[EL] Electoral college
Ilya Shapiro
IShapiro at cato.org
Tue Nov 20 16:56:13 PST 2018
The premise is flawed. Small states include HI, RI, CT, DE, VT. Large states include TX, FL, OH, PA.
But you said you looked at a congressional map. That would reveal coastal/urban vs the rest—an interesting sociological phenomenon, to be sure, but not related to Electoral College debates.
Ilya Shapiro
Senior Fellow in Constitutional Studies
Cato Institute
1000 Mass. Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20001
(o) 202-218-4600
(c) 202-577-1134
Twitter: @ishapiro
http://www.cato.org/people/shapiro.html
On Nov 20, 2018, at 7:50 PM, "larrylevine at earthlink.net<mailto:larrylevine at earthlink.net>" <larrylevine at earthlink.net<mailto:larrylevine at earthlink.net>> wrote:
It is argued often that the electoral college protects the small states from the dominance of the large states. I just saw a graphic on TV that depicts the location of Democrats and Republicans in congress on a red/blue map. The blue is mostly big states; the red mostly small states. Even though the Democrats are now in the majority, the map is overwhelmingly red. So, can we argue that we need to eliminate the electoral college to protect the big states against the ganging up of the small states? After all, the majority of popular votes nationwide in the 2016 Presidential election reflect the same notion – the small state’s ganged up to thwart the will of the majority of the nation.
FYI – this is the first time I have allowed myself to consider elimination of the electoral college. That map was a dramatic visualization of the situation. I suppose the small states would block a constitutional amendment to eliminate the electoral college, so the entire discussion may be moot.
Larry
_______________________________________________
Law-election mailing list
Law-election at department-lists.uci.edu<mailto:Law-election at department-lists.uci.edu>
https://department-lists.uci.edu/mailman/listinfo/law-election
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://webshare.law.ucla.edu/Listservs/law-election/attachments/20181121/3a3492be/attachment.html>
View list directory