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I’ve
been thinking about college. Actually I’ve been thinking about the
Electoral College, indirect elections, fairness/equality, anomalies, and
the League of Women Voters. Whether we like it or not, the 2008
Presidential campaigns have begun in earnest. These will be the longest
races for the oval office in our nation’s history. They should prove
most interesting and will set in motion commentaries and issues which go
beyond election of our 44th President. Eliminating the
Electoral College as the method of selecting our chief executive will
once again be pushed to the forefront of debate and discussion.
You see, when our founding fathers wrote the US Constitution, they felt
(for whatever reasons) that the general populace could not be trusted
with the direct election of our President and our US Senators. While the
term "Electoral College" does not appear in the Constitution.
Article II of the Constitution and the 12th Amendment refer to
"electors," but not to the "Electoral College;" the
founding fathers appropriated the concept of electors from the Holy
Roman Empire (962 - 1806). An elector was one of a number of princes of
the various German states within the Holy Roman Empire who had a right
to participate in the election of the German king. The political parties
generally nominate electors at their State party conventions or by a
vote of the party's central committee in each state. Each state is
entitled to one elector for each Senator and Representative they send to
the US Congress. Electors are often selected to recognize their service
and dedication to their political party. The electors meet in mid
December following the November elections in each state to cast their
ballots.
The
original Constitutional provision (Article 1, Section 3) mandating the
appointment of US Senators by the respective state legislatures was
repealed by the 17th Amendment and provided
for the direct election of Senators by the people of a state. This was
proposed on May 13, 1912 and was ratified on April 8, 1913 and first in
effect for the election of 1914. Over the past 200 years, over
700 proposals have been introduced in Congress to reform or eliminate
the Electoral College. There have been more proposals for Constitutional
amendments on changing the Electoral College than on any other subject.
Political
realities have now made the Electoral College an unfair anachronism. As
the country has stratified into “red states” and “blue states”
only 18 states are now considered competitive. The “winner take all”
system of the Electoral College focuses the candidates’ attention,
campaigning, and money on the states in play. In the 2004 Presidential
election only about 1% of all electioneering money was spent in all the
non-competitive states. And… the candidates visited only six of those
non-competitive states. Is it fair that voters in two/thirds of the 50
states are effectively ignored by the candidates for President?
Under this system a candidate receiving a majority of the Electoral
Votes (presently 270) seizes control of the White House for four years.
If no candidate receives a majority of electoral votes, the House of
Representatives elects the President from the 3 Presidential candidates
who received the most electoral votes. Each state delegation has one
vote. The Senate would elect the Vice President from the 2 Vice
Presidential candidates with the most electoral votes. Each Senator
would cast one vote for Vice President. This is not fair or equitable
because it circumvents/ ignores the “direct” will of the
electorate.
For
most of our history the “elector system” has worked without incident
- meaning that a candidate received the requisite majority of electoral
votes AND received the majority of popular votes as well. There are,
however, some notable and highly controversial instances where that was
not the case. In the elections of 1824, 1876, 1888, and
2000, the candidate who received a plurality of the popular vote did not
ultimately become president. The 1824 election was eventually decided by
Congress and thus is distinct from the last three which were decided
without the Congressional “vote” because one candidate did have the
necessary Electoral Votes. Most recently in 2000, Al Gore actually
received 543,895 more popular votes nationwide than George W. Bush.
Since Bush “carried” 30 states with 271 Electoral Votes’s to
Gore’s 21 states with 266 Electoral Votes, he became our 43rd
President.
On
Thursday, February 22, at 7:00 PM, Dan Johnson-Weinberger from FairVote
will speak at First National Bank’s Via Room in the May Mart Plaza
before the Rochelle Area chapter of the League of Women Voters. His
presentation will address educating voters about the advantages of a
popular vote election and a method of going “popular vote” WITHOUT
changing the US Constitution. This forum is open to the general public
and should prove to be most informative. Any interested individuals or
groups are encouraged to attend. I’m Fred Cederholm and I’ve been
thinking. You should be thinking, too.

© 2007 Fred Cederholm
Editorial Archive
Contact
Information
Fred
Cederholm
Creston,
IL USA
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