven't heard of any _realistic_ situation in which it fails. I know, as do we all, of several very important realistic ways that plurality has failed.
That said, I don't think I would be opposed to Condorcet voting. (Howe
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
I'll try.
Everyone ranks their candidates: I like Alice better than Bob better than Charlie. I hate Zod so much I don't even bother to rank him at all.
This vote can then be re-worded as a series of A/B comparisons: I like Alice better
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
Re:Why IRV? (Score:3, Informative)
No, because the "A > B, B > C, C > D" comparisons are inferred from the ranking. You only need to rank them all at once.
So a 25-person race would just have 25 names listed, and you put a "1" next to the person you like best, "2" next to your second choice, etc.
That said, I'm not sure how Condercet works for a multi-seat election like a county council. I
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2, Informative)
Pick the winner as per normal.
Delete him from all ballots.
Repeat until there are no more slots to fill.
(The same repetitive approach can work with concordet, plurality, or IRV)
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
You don't have to rank them all just as many people as you want; you are allowed to rank people at the same level even.
Actually a better way to explain condorcet uses a grid with all the candidates down the left side and then all across the top.
The directions read: "Mark a box if you prefer the candidate in the left column to the candidate on the corresponding top row" or something like that.
The problem is that such a ballot is complicated to print and han
Re:Why IRV? (Score:3, Informative)
Not the way I'd explain it but it is pass-able. Personally I prefer simplified examples.
Why I'm NEVER going to support IRV in a National Election:
We used to use run-off voting in our Fraternity [kettering.edu] Elections before we swapped to Condorcet. What run-off voting does is eleminate compromise candidates early on. In a national election this will favor the more extream candidates over the moderate ones.
Example:
We have three candidates
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
Personally I know the mathamatical problems of IRV, but if done on a state by state level for president, and then combined with Electoral College,
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
That's why I like Condorcet (or perhaps we could call it Fair Voting). However it is important to admit it's short commings.
In other words it would all balance out
I'm not convinced.
Personally I'd like to see three changes:
Re:Why IRV? (Score:4, Interesting)
That said, I believe what we really need is a two-step process. First get IRV in place, simply because we probably could, as a first-level reform. Once the American voter is used to it, and sees that the sky hasn't fallen, perhaps 20 years down the road, go for something better. A land that renamed French Fries to Freedom Fries won't trust its voting to a system with a name like Condorcet. (I need to learn more about other schemes. I did check your link, though I don't necessarily agree with everything I read there.) Personally, I believe IRV *is* an improvement over simple majority, and that most of the stones cast against it are odd corner-cases.
Re:Why IRV? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
But how the heck is Approval complex? Anyone who's ever used a computer UI can have it explained in a single sentence "The ballot's a list of checkboxes instead of radio buttons". Even without that, it's pretty easy to say "Just check off as many names as you like", or "It's just like what we have now except you can vote for more than one person".
It's actually *simpler* than the current sys
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
Re:Why IRV? (Score:3, Informative)
Ah, that seems much easier than what I just wrote. Lemme try and clean it up:
20% vote: Nader, Kerry, Bush
35% vote: Kerry, Nader, Bush
45% vote: Bush, Kerry, Nader
You
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
15% Nader, Kerry, Bush
5% Nader, Bush, Kerry
35% Kerry, Nader, Bush
45% Bush, Kerry, Nader
Now you have a two-way tie, with Bush and Kerry both getting 50%, and we are right back where we were.
Furthermore, some Kerry voters (the so-called "security moms") would probably prefer Bush over Nader, and some Bush voters (angry vets) would probaby pr
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
I'd like to point out that with ONE more vote in any dirrection there will not be a tie. Also with more candidates this is less likely to happen and there are more then three presidential candidates.
I'd futher li
Re:Why IRV? (Score:2)
Once they can win
Getting to that point is a huge accomplishment.
Personally I'm all for changing to Condorcet but I'm not going to get upset if we go with Approval instead.
From the makers of the Butterfly Ballot (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow, talk about being optimistic about the voting public.
Even if IRV is the most "accurate", I think Approval [boulder.co.us] voting is lot simpler to understand, especially since it is used in many of the local elections (school board, etc), so it is familiar to most voters.
- Tony
Re:From the makers of the Butterfly Ballot (Score:2, Insightful)
Actually IRV is the least "accurate". (Score:2)
We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:5, Insightful)
What I WOULD recommend is working on a better way to handle multi-party elections such as runoffs, etc.
In addition, Congress should instead be working harder to develop better solutions to validate voters, better solutions to develop more secure, reliable voting methods, and to develop legislation that eliminates the current loopholes in campaign funding laws.
Remember that the United States is NOT a Democracy, but a Federal Republic. To change that is to change the fundamental foundations of this country.
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't like the idea of making the minority candidate, who's party color is blood red, commander in chief of our armed forces while at the same time giv
Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
Senate - each state gets two Senators, Senators are the STATE's representative's, not the people of the states - that's the house. So, each state gets an equal 2% respresentation of the entire Senate.
House - OK, now the House does represent the people broken up into little districts. But how on god's green earth can you say that the House gives larger representation to smaller populations? I live in Delaware, we have one Representative. That means 1 vote out of 435 in the House. California on the other hand has 56 Representatives. If it were just between us two states, California would win every time. And furthermore, Resprentatives are awarded per population (I don't have the numbers offhand, but it's somewhere around a million citizens per Representative). So as populations change, so does representation.
President - Are you kidding me? Like an earlier post said, the founding fathers were not stupid. The electoral college is in place to even things out. My home state of Delaware has a population of slightly over a million people. We're small. Don't blink or you'll miss us. The point is, the electoral college ensures that the President is elected by the States - as in President of the United STATES (not President of the Popular Vote). If the Prez was elected by the popular vote, then the Candidates would be in California, Texas, and New York for the duration of the campaign and would never set foot in Delaware, Rhode Island, Wyoming, Vermont, et al. However, as it stands, because of the electoral college, both Bush and Kerry have made multiple stops to this little tiny dot on the map called Delaware. We only have slightly over a million people, but the STATE has 3 electoral votes so while the candidates spend most of their time in the states with the huge populations, tiny states like ours don't get a lot of attention, but the electoral college makes sure we're not forgotten.
Re:Bullshit (Score:2, Insightful)
Lets see, according to the 2000 census, Delaware's population is 738,600. US population is 281,241,906. So Delaware is 0.26% of the total population. For fairness, Deleware should have 0.26 senators, 1.14 represenatatives, and
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2, Interesting)
The federal government has its hands in everything. They
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2)
And that problem's solution was the Senate and Seperation of Powers. The electoral college was a fix to the then-not-now problem of actually counting votes from a country with more landmass than half of Europe.
Remember that the United States is NOT a Democracy, but a Federal Republic.
While the USA may not technically be a democracy, we were concieved as a federation o
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:5, Interesting)
On a side note, it is very good that congress realizes this is an issue and is amending it in the usual way. We are only two states away from a constitutional convention, and that is a dangerous and scary thing for many reasons.
Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass their (Score:2)
If Colorado goes for a percentage based system for assigning their electorial votes Colorado will cease to exist on the radars of political parties when it comes to Presidential elections. With 8 or 9 votes margin it is useful, when its just a 1 or 2 vote difference which is the result you have on using percentages its useless.
This type of change dilutes the power of any state which follows it. Can you imagine the hoopla that would come about should
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:2)
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:2)
1. Millionaires don't bury their money in the back yead, they spend it or they invest it. (Even putting money in the bank is investing the bank invest your money for you)
2. When they spend money it end up generally in normal peoples pockets, so we want to encourage this.
3. When they put money in the bank, it is usually used to provide loans for small buisnesses or for you to buy a house. Sure you get stuck paying interest, but that money g
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:2)
The problem is that no one in Washington really seems to care about debt, and they really do act like either the debt will never have to be repaid or it's someone else's problem.
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:2)
Though on the whole of it all excluding loans from other coutries, if you look at the country as a whole, you can't really say we are in debt, because if the government is made of a collection of its people, then how can the government be in debt to itself? Much of the debt is also from bonds whi
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm all for the protection of the rights of the minority, but that isn't the same as letting the minority have a bigger say in how the country is run than the majority. And that is the current situation: rural voters have a disproportionally large say in how the country is run. There are fewer rural voters, yet they have (approximately) the same amount of pull as urban voters.
What would happen if 95% of all Americans lived in cities? Would the 5% of rural voters still get 50% of the representation? That would mean rural voters have 20 times the influence as urban voters. 20 times! Those are going to be some hefty argriculture subsidies!
I am left wondering why geographical boundries should determine representation. Why should 5% of the population have the same amount of say as 95% of the population? We don't have representatives based on race or religion, right? About 13% of Americans are black, yet they don't have an equal share of representation as white people. On the logic that minority groups should have equal representation, they should get their representation boosted, right?
The question I am trying to expose (and to which I don't have an answer) is: what constitutes a minority group that should get equal representation in our legislature? It seems to me that determining a minority on the basis of population density and geography is a pretty arbitrary metric. What makes rural America as a minority group so special as to warrant higher legislative representation (or voting clout)? Why not blacks, too? Or latinos? Or Jews? Or amputees? Or homosexuals?
It seems to me that the current system is disproportionately assigning representation based on somewhat arbitrary standards. What is a better standard? I'm not sure. But I'd be open to suggestions. Or critiques of my logic. :)
Taft
State powers (Score:3, Insightful)
The State is supposed to represent and protect you.
If we go to some form of popular vote, that means the power of the states have actually been taken away, and given to the President, in the sense that the President only has to care about big cities: the SF Bay Area, Los Angeles, New York, Boston, etc.
Right now he has to court the 'swing states', but with popular vote, he'd court 'swing cities'. It changes the balance of power. The Founding Fathers
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:3, Insightful)
That wouldn't change the presidential vote unless these cities were all in the same state (or a small number of states).
Congressional districts within states are broken up roughly in terms of the same population for each. I would assume that this would mean lots of geographically small districts and a few large ones.
Even in the extreme case you describe the system is nowhere near unbalanced as you make it out to be,
About 13% of Americans are b
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:2)
I guess I was attacking the assumption that rural folk and city folk are so fundamentally different that we need to actively protect those groups from one another. I think there ARE differences between rural folk and city folk, but I would liken those differences to the differences between whites and blacks, jews and gentiles, etc. Everyone has a different backgr
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:4, Informative)
The obvious question to follow up with is "Which cities?" If 95% of all Americans live in Chicago, the West Coast cities, and the stretch from Boston to Washington, D.C., (call it 12 states) then they will be under-represented. Very badly in the Senate, where they would have 24 out of 100 senators, least badly in the House where they would have a large majority of the representatives but still not 95%, and somewhere in between in presidential elections.
Speaking as someone from a large western state with relatively few people, great scenic beauty, and rich in natural resources, let me say that replacing the current system with one that was based solely on population would be terrifying. I can easily envision the 95% who live in the 12 states (in this example) passing federal laws that do a variety of things: requiring that we strip-mine the resources; requiring that we operate massive land-fills in the non-scenic areas to dispose of waste from the urban states; requiring that we ban all development in scenic areas (even though the large majority of that 95% will never visit them); requiring energy-efficiency standards that make sense in an urban setting but are simply not practical in my state.
One of the key issues that the Founders wrestled with in writing the Constitution was how to make it difficult for a small group of states with large populations to impose their will on the other states. I would be happy to entertain systems other than the current one. Can you suggest one that guarantees my state's ability to have a meaningful say in governing the nation that doesn't give me "over representation" relative to our population?
Re:Colorado will become irrelevant if they pass th (Score:2)
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, we liberals need to keep in mind that *both* candidates in
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2)
The amusing aspect is that even if you agree that low-population areas need greater political power, the current system does a horrible job. States have unequal amounts of land, yet each state gets exactly the same 2 votes for that land!
The east coast is 14 states (28 votes), while the west coast, with about the same land area, is only 3 states (6 votes). Easterners have an unfai
Minority Rights (Score:2)
Take some hypothetical state where everyone is elected by popular vote. Now imagine this state has a large city (say, 80% of the total). Now imagine there is a small region just outside of the city, with no more than 1000 people.
Now, whenever there is an issue that affects the city people, you better believe that those that were elected by those 80% are going to care about it if they want to be re-elected. But what if it affe
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2, Insightful)
It is true that the Founding Fathers didn't want election by popular vote for fear that large states would dominate. However, the framers did not have it in mind that everybody would get t
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2)
Thousands of people say that.
Zero of them know the definition of "democracy".
Re:We're not a Democracy, so don't change it! (Score:2)
Would you care to enlighten the ignorant among us and reveal the one true definition of the word "democracy"
Remember, you can only give one definition and that definition cannot contain multiple parts
Condorcet (Score:2)
Condorcet (sp?) is practically a drop in replacement for IRV. People vote exactly the same as in IRV, but the result is more fair and favorable under a variety circumstances. They just have to decide the exact algorithm with Condorcet, since there's more than one, some slightly better than others.
Condorcet (Score:2)
Since most people don't know about condorcet, try this link [wikipedia.org] which compares Condorcet to IRV mathematically and by way of a simple example.
This is a crappy way to run a country (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:This is a crappy way to run a country (Score:2)
Electoral College (Score:5, Insightful)
That would completely eliminate the concept of a "battleground state" as it exists now, and "florida" situations in the future - there would never be a situation where a small increase in real votes could net you 21 electoral votes in one shot. Any recounts would be, at most, fighting over one electoral vote at a time instead of a whole state's worth, because the margin of error is never so large that it would cover more than that proportion of the state's voters.
I think this would probably have to be federally or constitutionally mandated, because individual states that apply it to only themselves instantly *dis*advantage themselves: where they might previously have gotten lots of attention from the candidates because 20+ electoral votes were up for grabs, the candidates would now concentrate on the states that *hadn't* implemented the change.
Re:Electoral College (Score:2)
Re:Electoral College (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Electoral College (Score:2)
Your system helps a lot, but there is a tiny chance that the winner is ahead by 1 vote, and they can find a state that is really close to N+.5 popular vote and argue that there were mistakes there of a few dozen and try to switch the vote.
I think fractional electoral votes would reduce the chances of this by so much that we don't need to worry about it ever again.
Re:Electoral College (Score:2)
The related idea, that electoral votes should be awarded based on voting in each congressional district (as they are in Maine, where it doesn't matter because it's got 2 districts t
Unintended Consequences (Score:2)
Putting it that way, I don't really think the *people* in any state want it to be a battleground, for that very reason. There is some enjoyment of st
Re:Electoral College (Score:2)
Not to attack on Jesse Jackson, Jr., nor suggest that he is a demagogue, but he comes from Chicago. His desire is to empower the cities and more densely populated states such as his own. Disclaimer: I'm from
Why is it that... (Score:2, Flamebait)
SECTION 2. The persons having the greatest number of votes for President and Vice President shall be elected, so long as such persons have a majority of the votes cast.
That's it. No provisions for how a runoff will be conducted or even IF one will be conducted. Speaking as a software designer, where's the error handling? Oh! In an unrelated piece of code that may not get implemented! Whoo!
This bill is a publicity stunt... considering it has
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
Speaking as a real person, "in the system."
Complexity is good when you know your instructions will all be followed. When your instructions must be understood and then applied by a sentient being, the simpler the better.
Re:Why is it that... (Score:2)
Hey look, it's Jesse Jackson Jr. writing this crap. He isn't the brightest bulb in the pack. He gets elected because there's a pile of morons on the south side of Chicago that adore his father. I'm from Illinois/Chicago, and think that he's got no clue about anything outside of an urban environment.
The amendment will not succeed, fortunately. In order for an amendment to be passed, it needs to be ratified by 3/4 of the states, or 38 states. The following states probably won't ratify this amendment: Ma
Who cares? So few vote... (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd rather see the entire populous vote for a gibbering idiot than see less than a quarter of it vote for the same idiot.
~Donald
Re:Who cares? So few vote... (Score:2)
Now, why move to one?
IRV is an awesome boost for 3rd parties... (Score:2, Insightful)
Why can't I vote for "none of the above"? (Score:2)
I should not have to choose the lessor of two evils.
Re:Why can't I vote for "none of the above"? (Score:2)
If the majority vote "none of the above," thus voting against all candidates for that office, then the race for that office should begin again, and continue until a candidate that a majority vote for is elected.
It's about choice. The choice to say that no candidate is right for the office.
problem with abolishing the electoral college (Score:2)
Stay with me.
The electoral college acts as a buffer against vote fraud in specific places. If you run up the vote, in, say, Chicago, or NYC, you'll only affect the outcome of the election in Illinois and NY, respectively. Without the electoral college, you can win the whole country by running up the vote in just a few places. Eliminating the electoral college would make vote frau
Re:problem with abolishing the electoral college (Score:2)
Backwards! WITH the electoral college, you can cheat on just 500-600 votes in the right state, and totally change the outcome.
What you call "running up the vote in Chicago" would have to be much more blatant. Without the electoral college, it'll take millions of phony ballots to put your candidate over the top.
IF elections were doen the way the constution says (Score:2)
Re:IF elections were doen the way the constution s (Score:2)
Re:IF elections were doen the way the constution s (Score:2)
That the problem with the current system, tell me something about either candidate that they have not said them selfs for their opponent has said, or enemy's have said. Politics are just way to impersonal, we might as well vote for Bender for all it worth! All see is wha
Electoral college is here to stay. (Score:2)
I HAVE A PLAN! (Score:2)
Its brilliant!
Why so much opposition here ? (Score:2, Interesting)
I remember reading here that the vast majority of slashdotters think the current system for electing the president of the USA is bad. Some complains that voting third party is more or less a waste. Others complain that their home state is so democrat/republican that their vote for the other party won't count. Others complain about the winner take all present in most states.
Yet, when someone proposes a bill that tries to adress these problems, people here
Electoral College (Score:2)
Re:Ya know... (Score:3, Informative)
This article [telegraph.co.uk] suggests approval;
The Mathematical Association of America and the American Statistical Association each elect their committees by a new method called approval voting.