[EM] Making a Bad Thing Worse
Kristofer Munsterhjelm
km-elmet at broadpark.no
Mon Oct 20 13:27:50 PDT 2008
Jonathan Lundell wrote:
> All of this would be finessed by the National Popular Vote idea:
> http://www.nationalpopularvote.com/
>
> It'd effectively result in a national FPTP plurality election, hardly
> ideal, but definitely an improvement.
>
> The Electoral College is, btw, a good example of a case in which an
> election method has a profound and obvious effect on the nature of the
> campaign. US presidential candidates have no motivation to campaign in
> California, New York, Texas, and many other states (they show up for
> fundraising events, but that's about it). If California is close, Obama
> has surely lost the election, and similarly Texas and McCain. The states
> in play vary somewhat over time, but I rather imagine contain a minority
> of the electorate.
Could the national popular vote lead to a similar effect, only opposite?
The candidates would have an incentive to visit the cities, because they
could reach many voters in little time; and thus the effect would move
from being biased away from cities (in the large states) to being biased
towards them.
Better might be a weighted vote (but who'd set the weights?).
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list