There is no "Popular Vote" winner.

Alate_One

Well-known member
Unlike you I wouldn't bemoan the constitutional system for the loss, nor would I be asking to change the constitution to fit my whim. You need to face facts that you all ran a loser, a dirtbag candidate with loads of baggage. What you democrats should be doing instead of bemoaning the constitution is changing your nonsensical super delegate system that is neither democratic or fair to the candidates you ran...Bernie was robbed & he probably would have beat Trump but, I assume you all can see that now as well.
I will agree on one point is that Hillary had a tremendous amount of baggage though it was mostly put there by the right relentlessly attacking her for so many years. Some was deserved but not all of it. I am not sure if Bernie could have won or not, we'll never know the answer to that question. But I think Republicans would have liked to have some super delegates this year to avoid Trump.

And you need to get over your majority rule notion completely, because this representative republic is a far superior system than any pure democracy that exists now, or has eventually failed in the past, especially when you consider that this vast majority that you speak of (only 2%) is confined to basically 2 states which doesn't give you a majority of states or the majority of electoral votes to speak for an entire nation of states under this nation's constitution.
It's far more than two states that voted for hillary, Most states were closely divided only a few were polarized one way or the other. All other nations that directly elect a head of state do so by popular vote. Since the US president is so tremendously powerful in our system it's important to have the majority represented rather than having some arcane system selecting the president. That's why the EC has been changed over the years.
 

kmoney

New member
Hall of Fame
The vote in California was about 60% for Hillary but it wasn't the only state with that proportion. Massachusetts, Maryland and Vermont were the same. Quite a few other states hit 55% for Hillary - New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island. Many other states were close to 50/50. So California isn't some statistical fluke that needs "balanced". If you took out one or two of the states I listed you'd also "erase" the popular vote margin.

What's more extreme are a few red states like West Virginia and Wyoming voting about 70% for Trump. Several more are 60/40. If we're just questioning proportions, why not question those if we're into randomly removing states because we don't agree with them? But there might be more democrats in those states that don't bother to vote because the states are so extreme. I see no good reason in telling some people their votes count more than others.
Proportions are part of it but not all of it. The actual population numbers are important. And being able to erase the margin with multiple states also misses the point because the concern is about a single state having too much influence.

However, you make a lot of sense and I'm not trying to wholeheartedly defend the EC as it stands but I still have some concerns with moving to a direct national popular vote. In a way it's more of a feeling than something I can express clearly.
 

Zeke

Well-known member
The Electoral College is not unfair, it exists to consider the interests of the states- if you take away the EC, you may as well take away the whole point of even having states.

There is no good, educated opposition to the EC- everyone opposed to it simply favors socialism, which is not what America is. The EC was in put in place to check socialism.

You don't have states, they are pretenders that bow to cash flow that will get cut off if they don't follow the Corporate/federal interest, the popular vote is joke to give the illusion that the district of Colombia citizen have a say which they don't. I would suggest some research on the state of emergency act that America has been under since 1933.
 

fool

Well-known member
Hall of Fame
Note the "was" being past tense. I think this EC feature you speak of needs to be a was, because it also overrides the will of the majority of the populace.

Never going to happen, you'd have to get the smaller states to agree to give up their power.
Now, I can see a swing state, like Michigan, that has gone Blue for President historically but is currently controlled by Republicans unbinding their votes like some other states. That would allow some of the Red to bubble up into the electoral college. I don't see places like California doing that because that would dilute their power. They are safely Blue.

The EC is where the rubber meets the road, or rather where the State Gove interface with the Federal. I don't think there's anyway the states can carry their pure popular vote numbers to the Federal Election is there?
The EC says; "what are you doing with your 16 votes Michigan?"
Saying;
R D. Trump 47.6% 2,279,805
D H. Clinton 47.3% 2,268,193
Doesn't make any sense to the EC.
 

Ktoyou

Well-known member
Hall of Fame
Do we decide what is right based on what two people's opinions from 200 years ago who thought it was okay to hold slaves and keep them (and women) from voting?

You are attempting to appeal to emotion rather than directing your response to the issue of voting
 

Alate_One

Well-known member
You are attempting to appeal to emotion rather than directing your response to the issue of voting
Um no, that's what you did. You asserted whatever the system is, it must be correct because the founding fathers designed it. I pointed out the founding fathers were imperfect human beings.

If you want to decide whether something is fair, decide based on actual moral principles, not who came up with the idea.
 

rexlunae

New member
What state would find in their best interest to distribute their EC vote along district lines?
Instead of a swing state you could be a "Nitty Gritty" state.

I dunno about district lines, but national popular vote makes some sense.

Try this scenario for a moment. Suppose you live in a state that tends to favor one party 65/35 or so. Strong enough in one camp that it's unlikely to swing one way or the other, but with the usual 10% band of persuadables. Under the EC, there's no incentive for any candidate to really campaign for your interests because the outcome of the state is unlikely to flip. However, if a lot of other states go by the national popular vote instead of the statewide popular vote, those 10% of persuadables become just as valuable and just as available as in a more "purple" state, so you would end up with more states that matter to the candidates.
 

fool

Well-known member
Hall of Fame
I dunno about district lines, but national popular vote makes some sense.

Try this scenario for a moment. Suppose you live in a state that tends to favor one party 65/35 or so. Strong enough in one camp that it's unlikely to swing one way or the other, but with the usual 10% band of persuadables. Under the EC, there's no incentive for any candidate to really campaign for your interests because the outcome of the state is unlikely to flip. However, if a lot of other states go by the national popular vote instead of the statewide popular vote, those 10% of persuadables become just as valuable and just as available as in a more "purple" state, so you would end up with more states that matter to the candidates.

I think there is zero chance of getting rid of the EC. You would have to have the support of the small states and they are never going to give up their power. And you can't take their power away because, they have it.
I can see getting some swing states to move away from winner take all. But deeply colored states aren't going to do that. Why would they? To be fairer to opponents in other states? People don't just do that without something in it for them.
 

ClimateSanity

New member
Um no, that's what you did. You asserted whatever the system is, it must be correct because the founding fathers designed it. I pointed out the founding fathers were imperfect human beings.

If you want to decide whether something is fair, decide based on actual moral principles, not who came up with the idea.

So, we have to change our laws based on your shifting sands ideas of morality ?
 

ClimateSanity

New member
Getting rid of the EC ain't gonna happen any more that getting rid of The Senate which is the root of the EC's inequality.

You underestimate the left and it's determination. Hillary's loss was huge. If the left is going to have any chance of coming back into power , they must thoroughly delegitimize trumps victory in the minds of most Americans.
 

rocketman

Resident Rocket Surgeon
Hall of Fame
You underestimate the left and it's determination. Hillary's loss was huge. If the left is going to have any chance of coming back into power , they must thoroughly delegitimize trumps victory in the minds of most Americans.

Doesn't seem to be working except with the choir...
 
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