Active Users:348 Time:14/07/2025 12:22:48 AM
I like that idea, though I have long felt Larrys idea of using Congressional Districts is better. Joel Send a noteboard - 05/11/2012 09:22:49 PM
Smaller states would still matter because they are winner takes all, but larger states would become more interesting, because all of a sudden Texas isn't just Republic, nor California or New York just Democrat. Florida would probably be less important because it's so evenly split, and Ohio would fade slightly. In other words, it would even out campaigns and force them to be national, without the terrifying thought of a nationwide recount or further erosion of the principle of a two-tiered (Federal) system of government.

Candidates would campain in nearly every state, too, forcing them to address everyones concerns (not just make empty transparent promises of 100 new Navy ships to Norfolk and Pensacola voters.) Elections have been getting tighter and tighter since 2000 but have been decided by two or three states for the past 20 years; that is ridiculous, and not terribly democratic. I think the last presidential rally in CA or TX was when Obama started his primary campaign in '08, and before that it was '04, when Kerry slipped over the border to North TX just to prove he was not scared to do so. It is little better in IL. No one takes Romneys ad buys and rallies in PA, WI, MI and MN seriously, but if it were done by CD they most certainly would, because all but the smallest states would be in play.

The one big downside is redistricting, which gets more partisan every decade. Whatever the flaws, one asset of winner-take-all state elections is that whoever wins a states popular vote wins the state. A gerrymandered presidential election is among the few ways to make a badly broken system worse. After all, the bulk of the problem is not the system itself, but the very same partisan electioneering that spawned gerrymandering. Mixing redistricting and presidential elections might well produce a perfect storm no one wants.

Omaha is a good example of both the benefits and detriments: Obama won it last time despite getting buried in Bob Doles home state, but after the 2010 census NE Republicans responded by carefully drawing CD boundaries in Omaha to make sure that NEVER happens again.
Honorbound and honored to be Bonded to Mahtaliel Sedai
Last First in wotmania Chat
Slightly better than chocolate.

Love still can't be coerced.
Please Don't Eat the Newbies!

LoL. Be well, RAFOlk.
This message last edited by Joel on 05/11/2012 at 09:36:15 PM
Reply to message
Could Ohio Kill the Electoral College? - 05/11/2012 04:43:48 PM 704 Views
what? directly vote for president? COMMUNISM! - 05/11/2012 06:01:00 PM 280 Views
Um - 05/11/2012 06:04:12 PM 258 Views
Ugh. - 05/11/2012 07:23:37 PM 365 Views
It is an appallingly large number. - 05/11/2012 07:40:47 PM 259 Views
A simple solution: proportional allocation of electors from each state with 15 votes or more. - 05/11/2012 08:34:08 PM 268 Views
I like that idea, though I have long felt Larrys idea of using Congressional Districts is better. - 05/11/2012 09:22:49 PM 393 Views
So you undermined your own argument from the start... - 05/11/2012 10:01:07 PM 242 Views
i've always favored district lines by ZIP code myself - 05/11/2012 10:05:59 PM 322 Views
Um... WHAT? Republicans have 9/13 CDs in NC. - 12/11/2012 07:52:16 PM 362 Views
But why do people bleive big states need more power? - 06/11/2012 06:31:22 PM 275 Views
I was not asked but will answer anyway: They do not. - 12/11/2012 07:45:26 PM 389 Views

Reply to Message