| View Poll Results: Should the Electoral College be abolished and replaced with a popular vote basis? | |||
| No. |
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9 | 42.86% |
| Yes, and it should be replaced with a plurality system. |
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1 | 4.76% |
| Yes, and it should be replaced with a majority vote or some hybrid system. |
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10 | 47.62% |
| I don't know/I'm not sure. |
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1 | 4.76% |
| Voters: 21. You may not vote on this poll | |||
| Thread Closed |
Should the electoral college be abolished? |
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| Oct15-05, 12:11 AM | #35 |
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Should the electoral college be abolished? |
| Oct15-05, 12:15 AM | #36 |
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| Oct15-05, 12:18 AM | #37 |
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"idealogue - One given to fanciful ideas or theories; a theorist; a spectator. " www.dictionary.com |
| Oct15-05, 12:22 AM | #38 |
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Majority: 50.000.....1% Plurality: One vote more than the next guy. |
| Oct15-05, 12:23 AM | #39 |
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| Oct15-05, 12:30 AM | #40 |
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| Oct15-05, 12:33 AM | #41 |
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Are you trying to set a new record for most consecutive posts, Russ, or are you just trying to get to 10,000 faster?
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| Oct15-05, 01:22 AM | #42 |
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I'm a little drunk, I'm in bed, and I'm not quite tired yet.
I also like to separate posts that have completely different subjects or different people responded to, for clarity. p.s. I lobbied to have Politics Forum posts not counted in the post-count, since they are a subset of GD and not germane to the forum. I was shot-down. |
| Oct15-05, 01:23 AM | #43 |
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I voted “no” because it is a moot topic. The individual states would never consent to the diminishment of their rights.
My personal preference would be a direct election with the six top voters installed as president, vice-president, majority and minority leaders of Congress. A weak federal government is a great federal government. |
| Oct15-05, 10:52 AM | #44 |
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Number 2 I have a problem with! Are we now saying that it is okay to win the *presidency* by having your brother get machinery into the state that will dock 16,000 votes directly from your opponent? Three is Bush's response to it all. There's nothing legal or illegal about this part of it - but you asked why do I keep bringing up election results - and his response in 2000, which I mentioned earlier on this thread, and 2004 (a "mandate" from the people, "political capital") - these responses are part of the reason. These responses show he is either completely out of touch with reality, or he doesn't care what people think. How else can you justify such a ridiculous attitude? But number 2 (and the analogous stuff in Ohio in 2004) is my biggest beef. It is unfathomable to me that any American would be content to have a president in office that got there through dishonest means. It makes me sick to think that kerry may have cheated in the primaries. People always ask "why aren't there ever any good candidates?" It seems like the answer is staring us in the face. McCain, Dean - these guys were much better than Kerry or Bush. Clark was good, and so on. But if they're good, and if we have technology that can assure an election, we're not going to be seeing the good guys get the nomination, because the crooks will buy it every time. I'll link this again in the hopes that you'll take a look at soe of the failures of this technology: http://www.votersunite.org/info/Dieboldinthenews.pdf |
| Oct15-05, 01:53 PM | #45 |
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I voted other. The electoral college is a holdover from the days that the United States was a republic protected against democracy. Originally, the public didn't even get to vote for Senators. Senators were selected by the State Legislature.
The House of Representatives was the democratic arm of the government, while the Senate, President, and Supreme Court were checks and balances against the majority doing something stupid. (If you look at states that allow voters to propose amendments to their state constitution, you'll see there is a somewhat valid reason to keep at least a few of these checks and balances, even today.) The problem is that the Electoral College probably never fulfilled the purpose it was intended to in the first place and definitely doesn't serve its purpose today. It just pits one 'state' against the other. I'm not certain who the 'state' is, since there's no problem throwing up to 49.999999% of the populace's votes in the wastebasket as if they'd never been cast at all. The Constitution has to be amended to force the death of the winner take all system. The change would have to be nation wide, since, right now, any state that makes a change from the winner take all system on their own just dilutes the importance of their state. At a minimum, it ought to be one electoral vote per Congressional distict plus 2 electoral votes for the winner of a state - not a great solution, but better than the current process. A better idea would be to scrap the Electoral College altogether and go to the automatic runoff system a couple of others mentioned. |
| Oct15-05, 01:56 PM | #46 |
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The intent of the Electoral College is to play the role of tiebreaker and as a check and balance to possible abuse in the popular vote -- whether fraud, or the influence of special interests, or voters who don’t have a clue about the issues. Technology allows better distribution of information, however this can be negative as well, with special interest ads and other forms of disinformation (Faux News), and of course technology such as electronic voting (new ways to tamper with vote counts), etc., so personally I feel a check and balance is needed all the more. How that is done, including the prevention of fraud in the Electoral College (the possibility of votes being bought, or what have you), I don’t know, but I feel we need it. I admit I’ve been more preoccupied with election reform of the popular vote first. If the popular vote were more reliable, the Electoral College would still be needed, but more for purposes of a tiebreaker. IMO the framers were brilliant, and we should not discount what they were trying to accomplish here. |
| Oct15-05, 03:26 PM | #47 |
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| Oct15-05, 05:49 PM | #48 |
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Why the Electoral College was formed:
“All forms of popular government previous to ours turned into tyrannies. Whenever the people ruled directly, in their own name and in their own interests, the rights of the minority were in jeopardy.” Address to the Ohio Electoral College Ohio Senate Chamber, Columbus, Ohio December 18, 2000 by: Peter W. Schramm http://www.ashbrook.org/articles/sch...alcollege.html Those who favor state’s rights should favor the Electoral College. Also, the Electoral College serves as a check and balance similar to the Senate and the House in congress. I should clarify that the Electoral College was not created to be a tie breaker, but rather in the event of a dead heat in the popular vote, it plays this role, and “In the event that no candidate receives a majority of electoral votes, the decision falls, under the 12th Amendment, to the House of Representatives.” http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/proj...ctoralcoll.htm ". . . if there be more than one [candidate having] an equal number of votes, then the House of Representatives shall immediately chuse by Ballot one of them for President." –U.S. Constitution Article II, Section 1 The problem is a tyrant has manipulated public opinion and come to power anyway, so something needs to be adjusted. |
| Oct15-05, 10:46 PM | #49 |
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Perhaps political parties should just be abolished..... What does everyone think of that idea? |
| Oct15-05, 11:01 PM | #50 |
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![]() Other ways you might consider: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proport...representation http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_...winner_methods http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voting_...representation |
| Oct15-05, 11:17 PM | #51 |
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| Thread Closed |
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