Should America ditch the electoral college once and for all? | Pro/Con
While some argue that the electoral college protects representation for Americans who live outside urban centers, critics have long opposed a system that can flout the popular vote. To tap into this debate, the Inquirer asked a journalist and a political volunteer: Should we finally dump the electoral college?
Yes: The college suppresses the will of the majority.
President Donald Trump’s apparent intention to machinate reelection through legal and other challenges to voting should focus Americans on the twisted system that enables such chicanery.
Our unhelpfully unique
Supporters say the national “popular vote,” which means nothing officially, should carry zero weight because it is distorted by the system. And they’re right, because in over 40 states the results are preordained.
A Republican candidate basically has zero chance in
In theory, we don’t know how elections would net out under a difficult-to-mess-with straightforward national vote. But in reality we do: polls consistently show the
That’s because demographic trends work against the
So Joe Biden’s probable popular victory in November almost certainly will reflect the majority preference. But the will of that majority gets ignored by our system’s design.
We are still caught up in centuries-old compromises between those who wanted to found a exemplary new country, and backers of a loose confederation of states. (The debate turned out to be largely about “states' rights” to preserve slavery.) To ensure all states got attention, a minimum of three electoral votes were guaranteed, regardless of their population.
That made some sense when America sanctified the frontier life and was expanding west. But the result today is that a bunch of tiny states are wildly overrepresented. Eight jurisdictions have the minimum three votes without having anywhere near the corresponding share of the population:
Furthermore, most sparsely populated rural areas are reliably Republican, giving that party a significant and unintended advantage via geographic overrepresentation in the electoral college.
The tilt is outrageous. Since
Can Trump win again without winning the most votes? Yes.
Almost all candidate attention is focused on a small number of random “swing states” where the result is not foretold. And it’s not Frontierland there: These are states with large urban populations like
So the vast majority of the country’s voters are ignored by the candidates, for no good reason.
Absurdly, the deciding vote is held among 538 electors almost no voters have heard of who, technically, could do as they please.
Over 60% of Americans favor abolishing the electoral college. Democracy depends on the consent of the governed, standards of decency, and the appearance of fairness. The dysfunction of this system is a danger to our republic.
No: Our system protects diverse viewpoints candidates would otherwise ignore.
During former first lady Michelle Obama’s highly praised opening speech at the recent
The system may seem flawed. In 2016, 94% of campaign events were held in 12 “battleground” states. “And those states don’t represent America,” says
If the electoral college can thus award victory to a candidate who loses the popular vote by nearly 3 million, it should be replaced with a direct popular vote system that reflects Americans' interests, some Democratic leaders argue.
As a longtime Democratic campaign worker, I disagree.
Candidates do not only care about the swing states. By definition, their bases come from elsewhere. That is the section of the vote whose opinion candidates care about most, and whose values they share. Swing-state campaign events instead have value in reaching the viewpoint-diverse subcultures of America whose opinions candidates would otherwise overlook.
The American framers had this in mind when they decided against instituting a direct popular vote.
Voting has started early this year in
I may personally disagree with those policy positions. But if my Democratic colleagues want to learn from the 2016 election, they must adapt our message to appeal to a wider range of American voters. They cannot continue to scoff at rural and moderate voters and entertain a fantasy of abolishing the electoral college, so that they can circumvent opposition and win by catering to a narrow base. To abolish the electoral college would usher in the superior force of an overbearing majority. Millions of Americans would be abandoned and neglected--and we would all suffer the consequences.
Kenneth W. Gatten III is a senior at Penn State and has worked for the
Read more Inquirer pro/cons:
Should journalists exercise their right to vote amid concerns of bias?Do we still need presidential debates?
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Should America ditch the electoral college once and for all?
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