[nycphp-talk] [OT] Voting
David Krings
ramons at gmx.net
Thu Aug 28 12:50:48 EDT 2008
sbeam wrote:
> So a lot of people don't understand it, and 3 times out of 54 a popular vote
> loser has become president - but elections are not supposed to just be a mere
> popularity contest anyway.
But that is what an election in a democracy is supposed to be. The majority
vote determines the winner, which means the popular vote and not the
constellation of some electrocal college. Especially not since the rules for
allocating the popular vote to the constellation of the members of the EC
varies by state. Some have a winner takes it all approach while others follow
more closely the will of the people.
I understand the benefits of it alright, but I am disturbed by calling this
then a democratic process, because it is not. It skews the results and gives
some rural vote more weight. That doesn't follow the one person one vote idea,
which doesn't even apply with the EC in the middle. There is nothing that
mandates that the EC members of one state have to follow the majority decision
of the voters. So if 80% in state A vote for candidate 1 the EC members of
that state can all vote for candidate 2. How is this a fair and democratic
process? It is like me hiring you to do my work, but not givinh you any of my
salary - or commonly known as scam.
I agree that the cases where the EC member(s) voted differently than expected
are not that many, but just having this possibility designed into the system
is a major flaw. And that is why many people who do well understand the
process don't understand why a country like the USA still employ such a
process that may have made sense 200 years ago. I guess it is kept in place as
it is much easier to bribe only a bunch of people than the whole population.
David
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