Trappin wrote:
The horror of the populist mob during the French terror influenced thought on direct democracy elections. The Directorate and the XYZ extortion affair, too
That's a great theory except for the fact that almost no instances of democracy in history used a direct popular vote for most things, preferring to elect representatives (who represented a specific set of people living in a given geographical area) who voted on things instead (ie: A Republic). That, and the fact that the US constitution was ratified in 1788, while the French Terror didn't happen until 1793. But other than that, great point!
That's kinda why I referred to the handwaving of our system (and specifically the EC) as some sort of defense against the incompetent masses as snark. It's oft repeated, but the reality is that people pretty quickly figured out that representation was a much better implementation of democratic principles, for a whole lot of reasons, and have been using that as the primary form of "democracy" for a couple thousand years or so. While yes, there certainly is the concern about the people voting directly on things at whim and while public emotions are driving things rather than cooler heads, the fact also is that there are a host of other really good reasons to do things the way we do them.
I actually find it interesting that people have such a negative opinion of how their votes are filtered through the EC process, but yet they are fine with how their votes are similarly filtered through our legislative representation process as well. The only difference is that when congress votes on things, we don't simultaneously hold a public election and count up the popular vote on the same issue. If we did that, we'd find that the popular vote wont match the legislative vote on occasion either. And that should not be a surprise, since the same sort of weighting occurs in congressional representation. While we don't send delegations to the house in a winner takes all by popular vote in each state, we do basically do that in the senate. And in that body, it's quite possible that the total votes in the senate for party A versus party B will not match the ratio of popular voters for each party nationwide. And for the exact same reason that it happens in the EC. Some states will have very high majorities of one party (essentially more than is needed to merely win the seat), while the other party may have more states that it won by more narrow majorities.
The house is actually a bit more interesting though, despite not being winner take all by state (but it is by district, which you'd think would make it closer). I'll note specifically that not one person has complained that while the popular vote favored Clinton in this election, and we can assume that Clinton voters also vote Democrat for their representative, yet the house, in which every member had to win re-election, is still firmly controlled by the GOP. Shouldn't the percentage of house representatives reflect the percentage of each party's voters in the election? Why aren't people up in arms that the house representation is skewed from the popular vote?
This means that this issue isn't just in states, but also
in districts (and arguably more so). Democrats win a smaller number of districts by a larger number of votes, while the GOP wins more districts by a narrower margin. And yes, this gets us right back to the whole gerrymandering issue, but it's also related to a point I made earlier about Dem voters clustering themselves into very tightly packed high population density areas. It's just not hard for GOP controlled state legislatures to gerrymander their districts to cause this effect in their favor, while the Dems would have to gerrymander some very seriously bizarrely shaped districts in order to make things come out differently. You literally have to deliberately shape districts such that you take a small slice of your high population areas, and then stretch them over a large portion of some surrounding rural spaces in order to make house districts actually favor the Dems. And in many states there just aren't enough big cities to do this.
People complain about the EC pretty much entirely because other people tell them that's a big issue they need to care about. But when you actually step back and look at the whole picture, you see that the same effect occurs in pretty much every part of our voting process. The only exceptions are the relatively rare instances where the public directly votes on things. And that's
never at the federal level. You never vote for anything federal. You always elect a representative who votes on your behalf.
Edited, Nov 17th 2016 7:56pm by gbaji