LeafByNiggle
Well-known member
If California was split into two states, they would get 57 Electoral Votes. And those states would still be fairly big in population.How are they bring penalized? They get 55 Electoral Votes!
If California was split into two states, they would get 57 Electoral Votes. And those states would still be fairly big in population.How are they bring penalized? They get 55 Electoral Votes!
So what?If California was split into two states, they would get 57 Electoral Votes. And those states would still be fairly big in population.
So by being one big state they only get 55 electoral votes, which is less than what they could have gotten if they were two states. That’s a two-vote penalty.So what?![]()
hotair.com/archives/2016/12/19/electoral-college-poll-slight-plurality-favors-action-that-requires-34s-of-states/It would take 38 to ratify even if one could get Congress to pass it with two-thirds majorities. Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, and Michigan just got a taste of what being a swing state means, joining others like Colorado, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Ohio, and others. Would southern states surrender their electoral power to the Yankees? Would Midwestern states allow California and Florida to pick their presidents? Not a chance.
npr.org/2016/11/17/502292749/critics-move-to-trash-the-electoral-college-but-its-not-likely-to-workAbolishing the Electoral College would require an amendment to the U.S. Constitution — which would need a two-thirds majority vote in both the House and the Senate, and then it would have to be ratified by 38 states.
Oh ok that must be the reason HC lost,rhanksSo by being one big state they only get 55 electoral votes, which is less than what they could have gotten if they were two states. That’s a two-vote penalty.
I wonder if the activists who are seeking to eliminate the Electoral College in favor of a popular vote to elect the president (presumably because the EC violates “one person, one vote,” as opined by Sen. Diane Feinstein on Larry King Live) are also willing to abolish the Senate for the same reason. Wyoming, with a population of 586,000, gets the same number of Senators as California with its population of more than 39 million. No “one person, one vote” there… where’s the consistency?Even this NPR article says, “the likelihood of the country moving toward pure one person, one vote any time soon is almost nil.”
This implies that the winner-take-all elimination would be easier. I am not sure it is.In case anybody doesn’t know, this is what would have to happen for the electoral college to be scrapped in favour of a popular vote:
npr.org/2016/11/17/502292749/critics-move-to-trash-the-electoral-college-but-its-not-likely-to-work
Even this NPR article says, “the likelihood of the country moving toward pure one person, one vote any time soon is almost nil.”
The Senate is a different branch of government. You shouldn’t duplicate the same voter constituency but unfortunately its already written in the Constitution.I wonder if the activists who are seeking to eliminate the Electoral College in favor of a popular vote to elect the president (presumably because the EC violates “one person, one vote,” as opined by Sen. Diane Feinstein on Larry King Live) are also willing to abolish the Senate for the same reason. Wyoming, with a population of 586,000, gets the same number of Senators as California with its population of more than 39 million. No “one person, one vote” there… where’s the consistency?
Exactly. Whereas North Dakota and South Dakota get six electoral votes instead of three or four.So by being one big state they only get 55 electoral votes, which is less than what they could have gotten if they were two states. That’s a two-vote penalty.
It isn’t a penalty at all. They get the proper representation in the electoral college.So by being one big state they only get 55 electoral votes, which is less than what they could have gotten if they were two states. That’s a two-vote penalty.
Same question. Do you think it unfair that North Dakota gets the same say in passing laws as New York?Exactly. Whereas North Dakota and South Dakota get six electoral votes instead of three or four.
In close elections those 2 votes make all the difference in the world. In 2000, for example.
I’m not saying the electoral college is improper or undemocratic. I’m just confirming that it gives California a penalty. Just because it is a penalty does not mean it is an improper penalty. Maybe it is proper to penalize large states with respect to small ones so that they will not unfairly dominate national policy. I’m not taking a position one way or the other on that.It isn’t a penalty at all. They get the proper representation in the electoral college.
Leaf, do you think the way the Senate is set up is undemocratic?
It isn’t the same constituency. The Senate represents the states. Equal representation for each state. This is why the 17th amendment is such a travesty.The Senate is a different branch of government. You shouldn’t duplicate the same voter constituency but unfortunately its already written in the Constitution.
Again, it doesn’t penalize any state. Each state gets the representation commensurate to that which their state has. It cannot logically be said that a state that receives 55 electoral votes is being penalized compared to a state that receives 3 or 4.I’m not saying the electoral college is improper or undemocratic. I’m just confirming that it gives California a penalty. Just because it is a penalty does not mean it is an improper penalty. Maybe it is proper to penalize large states with respect to small ones so that they will not unfairly dominate national policy. I’m not taking a position one way or the other on that.
The Senate *is supposed to *represent the states. As you pointed out, the 17th Amendment broke that.The Senate represents the states.
The 17th Amendment was a critical step on the path to the federal government accruing more power to itself at the expense of the states and the 10th Amendment.The Senate *is supposed to *represent the states. As you pointed out, the 17th Amendment broke that.