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Wednesday, April 04, 2007
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
Save the Electoral College
by Paul Greenberg
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How strange: Legislators here in Arkansas, or at least those in this state's House of Representatives, have just voted for a bill that would cast the state's six electoral votes for whichever presidential candidate won the nation's popular vote.

That's right: This state's delegates to the Electoral College would no longer follow the wishes of Arkansas voters. Instead, they'd go with whichever candidate got the most popular votes nationwide.

Can this bill be constitutional? Can a state legislature reverse the result of a federal presidential election within its borders? And why would the state's own legislature take away Arkansas' right to vote for a president, and just go with the rest of the country willy-nilly?

Arkansas doesn't ordinarily play a large part in presidential campaigns as it is. After all, larger states have a lot more electoral votes to cast than a small one like Arkansas. But why sacrifice what little influence a small state has? It's a mystery.

Yet this is happening all over the country, as states are asked to join an interstate compact pledging to support the winner of the national popular vote. If successful, this movement would render the Electoral College meaningless.

It's all being done in the name of One Person, One Vote! Nice slogan. But it's no substitute for serious thought about the Electoral College and the role it plays in the complex American constitutional system.

The Electoral College is part of a delicate set of constitutional checks and balances. Change one part and the whole mechanism could be thrown off. The current electoral system means that a presidential campaign has to be waged nationally by large, well-organized parties-usually two-rather than by a bunch of competing individual candidates. Or by a dozen or so small parties slugging it out to see which one can win a bare plurality.

With the Electoral College in place, the winner has got to get enough votes in enough states to claim a majority of the electors-not just a popular plurality. That means organizing large, national parties, which is how the country's two-party system came about. Take away the Electoral College, and you take away a prominent inducement for having a two-party system.

The idea of electing the president of the United States by popular vote may sound unexceptionable in theory-One Person, One Vote!-but in practice it could be full of unintended consequences. The most troubling: What would happen to the two-party system? Right now, each party must achieve consensus in order to nominate a candidate who can appeal to the broad middle of the country, and so gain a majority of the Electoral College. Continued...

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Jet Pilot
The gerrymandering of particular districts in any state has absolutely no corrupting influence on the Electoral College. The numbers of representatives are set by the census, not by gerrymandering. The popular vote in the state identifies whether the delegation sent to the Electoral College will be entirely republican or entirely democrat. It is not a district by district meeting. All that is done when the state legislature sets district boundaries is to identify commonality among communities for legislative representation. Some do this fairly, others not so fairly. It is a pretty good indication though when state delegations are 60-40 democrat but the popular vote taken at the same time is consistently 60-40 republican that something may be wrong and boundaries may not be representative of the actual population. It isn't an automatic assumption but a pretty good indication. Based upon the Texas vote over the last several national elections I would say that the Texas legislature corrected a problem.

As for Tom Delay, I continue to support him. He was railroaded by an overzealous district attorney who filed charges against him for acts that were not crimes when they were conducted. This is also a district attorney that elects to use this method to attack other political enemies. It is an abuse of power. My only regret is that Delay, like too many other republicans did not stand and fight. He should have stayed in the Congress. Unfortunately the character normally associated with republicans but absent in democrats caused Delay and others to resign rather than soil the party with exhaustive court battles.

Conservative Ron good point, counter pt
Conservative Ron writes: Wednesday, April, 04, 2007 3:12 PM

"Jetpilot: Do you honestly believe that only republicans gerrymander?...........thankfully this was corrected and the representation of Texas today more closely resembles the popular vote of Texas as a result of gerrymandering."


No, just the republicans are better at it. And Texas? Aware but not conversant. You are happy because it servers your party better. I have a feeling the gerrymandering went too far the other way in Texas and was done not out of fairness but for politics. Getting rid of the EC would eliminate this totally.

Good points, Conservative Ron, than by your own omission EC can be corrupted and manipulated. That is a problem. Counter point.

Texas is the home of Tom Delay as well. Are you proud of him? He is the worst politics has to offer. If he is a representative of TEXAS republicans, with Bush, than I am all for Texas becoming part of Mexico. (Kidding I like Texas).
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