The Electoral College should be abolished because it is anti-democratic. It gives greater weight to the votes of people in the small states than in the bigger states. Consider the following:
California has 55 electoral votes and a population of 37,253,956. Thus, California has one electoral vote for every 677,345 people.
Wyoming has 3 electoral votes and a population of 563,626 people. Thus, Wyoming has one electoral votes for every 187,875 people.
Bush lost the popular vote to Gore by 543,895 votes, yet [strike]stole[/strike] won the election in the Electoral College. Just over 200,000 people voted in Wyoming, less than half of the difference in the popular vote split. A swing of 3 electoral votes would have given Gore a majority of electoral votes.
It's also anti-democratic because the election is largely conducted in a handful of swing states. We never see any presidential candidates in the New York area at election time, except for when they come here for fundraisers. This obviously inflates the turnout in battleground states, but depresses it in safe states.
As I said earlier, the electoral college is a relic of the 18th century and should be eliminated.
In my mind, and in my view you and I are still on the same page.
But I like the point that Kuli mentioned previously in this thread:
Kulindahr said:
It's not good for the country because it endangers liberty. If it was all by popular vote, you'd get what we have in Oregon: the whole state is run the way the people in the big city want it to, regardless of what the people who live on the land want or what's good for them. Rural people are more and more effectively serfs to the people in the cities.
Make the election of the president by popular vote, and there'd be no reason at all for the candidates to visit anywhere but the biggest cities. Only urban areas would be represented.
I'm a Texas Democrat who lives in Rural/Conservative/Republican Values part of Texas.
My neighbors and coworkers vote Republican, vote against health care, vote against their Children's health insurance, vote against Education, vote against "Welfare" even though 95% are on it, but they're not a part of "the GOP Party" electorate.
They just vote how they're told, much like some Democrats in the area.
The "grass roots Karl Rove activists."
So consider this, Obama is the incumbent.
FACT.
The GOP wants to nominate a challenger.
FACT.
The GOP challenger has to acquire X amount of delegate votes to be considered the nominee.
FACT.
Some States give away their delegates like a whore gives away their services, and some states make them work for it.
This would be where "State's Rights" work their way in.
But because of the way that Electoral Votes are counted, who ever is running for POTUS...IMO...goes for the cheap whores; Ohio, Florida, Michigan, etc.
What's happening during this process?
The rest of the Nation/Electorate gets to see what a group of self serving incompetent assholes that want to represent them.
Which is why, as a Democratic Delegate for the State of Texas that I did not caucus for Obama back in '08.
As much as I disliked Hillary, I was willing to caucus for her more so than an untested legislative candidate from Illinois.
The POTUS candidates aren't chosen by the electorate, they're chosen by the "grass roots activists" (those most likley to vote), and then we get to the part where "popular vote" v. "electoral college" matters.
This isn't American Idol, or Jersey Shore on MTV, this is American Politics 101.
It isn't perfect.
But honestly?
I'd rather count upon a group of fellow Americans that I vehemently disagree with, than an electorate that can't tell the difference between the Kardashians, and their favorite contestant on American Idol.
Are we beginning to understand each other a little better now?