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The past several presidential election cycles, a few people I've known (barfo, Minstrel) have argued that the president should be elected by popular vote.
The obvious problem with that is that we're a republic, not a democracy, so the popular vote shouldn't be what elects the president.
Aside from that, let's see what those who favor the popular vote have to say about some questions it would raise.
First, we've had Bill Clinton elected twice without a majority of the vote. Do we allow a president to be elected by a plurality vote?
If so, the Clinton elections raise another question. What about 3rd party candidates - if you have 4 candidates to each get about 25% of the vote, the guy who gets elected has 75% of the vote not for him.
To the extreme, you have 99 candidates, 98 getting 1% and the other getting 2%. Are we really going to sit a president who got just 2% of the popular vote?
To get around this, do we set some minimum % of the vote? What would that be? 45% and Clinton doesn't get elected in 1992, even though he got 370 electoral votes.
If we do have some minimum % of the vote, do we have as many runoff elections as needed to satisfy the minimum % of the vote requirement? It's not looking so democratic anymore, nor does it satisfy the constitutional requirement that the national elections be held everywhere on the same day.
Consider the past election. If McCain and Obama had tied or neither got the required minimum %, would it be proper to have a 2nd vote knowing the senate was decided at 60 democrats and the house with a democratic majority?
Like it or not, the electoral college has proven its value time and time again. The 1992 election is the obvious one, where Clinton won a convincing electoral college victory with a plurality of the vote.
The obvious problem with that is that we're a republic, not a democracy, so the popular vote shouldn't be what elects the president.
Aside from that, let's see what those who favor the popular vote have to say about some questions it would raise.
First, we've had Bill Clinton elected twice without a majority of the vote. Do we allow a president to be elected by a plurality vote?
If so, the Clinton elections raise another question. What about 3rd party candidates - if you have 4 candidates to each get about 25% of the vote, the guy who gets elected has 75% of the vote not for him.
To the extreme, you have 99 candidates, 98 getting 1% and the other getting 2%. Are we really going to sit a president who got just 2% of the popular vote?
To get around this, do we set some minimum % of the vote? What would that be? 45% and Clinton doesn't get elected in 1992, even though he got 370 electoral votes.
If we do have some minimum % of the vote, do we have as many runoff elections as needed to satisfy the minimum % of the vote requirement? It's not looking so democratic anymore, nor does it satisfy the constitutional requirement that the national elections be held everywhere on the same day.
Consider the past election. If McCain and Obama had tied or neither got the required minimum %, would it be proper to have a 2nd vote knowing the senate was decided at 60 democrats and the house with a democratic majority?
Like it or not, the electoral college has proven its value time and time again. The 1992 election is the obvious one, where Clinton won a convincing electoral college victory with a plurality of the vote.


