VicDaring
Muse
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2003
- Messages
- 587
In the 17th ammendment thread, Shanek said this topic deserved its own discussion, and I agree.
A popular notion these days, particularly in the wake of the 2000 Florida Debacle, is to simple abolish the electoral college system and just count the votes.
I propose a compromise: Retain the electoral college system, but allocate electors on a percentage basis, ie. if a state has 10 electoral votes, and Candidate A wins that state by a 60-40 margin, he gets 6 and his opponent gets 4. Also, just for the sake of eliminating bad perceptions, these votes are locked in by law and automatically awarded, eliminating "electors" and the idea that shady guys in smoky rooms are electing whoever they want.
Unless I'm mistaken, both parties use this very system in primary elections. Why not translate it over to the general election?
A popular notion these days, particularly in the wake of the 2000 Florida Debacle, is to simple abolish the electoral college system and just count the votes.
I propose a compromise: Retain the electoral college system, but allocate electors on a percentage basis, ie. if a state has 10 electoral votes, and Candidate A wins that state by a 60-40 margin, he gets 6 and his opponent gets 4. Also, just for the sake of eliminating bad perceptions, these votes are locked in by law and automatically awarded, eliminating "electors" and the idea that shady guys in smoky rooms are electing whoever they want.
Unless I'm mistaken, both parties use this very system in primary elections. Why not translate it over to the general election?