[EM] margins of victory with different voting methods
robert bristow-johnson
rbj at audioimagination.com
Sun Apr 3 19:52:40 PDT 2011
On Apr 3, 2011, at 10:10 PM, Dave Ketchum wrote:
> US Electoral College - done with each state done separately, unlike
> most any other election - meaning that various parts are done in
> different ways.
but not to a significant degree. *every* state, except Maine and
Nebraska, simply award their entire allocation of electoral votes to
the plurality winner in that state. Maine is 4 electoral votes,
Nebraska is currently 5 electoral votes, out of 538.
the interesting thing is, that for the first time i know of, a state
(Nebraska) has actually split their slate of electors in 2008.
Nebraska was, essentially, a Red state (GOP, McCain), but the
congressional district around Omaha went to Obama. so it was five
electoral votes split 4 and 1.
is there any historical case in modern American electoral history
where a state (having similar law as Nebraska or Maine) has, because
of the outcome, split their electoral vote? i know of no other case.
for the most part, it's winner take all, which gives big states a big
swing vote (Ohio is the most reputed to having this quality making it
the quintessential "battleground state") and the small states (like
the one i grew up in and the one where i live now) get "compensated"
for their having less of a swing effect by having more electoral votes
per capita than the big states. even so, prez candidates do not spend
any time during the General Election season in hardly any of the small
states like North Dakota or Vermont.
--
r b-j rbj at audioimagination.com
"Imagination is more important than knowledge."
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