[EL] Toobin and House Results -- Re: ELB News and Commentary 11/18/18
larrylevine at earthlink.net
larrylevine at earthlink.net
Tue Nov 20 08:47:38 PST 2018
I think the drop off for U.S. Senate would have been even greater if it weren’t for some/many Republicans wanting to punish Feinstein for the Kavanaugh vote and hearing. The de Leon vote was comprised largely of Latinos attracted by his name, hard-core anti-Feinstein Democratic lefties, and Republicans willing to vote for someone with whom they have no affinity to punish Feinstein.
The drop off for Lt. Governor probably had more factors involved, including two candidates with ethnic surnames and an office no one understands.
If someone out there is doing some work on top-two races with both candidates of the same office, there are some very interesting below-the-radar factors. I’d be happy to share if anyone is dealing with this.
Thanks,
Larry
From: Rob Richie <rr at fairvote.org>
Sent: Monday, 19 November 2018 11:54 PM
To: John Tanner <john.k.tanner at gmail.com>
Cc: Larry Levine <larrylevine at earthlink.net>; law-election at uci.edu
Subject: Re: [EL] Toobin and House Results -- Re: ELB News and Commentary 11/18/18
I wanted to correct my email below.. I had glanced at the results and mistook the Use Senate race (won by Diane Feinstein over a fellow Democrat) with the governor's race. In the actual governor's race, Democrat Gavin Newsom has 61.3 percent with votes still coming in. The core Republican vote in other two-party statewide races is about 36%. Republicans will end up with either 13 or 15 percent of House seats when the dust clears.
Speaking of California and vote effectiveness, it's revealing to see how much greater the dropoff in votes in statewide contests is from governor to the contest sthat only have Democrats (Lt. governor and Senate) and those that have Republicans. Nearly two million fewer votes (about a sixth) in the Lt. governor elections, as opposed to less than 200,000 fewer votes in the secretary of state race. I guess California Republicans are experiencing what it can feel like for third party backers so often denied ballot access, but in far greater numbers..
Rob
On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 8:36 AM Rob Richie <rr at fairvote.org <mailto:rr at fairvote.org> > wrote:
>
> I'll note that California is going to be at least 45-8 Democratic in the delegation, and perhaps will end up 46-7. The Republican candidate for governor won 45.5%, but the GOP House vote was lower -- and just low enough to tip nearly every close House race to D's. So that vote margin did have a rather significant effect.
>
> Rob
>
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 8:32 AM John Tanner <john.k.tanner at gmail.com <mailto:john.k.tanner at gmail.com> > wrote:
>>
>> Getting back to the House vote, does California skew those results? Certainly in the Senate, there were two Democrats who split the entire vote. I don’t know whether there were similar House contests
>>
>> On Nov 19, 2018, at 12:03 AM, <larrylevine at earthlink.net <mailto:larrylevine at earthlink.net> > <larrylevine at earthlink.net <mailto:larrylevine at earthlink.net> > wrote:
>>
>> I was attempting to point to the irrelevance of citing a national vote total in races in which that number has no relevance. Apparently, I missed. However, I believe one of the purposes for the Electoral College was just this circumstance – to protect smaller states from the dominance of larger states. Another purpose was to shield against the election of a certain kind of candidate to be President, which doesn’t seem t have worked to well this time around.
>> https://www.historycentral.com/elections/Electoralcollgewhy.html
>> Larry
>>
>> From: Fredric Woocher <fwoocher at strumwooch.com <mailto:fwoocher at strumwooch.com> >
>> Sent: Sunday, 18 November 2018 8:40 PM
>> To: larrylevine at earthlink.net <mailto:larrylevine at earthlink.net> ; jboppjr at aol.com <mailto:jboppjr at aol.com> ; davidadamsegal at gmail.com <mailto:davidadamsegal at gmail.com> ; mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu <mailto:mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu>
>> Cc: law-election at uci.edu <mailto:law-election at uci.edu>
>> Subject: RE: [EL] Toobin and House Results -- Re: ELB News and Commentary 11/18/18
>>
>> I don’t get your point here, Larry. So what if Clinton’s entire margin was from California? If one objects to the electoral college because it does not count everyone’s vote equally, why is 2016 not a legitimate example of the objection that the vote of 3 million Californians was overcome by the votes of 250,000 people in Montana and Wyoming (or whatever the vote margins were there)?
>>
>> Fredric D. Woocher
>> Strumwasser & Woocher LLP
>> 10940 Wilshire Blvd., Ste. 2000
>> Los Angeles, CA 90024
>> fwoocher at strumwooch.com <mailto:fwoocher at strumwooch.com>
>> (310) 576-1233
>>
>> From: Law-election [mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu <mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu> ] On Behalf Of larrylevine at earthlink.net <mailto:larrylevine at earthlink.net>
>> Sent: Sunday, November 18, 2018 7:18 PM
>> To: jboppjr at aol.com <mailto:jboppjr at aol.com> ; davidadamsegal at gmail.com <mailto:davidadamsegal at gmail.com> ; mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu
>> Cc: law-election at uci.edu <mailto:law-election at uci.edu>
>> Subject: Re: [EL] Toobin and House Results -- Re: ELB News and Commentary 11/18/18
>>
>> Agree, Jim, but still find it curiously interesting. What distorts the whole picture is California. It’s kind of like every time I hear someone say Clinton won the popular vote in 2016 by 3 million votes I recall that was her margin in California, so they just about broke even in the rest of the country. It comes up often when I do presentations and someone challenges the electoral college and uses the 2016 popular vote as justification for changing. I tell them they have a right to not like the electoral college, but 2016 is not a place to rest the argument.
>> Larry
>>
>> From: Law-election <law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu <mailto:law-election-bounces at department-lists.uci.edu> > On Behalf Of jboppjr at aol.com <mailto:jboppjr at aol.com>
>> Sent: Sunday, 18 November 2018 6:46 PM
>> To: davidadamsegal at gmail.com <mailto:davidadamsegal at gmail.com> ; mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu <mailto:mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu>
>> Cc: law-election at uci.edu <mailto:law-election at uci.edu>
>> Subject: Re: [EL] Toobin and House Results -- Re: ELB News and Commentary 11/18/18
>>
>> I find the comparison between seats won and the total nation vote per party to be meaningless. We dont award seats based on the national vote per party , but by district, so campaigns are conducted by district, not to generate a maximum national vote.
>> In addition, candidates matter more in District elections while they would be substantial less significant if the national vote count determined who won. If fact, Tip O'Neill's maxim that all politics is local would be repealed.
>> So judging district-based elections by national proportional results is incoherent and invalid.
>> Jim Bopp
>> ________________________________
>>
>> On Sunday, November 18, 2018 David Segal <davidadamsegal at gmail.com <mailto:davidadamsegal at gmail.com> > wrote:
>>
>> It'd be what you'd want taken in isolation (and I support systems that are more likely to yield proportionality than the current one) but Toobin should have contextualized the stat in the asymmetry relative to what happens under the current districts for Republicans.
>>
>>
>>
>> Repubs won 50.4% of the two parties' popular vote in 2016 but took 55.4% of seats.
>>
>>
>>
>> 52.9% vs 56.8% in 2014
>>
>>
>>
>> 49.3% vs 53.7% in 2012
>>
>>
>>
>> And also could have been spoken to in the context of the longer historical norm that Nicholas mentions. (Which isn't necessarily a positive feature of our system, and could be corrected for through PR.)
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 8:22 PM Mark Scarberry <mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu <mailto:mark.scarberry at pepperdine.edu> > wrote:
>>
>> Jeffrey Toobin, in the New Yorker article, writes:
>>
>>
>>
>> "Even the good news from the election comes with a caveat, however. According to an analysis by the Brennan Center for Justice, Democrats won the over-all popular vote in the four hundred and thirty-five races for the House of Representatives by about nine per cent, but they managed to capture only a relatively narrow majority of seats. This is because the district lines are so egregiously gerrymandered, especially in states fully controlled by Republicans."
>>
>>
>>
>> Assuming my math is correct:
>>
>>
>>
>> A 9% margin would put the percentages at 54.5 to 45.5 (leaving aside third parties). Out of 435 seats, 54.5% would be 237, and 45.5% would be 198. It appears that, with a few races still to be decided, Democrats will have at least 232 seats and Republicans will have at least 198. If the five other raises split evenly, the division will be 234 or 235 Democrats, and 200 or 201 Republicans. Is this particularly disproportionate?
>>
>>
>>
>> Mark
>>
>>
>>
>> Prof. Mark S. Scarberry
>>
>> Pepperdine Univ. School of Law
>>
>>
>>
>> On Sun, Nov 18, 2018 at 4:09 PM, Rick Hasen <rhasen at law.uci.edu <mailto:rhasen at law.uci.edu> > wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> ...
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Jeffrey Toobin Expresses Some Optimism About Voting Rights
>>
>> Posted on November 18, 2018 3:17 pm by Rick Hasen
>> Not so sure I agree with this one.
>> Posted in The Voting Wars
>>
>> ...
>>
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>
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