No more than in the current system that the Montana ranchers and Hawaiin beach bums have more say in how the Army and Coast Guard are run.
Why the implication that the views of concrete canyon dwellers are less important than those of the Montana ranchers?
Because the concrete canyon dwellers are merely a tool used, a vector to power by charismatic politicians to lord over things with an ever-extending hand of intrusiveness?
Oh, wait. When people fancy they are behind the politician extending the hand sliding into other people's pants, unasked, it doesn't feel wrong. Sorry, I forgot.
It's no different than Congressional district 1 voting for Candidate B, but the state prefers candidate A. Boulder County, CO probably voted 80% for Kerry in the last election, but all of CO's votes went to Bush. What's the difference?
Again, what politician wants to try to get elected touting a system
where his state loses power? It should be effortless to get this swatted down by another, opposing politician (who, remember, also wants power) by simply portraying it, accurately, as such.
As described, it's in the interest of no state legislatures anywhere, big or small state.
Sure it is. It is in fact relevent to all the states that are not the "swing states." It makes the popular note matter, and if that is the case, then every single vote matters, regardless of the state.
This plan would give big states more voting power, and voting power more proportional to their population.
The popular vote does not matter to politicians. Only getting elected does. Some politicians will portray this as an awesome plan
because they believe it will help them, or their party, at the next election or two. End of story. Don't pretend they're doin' somethin' fer good old democracy here.
And, given how governmental power grows in intrusiveness, how anyone can be pleased about giving massive states more power, I don't know. Unless, of course, you are a politician in said state, or a "useful idiot" who supports them, believing their positions are about
the people rather than
the power.
Be careful what you wish for. One thing that will disappear will be the appearances of massive landslides, giving presidents mandates, i.e. the ability to strike fear into the heards of Congress to try to get things accomplished. And remember presidential elections are frequently about the course the nation should take.
Just like the Republicans thinking about the "nuclear option" in the senate to get votes on judges to happen, the Democrats should think seriously about this before getting on board just because they lost one such election six years ago. In both cases,
it may very well come back to bite them in the ass, hard and unforgivingly. Think about it, had Bush won with a sliver of the popular vote, and Kerry won the electoral, the shoe would be on the other foot, with both sides screaming the exact oppositie positions today.
(Gets out a bag of popcorn to watch politicos beat each other in their wars...)