Beyond the usual reasons there are others. In a straight up/down voluntary voting system a politician has extra reason to invest 'get out the vote' efforts in places where they have maximum effect... cities and college campuses, liberal territory basically. You could do straight up/down in a mandatory system but then you're deliberately including votes by people who are too lazy to go through the minimal effort to vote and thus probably are too lazy to be informed on issues and aren't really ideal voters.
In the US, older people have more effective say as a group since many more of them vote, and we like that as older people generally are better informed, your average 55 year old knowing more then an 18 year old. In a mandatory voting system there will be more 18 year olds then 55 year olds voting, as population grows, and that's not really a bias one might consider ideal. Absent that, in a voluntary system, it is simply far easier to grab those who would be unlikely to vote and get them to vote in a city or near a college then in the country, so you'd be creating a doubly non-ideal shift to the vote.
Currently, say, if the Governor of New York created a tax break or cash reward on the spot for voting, and pulled off say 80-90% vote totals, while the end sum might be a decent amount different then prior breakdowns, it wouldn't infect the national vote, NY has NY's votes based on their population nothing more. A 40% turnout in Indiana and a 70% turnout in Arizona, both population 6.5 million, will get the same result, even though one had 2.6 and the other 4.6 million voters. So the current system eliminates the advantage to any heavily republican or democrat state... the sort who would have a one-party state gov't... from having any reason to get their hands into the pot, those states have no motive to tamper with the EV as it is already a foregone conclusion, and those states are also the ones that could most easily pull off some sort of legitimate or fraudulent mass vote effort.
The billion or two spent on POTUS races is less than a percent of a percent of the economy, but effects far more, and a populace state with a candidate up for POTUS could easily find some way, in a pop vote system, to seriously spike the odds, even if simply by that state voting more on account of that person coming from there, so we might end up never seeing a candidate who didn't come from the top 5 most populous states. This is not to say our current system is wonderfully fair, but devil you know, and I don't think most pop vote fans or fence sitters have ever considered much of what I listed there.
In the US, older people have more effective say as a group since many more of them vote, and we like that as older people generally are better informed, your average 55 year old knowing more then an 18 year old. In a mandatory voting system there will be more 18 year olds then 55 year olds voting, as population grows, and that's not really a bias one might consider ideal. Absent that, in a voluntary system, it is simply far easier to grab those who would be unlikely to vote and get them to vote in a city or near a college then in the country, so you'd be creating a doubly non-ideal shift to the vote.
Currently, say, if the Governor of New York created a tax break or cash reward on the spot for voting, and pulled off say 80-90% vote totals, while the end sum might be a decent amount different then prior breakdowns, it wouldn't infect the national vote, NY has NY's votes based on their population nothing more. A 40% turnout in Indiana and a 70% turnout in Arizona, both population 6.5 million, will get the same result, even though one had 2.6 and the other 4.6 million voters. So the current system eliminates the advantage to any heavily republican or democrat state... the sort who would have a one-party state gov't... from having any reason to get their hands into the pot, those states have no motive to tamper with the EV as it is already a foregone conclusion, and those states are also the ones that could most easily pull off some sort of legitimate or fraudulent mass vote effort.
The billion or two spent on POTUS races is less than a percent of a percent of the economy, but effects far more, and a populace state with a candidate up for POTUS could easily find some way, in a pop vote system, to seriously spike the odds, even if simply by that state voting more on account of that person coming from there, so we might end up never seeing a candidate who didn't come from the top 5 most populous states. This is not to say our current system is wonderfully fair, but devil you know, and I don't think most pop vote fans or fence sitters have ever considered much of what I listed there.
The intuitive mind is a sacred gift and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift.
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
- Albert Einstein
King of Cairhien 20-7-2
Chancellor of the Landsraad, Archduke of Is'Mod
Now That Romney Is Officially the Republican Presidential Nominee: Pick the President!
29/02/2012 08:29:02 PM
- 1362 Views

I agree Romney will be the candidate.
29/02/2012 08:54:52 PM
- 735 Views
I would say the math favors Romney over Obama, but it will probably be close either way.
01/03/2012 03:37:52 PM
- 786 Views
I have never understood the point of the Electoral College.
29/02/2012 11:39:11 PM
- 784 Views
You don't think like a politician then
01/03/2012 12:38:36 AM
- 836 Views

I certainly hadn't considered much of that. I'm glad you posted it. *NM*
01/03/2012 07:15:03 AM
- 347 Views
I also have not seen most of that mentioned in the popular vs. electoral debate.
01/03/2012 02:34:31 PM
- 710 Views
a bit simplistic and unrealistic
02/03/2012 11:44:02 PM
- 760 Views
When illustrating a point realism is not required and simplicity is a plus
03/03/2012 03:04:26 AM
- 789 Views
I have a couple quibbles.
03/03/2012 05:23:46 AM
- 818 Views
Oh, certainly, I'm over-generalizing but I was already getting long-winded
03/03/2012 06:52:04 AM
- 758 Views
What a bunch of waffle!
03/03/2012 10:47:19 AM
- 902 Views
Also I don't like this refrain that implies only the POTUS vote matters
03/03/2012 03:29:58 AM
- 919 Views
IMHO, parliaments choosing prime ministers is LESS democratic than the electoral college.
03/03/2012 05:57:41 AM
- 720 Views
Re: IMHO, parliaments choosing prime ministers is LESS democratic than the electoral college.
03/03/2012 07:02:30 AM
- 754 Views
*is learning*
04/03/2012 09:49:42 PM
- 752 Views
Re: *is learning*
04/03/2012 09:56:16 PM
- 791 Views
Re: *is learning*
05/03/2012 12:08:08 AM
- 798 Views
You could imitate the French.
07/03/2012 10:40:16 PM
- 741 Views

That seems... unlikely....
08/03/2012 03:03:54 PM
- 744 Views

It does, doesn't it?
08/03/2012 06:11:08 PM
- 930 Views

After I thought about it more, I realized France and the US are not so different in that respect.
08/03/2012 08:51:03 PM
- 704 Views
More similar than the other major Western democracies at least, agreed.
08/03/2012 09:32:55 PM
- 692 Views
I did not realize lack of a parliamentary majority dictated his cabinet.
09/03/2012 12:27:31 AM
- 766 Views
I don't know much about Norwegian politics, but you seem to be wrong.
03/03/2012 06:18:08 PM
- 779 Views
Do you happen to have that link, please?
03/03/2012 06:46:31 PM
- 642 Views
Sure.
03/03/2012 06:58:07 PM
- 832 Views
Guess we did not read far enough.
03/03/2012 10:38:07 PM
- 767 Views
Yeah, you have to know a few things about European politics...
03/03/2012 11:49:44 PM
- 970 Views
Hey, man, I am an AMERICAN: I do not HAVE to know ANYTHING!
04/03/2012 11:46:57 PM
- 983 Views

Re: Yeah, you have to know a few things about European politics...
05/03/2012 06:56:24 AM
- 764 Views
The thing is, regions often have national relevance far greater than their populations would suggest
05/03/2012 10:21:26 AM
- 717 Views
Re: Yeah, you have to know a few things about European politics...
08/03/2012 07:11:12 PM
- 711 Views
Many valid reasons, including those Isaac cited.
02/03/2012 02:26:37 AM
- 873 Views
Most states are ignored anyway
02/03/2012 11:56:12 PM
- 943 Views
Only because and to the extent they have already committed themselves.
03/03/2012 03:41:39 AM
- 794 Views
Why would we do something logical? Dude, you're utterly ridiculous. *NM*
05/03/2012 04:53:38 PM
- 406 Views
I'm kind of sad- does this mean Santorum won't be providing wonderful sound bites anymore?
01/03/2012 02:22:31 PM
- 708 Views
Romney or Obama, either way, America loses. *NM*
02/03/2012 01:10:26 AM
- 557 Views
Hard to dispute that either; six of one, half a dozen of the other.
02/03/2012 01:38:07 AM
- 688 Views
I'd agree hope and change was extremely unrealistic
02/03/2012 11:58:57 PM
- 686 Views
Well, you know my story there; I voted for Obama and got Hillary (at best.)
03/03/2012 01:43:20 AM
- 709 Views
Update: Despite rules requiring they be split, the MI GOP is giving Romney BOTH statewide delegates.
02/03/2012 11:10:56 PM
- 790 Views
Romney is damaged
02/03/2012 11:27:33 PM
- 700 Views
Obama is rather damaged also; it will probably come down to FL and OH, yet again.
03/03/2012 02:23:53 AM
- 820 Views
I'm hoping for Rubio as VP... then FL probably won't matter
03/03/2012 04:28:08 AM
- 686 Views
You should put that on your license plates.
03/03/2012 06:41:34 AM
- 813 Views

And what are you basing all of this on?
03/03/2012 09:54:06 PM
- 812 Views
The closeness of several states when Obama was far more popular, and UTs heavily Mormon neighbors.
03/03/2012 11:44:06 PM
- 760 Views
Wrong
04/03/2012 08:08:56 AM
- 885 Views
Higher turnout magnifies the Mormon effect.
04/03/2012 08:08:09 PM
- 924 Views
Your reasoning is flawed and if you can't see it there is no hope for you
05/03/2012 11:39:04 PM
- 836 Views
Yeah, I think we had that conversation already, several times, in fact.
07/03/2012 05:36:45 AM
- 670 Views
Do you have any knowledge of statistics at all?
07/03/2012 09:04:15 PM
- 835 Views
I hate this message board
07/03/2012 09:06:30 PM
- 618 Views
It would probably help if you deleted the stuff from two, three posts back?
07/03/2012 09:25:40 PM
- 731 Views