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Grex > Agora35 > #207: The faithless elector possibility | |
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| 25 new of 57 responses total. |
polygon
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response 15 of 57:
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Dec 15 15:06 UTC 2000 |
Re 14. I really don't know about the 2000 electors, since I haven't
collected information about them yet. My comments about what electors are
like are based on my knowledge about electors in past years, especially in
Michigan from 1940 to 1996. There were no faithless electors in Michigan
during that period, but there was at least one (Zolton Ferency in 1968)
who resigned because he couldn't bring himself to vote as pledged.
I have been thinking more about your comments and will have more to say
about these topics when I have a moment.
I appreciate your thoughtful and not overly confrontational responses.
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janc
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response 16 of 57:
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Dec 15 15:24 UTC 2000 |
I don't know. I find most of these predictions pretty implausible. Eight
faithless electors? No way. One would be a bit surprising, much more seems
unlikely.
Admittedly this is a more tempting year to jump ship in a way - the election
result already seems to have been decided on technicalities by someone other
than the electorate, so a person might think their decision on technicalities
is as good a anyone elses. But so far as I can tell, most faithless electors
in the past have been protest votes only cast with the knowledge that it
wouldn't alter the outcome of the election. I can't imagine many people
taking the step of further delegitimizing an already dubious election.
Imagining Gore phoning Hawaii to ask his electors to vote for Bush is fun,
but I can't take the scenario very seriously.
Of course, some pretty unimaginable things already have happened.
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polygon
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response 17 of 57:
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Dec 15 15:27 UTC 2000 |
Yeah. If the Supreme Court decision had been presented as fiction, two
months ago, I would have hooted over such patently absurd paranoia.
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polygon
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response 18 of 57:
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Dec 15 16:30 UTC 2000 |
In regard to faithless electors, let me remind y'all of the following,
which appeared several days before the recent election:
Bush Set to Fight An Electoral College Loss
by Michael Kramer
New York Daily News, November 1, 2000
They're not only thinking the unthinkable, they're planning for
it.
Quietly, some of George W. Bush's advisers are preparing for the
ultimate "what if" scenario: What happens if Bush wins the
popular vote for President, but loses the White House because Al
Gore's won the majority of electoral votes?
"Then we win," says a Gore aide. "You play by the rules in force
at the time. If the nation were really outraged by the
possibility, then the system would have been changed long ago.
The history is clear."
Yes it is, and it's fascinating. Twice before, Presidents have
been elected after losing the popular vote. In 1876, New York
Gov. Samuel Tilden won the popular vote (51% to 48%) but lost the
presidency to Rutherford Hayes, who won by a single electoral
vote. Twelve years later, in 1888, Grover Cleveland won the
popular vote by a single percentage point, but lost his
reelection bid to Benjamin Harrison by 65 electoral votes.
The same thing almost happened in 1976 when Jimmy Carter topped
Gerald Ford by about 1.7 million votes. Back then, a switch of
about 5,500 votes in Ohio and 6,500 votes in Mississippi would
have given those states to Ford, enough for an Electoral College
victory. But because it didn't happen, the upset over its having
almost happened faded rapidly.
Why do we even have the Electoral College? Simply put, the
Founding Fathers didn't imagine the emergence of national
candidates when they wrote the Constitution, and, in any event,
they didn't trust the people to elect the President directly.
A lot has changed since then, including the anachronistic view
that the majority should be feared. But the Electoral College
remains.
So what if Gore wins such crucial battleground states as Florida,
Michigan and Pennsylvania and thus captures the magic 270
electoral votes while Bush wins the overall nationwide popular
vote?
"The one thing we don't do is roll over," says a Bush aide. "We
fight."
How? The core of the emerging Bush strategy assumes a popular
uprising, stoked by the Bushies themselves, of course.
In league with the campaign _ which is preparing talking points
about the Electoral College's essential unfairness _ a massive
talk-radio operation would be encouraged. "We'd have ads, too,"
says a Bush aide, "and I think you can count on the media to fuel
the thing big-time. Even papers that supported Gore might turn
against him because the will of the people will have been
thwarted."
Local business leaders will be urged to lobby their customers,
the clergy will be asked to speak up for the popular will and
Team Bush will enlist as many Democrats as possible to scream as
loud as they can. "You think 'Democrats for Democracy' would be a
catchy term for them?" asks a Bush adviser.
The universe of people who would be targeted by this insurrection
is small _ the 538 currently anonymous folks called electors,
people chosen by the campaigns and their state party
organizations as a reward for their service over the years.
If you bother to read the small print when you're in the booth,
you'll notice that when you vote for President you're really
selecting presidential electors who favor one candidate or the
other.
Generally, these electors are not legally bound to support the
person they're supposedly pledged to when they gather in the
various state capitals to cast their ballots on Dec. 18. The
rules vary from state to state, but enough of the electors could
theoretically switch to Bush if they wanted to _ if there was
sufficient pressure on them to ratify the popular verdict.
And what would happen if the "what if" scenario came out the
other way? "Then we'd be doing the same thing Bush is apparently
getting ready for," says a Gore campaign official. "They're just
further along in their contingency thinking than we are. But we
wouldn't lie down without a fight, either."
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richard
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response 19 of 57:
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Dec 15 17:07 UTC 2000 |
and it would only take, wha? three electors to change their minds to to
flip the election? might there be three electors from gore's homestate
who regret that Gore won the popular vote and didnt get the win, who would
change their votes on principal?
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polygon
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response 20 of 57:
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Dec 15 17:09 UTC 2000 |
Re 19. Reread #0. For most Republican electors, including probably
ALL of the ones in Tennessee, flipping would be almost suicidally self-
destructive.
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polygon
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response 21 of 57:
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Dec 15 17:12 UTC 2000 |
(And, yeah, Jan is right to question my prediction of as many as seven
flips. I'm guessing now more in the range of zero to one.)
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polygon
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response 22 of 57:
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Dec 15 18:24 UTC 2000 |
Another data point on the faithless elector debate. This is the current
editorial in The Nation. Though I sympathize somewhat, I do not agree
with what is suggested here. NEVERTHELESS, this should demonstrate that
there are voices out there prepared to thank the flippers rather than
denigrate them.
The Nation editorial
Wanted: Three Electors
Let the chattering classes focus on chads and undervotes and
Florida recounts and what the courts--state and federal, all
the way up to the Supreme Court--would or wouldn't do. Let
us not forget that the candidate who won the national
popular vote falls only three votes short of a clear
Electoral College majority even without Florida. If on
December 18, the day the Electoral College convenes to cast
its ballot, three Republican electors decide on their own to
vote for him, all the speculation is moot.
Our purpose is to argue that our three hypothetical electors
should so decide and that American democracy would be the
better for it. And that this particular election, because it
is so close and because it has raised fundamental issues of
voting rights, provides the right historic moment for such a
gesture. In 1960, another close election, Ted Lewis argued
in The Nation that there was such revulsion against the
Electoral College that it "would certainly now be on its way
out" if it hadn't "functioned on November 8 in accordance
with the national will."
Election 2000's clouded outcome has highlighted some glaring
flaws in our electoral system--uncounted votes, confused
voters, voters rejected (see David Corn, on page 5)--which
has stimulated a growing sentiment for reform. And so while
the country's mood is hospitable to reform, why not abolish
the most undemocratic institution of all--the Electoral
College?
That's where our hypothetical three electors come in. By
casting their votes for the popular-vote winner, in the
short run they would guarantee the election of the man who
won the popular vote; but more important, in the long run
such a gesture might break the antidemocratic stranglehold
of the Electoral College on American politics. Let's be
clear: We are not urging them to vote for the popular-vote
winner because we support Al Gore. We are urging them to
cast such a vote because it would be the right thing to do--
legally, morally and politically.
It will immediately be objected that what we are proposing
is an invitation to electoral anarchy, that history has
rightly stigmatized the thirteen electors who switched their
votes in previous presidential elections as "faithless
electors." Besides, Vice President Gore himself has said he
would "not accept" Republican electors. But the Vice
President has no say about the matter, any more than he has
a say about not accepting the vote of those whose party
affiliations or (political) motives he finds repugnant. Even
a Gore concession speech doesn't bind the electors.
As for those faithless electors, we would argue that if you
have a system of electors instead of direct democracy, the
possibility of defection goes with the package. What is
more, if three or more Republican electors decide to cross
over, far from creating electoral anarchy, their actions
would be legally defensible, morally beneficial and
politically desirable.
Legally, because under the Electoral College electors are
not bound by the Constitution to follow the popular vote,
and in twenty-four states they remain free to vote their
conscience. In twenty-six others they are required by state
law to follow the popular vote. Scholars like Akhil Reed
Amar and Mark Tushnet argue that electors are totally free
agents.
Morally, because their action would prevent the presidency
of a man who lost the popular vote. It also brings us a step
closer to the democratic ideal of one person, one vote. The
Electoral College was created by the Framers under a deal
with the slaveholding states to give those states added
clout in the new Union. The Framers distrusted the popular
will. As Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist Papers,
"A small number of persons, selected by their fellow-
citizens from the general mass, will be most likely to
possess the information and discernment requisite to such
complicated investigations" to choose the "Chief
Magistrate." They did not anticipate political parties or
the current practice of electors pledging to vote in
accordance with the popular vote in their state.
Politically, because ultimately the fortunes of both
parties--and minority parties as well--would be strengthened
by a more democratic government. The smaller states now
wield disproportionate influence in elections. And without
the need to troll for electoral votes, candidates would be
motivated to campaign in all fifty states, not merely the
big contested ones.
Passing a constitutional amendment to abolish the Electoral
College will not be easy. But the dramatic gesture of three
electors or more defying the Electoral College could
concentrate the nation's attention wonderfully and help
jump-start a movement for reform. It might at least
stimulate collateral reforms in the states, along the lines
of the present systems of appointing electors in Maine and
Nebraska, only carrying it further.
In the past, faithless electors were eccentric loners. This
year they could be electors of conscience--the people's
electors. Their action would cause a firestorm in the House.
But such high constitutional drama would open a national
debate on the legitimacy of the Electoral College. It's time
to start that debate.
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krj
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response 23 of 57:
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Dec 15 18:25 UTC 2000 |
My vague recollection is that one of the DC electors announced a plan to
abstain, in protest against DC's lack of voting representation in
Congress.
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ashke
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response 24 of 57:
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Dec 15 18:52 UTC 2000 |
Here is my 2 cents worth. I think this has all been premature. It always
has been. If the election isn't over until the Electoral College votes, there
is NO reason for the candidates to conceed BEFORE that election.
flippers or no flippers, if the american people do not choose the president,
(ie, popular vote) then the election hasn't happened until the EC votes. So
"president-elect" is jumping the gun. And I can't wait to see what happens.
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polygon
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response 25 of 57:
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Dec 15 20:04 UTC 2000 |
Another article, this from the conservative Washington Times:
Three 'faithless electors' could still give election to Gore
By Frank J. Murray
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
A month-long crusade to persuade three of Texas Gov. George
W. Bush's 271 hard-won electors to switch sides still could
make Vice President Al Gore president.
In his concession speech Wednesday, Mr. Gore assured
Americans that the Electoral College would ratify Mr. Bush
as president-elect when electors meet Monday in 50 state
capitals and in the District of Columbia.
But there is nothing in the law or Constitution that can
prevent "faithless electors" from deserting their candidate.
That has sparked speculation since November, when a veteran
Democratic operative said that he was "trying to kidnap"
Bush electors who might be willing to switch to Mr. Gore.
And in the five weeks since Election Day, tens of thousands
of e-mails, letters and phone calls bombarded 172 Bush
electors as a result of an Internet campaign engineered by
two California college students, who say the popular vote
should prevail over the Electoral College.
"I think this is exactly the kind of situation where the
Founders, who originated the Electoral College, might want
unbound electors to exercise discretion," said Beverly Ross,
of Coral Gables, Fla., co-author of an Electoral College
study cited twice in Tuesday's Supreme Court decision in the
case of Bush vs. Gore.
There is precedent for mass defection as recently as 1960,
when six Alabama electors who signed pledges to Sen. John F.
Kennedy voted for Sen. Harry Byrd, Virginia Democrat, under
a segregationist plan hatched by a Montgomery, Ala., lawyer
who also persuaded Oklahoma elector Dr. Henry D. Irwin to
switch from Richard Nixon to Mr. Byrd.
Other electors made their political statement one at a time,
but none ever changed an election outcome. No electors
switched sides in 1876, when Rutherford B. Hayes won by one
vote in the Electoral College.
Mr. Gore would have to get votes from three "faithless
electors" to achieve the 270 electoral votes needed to
become president. Gaining those three electors is the goal
of an organized effort to convince Bush electors that Mr.
Gore's 337,576 popular-vote plurality trumps the
Constitution's system for choosing presidents.
Two switchers would only tie the vote 269-269 and throw the
election into the House, where a Republican majority is
likely.
There are 140 Bush electors totally unbound either by state
law or signed pledge _ including 11 in Mr. Gore's home state
of Tennessee, where the electoral vote is by secret ballot.
The remaining 131 _ including 59 in other states using
secret ballots _ know that no "faithless elector" has ever
been prosecuted for switching sides.
In 1952, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 7-2 that political
parties could require electors to sign a pledge to vote for
their party's nominee for president. Six states and the
District have such a pledge, enforceable by party
discipline.
Twenty states have statutes binding delegates to vote for
the candidate they were elected to vote for. New Mexico,
Oklahoma and South Carolina prescribe criminal penalties and
three others _ North and South Carolina and Michigan
_nullify "faithless" votes and replace the elector on the
spot.
When published reports identified four Bush electors as
potential converts, those four were bombarded with calls,
pro and con, more heavily than the overall group. "I am
casting my vote for George W. Bush," said Frances Sadler, of
Ashland, Va., contradicting those reports.
"No way would I switch," said Joe Arpaio, of Scottsdale,
Ariz., the sheriff of Maricopa County, who gained fame for
housing 1,400 of his 7,300 jail inmates in a tent city,
forcing female convicts to work on chain gangs, and muting
macho males by clothing them in stripes and underwear dyed
pink.
"I guess you have First Amendment rights, but if they come
down here and violate any law, try to bribe me or anybody
else, they're going to be in Tent City wearing pink
underwear," Sheriff Arpaio told The Washington Times.
The other two electors targeted in a Wall Street Journal
report _Wayne McDonald, of Derry, N.H., and Mamon Wright, of
Memphis, Tenn. _ were not answering phones or taking
messages.
While the recount still was at an impasse, the vice
president's campaign actively studied ways to recruit enough
electors to win, even as it publicly repudiated free-lance
efforts to "kidnap" a few votes, The Times learned from an
authority on the Electoral College who was advising the Gore
organization.
"Gore is three electors away from a victory, two away from a
tie. Some might defect," he said, refusing to respond when
asked if any recruits were on board.
His statements seemed to contradict public disavowals by
Gore strategists, including former Secretary of State Warren
G. Christopher.
"The vice president has said he never would engage in that
kind of activity and I'm sure he wouldn't. I believe he
would discourage it," Mr. Christopher said.
"No matter what happens in Florida, switching electors will
still be an open question. . . . Gore and Christopher can't
control that," said former New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, a
Democrat.
"I take Secretary Christopher at his word. Mario is
dreaming," countered John Sununu, former Republican governor
of New Hampshire and President Bush's first chief of staff.
"Republican electors aren't leaning one iota toward changing
their commitment."
That was the view from Bush headquarters in Austin after
supportive conference calls urging Republican electors to
stay true, according to campaign spokesman Ray Sullivan.
"It's certainly unusual for one side to contact the others.
We were disappointed with the Democrats' efforts to
investigate Republican electors and try to pressure them
into switching," Mr. Sullivan said.
"We expect our electors to support Governor Bush," he said.
The Gore campaign consultant, who asked not to be
identified, also said the now-defeated Florida slate of
Democratic electors still could meet Monday and mail their
vote to Washington without certification. If that happened,
according to a National Archives official, the competing
slate also would be placed before the Joint Session of
Congress on Jan. 6.
The Times learned yesterday that Florida Democrats had a
contingency plan to do precisely that. Until Mr. Gore's
concession speech, the plan was so solid the Democratic
Party reserved a meeting room in the state Capitol.
"We had to be prepared," Tony Welch, Florida Democratic
Party communications director, said in an interview when
asked if that prospect had been floated.
"More than raised and studied _if there was no concession
and the Florida Legislature had done what we think is
illegal and Gore had won the vote based on a recount, we
were ready with our electors meeting," Mr. Welch said.
"My understanding is that, as of this very moment, our
electors are not going to meet," Mr. Welch added, saying
that reflected the policy of Florida Democratic Chairman Bob
Poe.
Susan Cooper, spokeswoman for the National Archives, which
administers Electoral College affairs, confirmed such a ploy
would put a conflicting slate's claim before Congress, as
occurred in 1960, when Hawaii sent three claims for their
three electoral votes, two of them certified by succeeding
governors of opposite parties.
"What we did in that case and what we would do again, if the
situation comes up, is let Congress decide. We would send
forward any certificates we received," Miss Cooper said.
Dozens of Bush electors contacted by The Times uniformly
reported barrages of phone calls, e-mails and letters. About
one-third were from Democrats urging them to switch sides,
and most of the rest asked them to stick to their guns, they
said.
"No one has been so indecorous as to be threatening or to
say they'd open a seven-figure bank account for me in the
Caymans, but a lot of callers seemed to come from the
shallow end of the gene pool," said West Virginia elector
John McCutcheon, executive director of the Bush campaign in
that state.
Much of that uprising was the Internet-based brainchild of
government majors David Enrich, 21, of Boston, and Matt
Grossmann, 21, of Columbia, Mo., at Claremont-McKenna
College in California.
Their project began two years ago under the name Citizens
for True Democracy to abolish the Electoral College system.
It transformed on Dec. 10 into Vote With America, whose Web
site (www.votewithamerica.com) sparked the outpouring of e-
mail to 172 Bush electors, whose addresses were posted.
"We hope that two or three electors will agree with our
logic," said Mr. Enrich, who said he and Mr. Grossmann side
with neither candidate. He also said they do not endorse the
implied threat of investigating electors' backgrounds that
was raised by Democratic consultant Bob Beckel of Alexandria
during a cable-television interview.
"I'm trying to kidnap these electors in states that [Mr.
Bush] won that are not legally bound to him that have a
right to vote how they want to," said Mr. Beckel, whose plan
was publicly disavowed by Mr. Christopher.
While conceding that Mr. Beckel would not break any laws so
long as he avoided coercive acts that look like extortion,
constitutional law professor Paul Campos, of the University
of Colorado, countered with a war of words against the
crusade.
"I think the unfortunate tendency we have in this culture is
to equate what is legal with what is sort of decent," Mr.
Campos told The Times. "You can go on television and
announce your plans to burgle the presidency of the United
States, and nobody blinks an eye. The very fact that
Beckel's plan could actually succeed . . . is a testament to
the risk that a kind of mad corruption will soon engulf this
whole affair."
Mr. McCutcheon, the West Virginia elector, agreed and said
the modest Beckel plan to find three votes may fail only
because he went public, galvanizing Republican slates
nationwide.
"Beckel might have succeeded if he hadn't been open and
notorious," Mr. McCutcheon said. "What the coordinated
effort by the other side has done is make us all stick
together."
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aaron
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response 26 of 57:
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Dec 15 22:50 UTC 2000 |
Being "open and notorious" means you lose? I guess, then, that you
can't win electors by adverse possession.
(Hm. A bit obscure. Okay... a lot. But I know one or two people will
get it.)
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mdw
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response 27 of 57:
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Dec 16 00:55 UTC 2000 |
You can still win electors by demonic possession.
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albaugh
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response 28 of 57:
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Dec 16 02:18 UTC 2000 |
Certainly there are legal and political justifications for a faithless
elector. But I reject the argument that there is a moral justification:
The Electoral College is not an immoral contrivance that demands "jury
nullification". It may have outlived its usefulness, as I happen to believe.
But there were no cries of indignation about heading into another presidential
election with an immoral EC in place. It didn't break the nation apart in
1888 when the popular vote leader didn't assume the presidency. So there is
no moral issue in 2000 either.
That being said, the popular vote leader not slated (if you pardon the pun)
to assume the presidency is one of the few, if not the only justification for
an elector to be faithless.
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flem
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response 29 of 57:
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Dec 16 19:39 UTC 2000 |
Satan for President! :)
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polygon
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response 30 of 57:
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Dec 16 19:56 UTC 2000 |
Re 28. The theoretical reasons for disliking the Electoral College are
stronger now than they were in 1888, when ideas of numerical fairness in
voting and representation were not well developed. Right up into the
1960s, many state legislators or even members of Congress were elected
from districts which had many times the population of other districts.
Only in our lifetime did the Supreme Court decide that was a problem.
The theoretical reasons for keeping the Electoral College are much weaker
in an era when states have lost a lot of their distinctiveness and
separateness, and millions of people move readily across state lines and
consider themselves fundamentally to be Americans rather than Virginians
or Ohioans or whatever.
Yes, there have been plenty of cries of indignation against the Electoral
College. They appear in almost every civics textbook or learned essay
about the structure of the presidential election process. Colmnists
warned that the electoral college/popular vote mismatch possibility was a
"timb bomb" which could explode and cause public outrage, a constitutional
crisis, maybe even violence.
All of those predictions were wrong. Almost everybody is willing to keep
following the steps outlined in the Constitution, even if they lead to a
result they don't like for political or theoretical reasons. And those
steps outlined in the constitution include the concept of independent
electors who are free to vote their conscience.
The Electoral College will probably never be abolished; if we're going to
live with it, we have to live with the whole thing, not selected aspects
of it.
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drew
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response 31 of 57:
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Dec 16 20:04 UTC 2000 |
It depends on whether we are going to continue to be a federation of
independent polities or become one big megastate. Whatever the choice, though,
winner-take-all-by-state has to go. If we continue the compact-of-governances
model, the proper way to do presidential elections is:
* Each State gets *two* electors, that th respective States may choose
any way they want;
* Each *Congressional district* gets one elector, selected by popular vote
within the respective districts.
This better mirrors the way Congress is set up, and makes popular/electoral
result mismatches a lot less likely.
DC could still have its three votes, I guess. AFAIAC, DC should get squat,
as a political entity. Instead, let each person in DC vote as a resident of
his State of origin - and be able to choose a state of origin if it's not
known. DC is supposed to be common territory - an extrality zone, if you will.
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rcurl
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response 32 of 57:
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Dec 16 21:28 UTC 2000 |
Not quite. The Constitution provides for a very large fraction of
national authority to reside in "one big megastate", but it reserves
the rest to the states.
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carson
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response 33 of 57:
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Dec 16 21:43 UTC 2000 |
This response has been erased.
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carson
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response 34 of 57:
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Dec 16 21:53 UTC 2000 |
resp:15
(great. perhaps you might also say why if you "could have left skin
color out of it... and maybe... should have," you felt the need to
begin resp:13 with seven paragraphs of why you _didn't_.)
(perhaps you might go into more detail about why you chose to use the
word "opportunist." you briefly touch on this by referring to your
experiences in Detroit, but it's not clear [to me] why someone who
isn't an "ideological conservative" wouldn't belong in the GOP save for
the chance at some nebulous political appointment. I'll also point out
that, with Detroit being one of the poorest cities, it wouldn't be
surprising to see someone who grew up with nothing to try and make
something out of themselves by any means necessary. surely you see
that in both major parties. perhaps you meant to imply poorer people
are "opportunists", and just happened to confuse a socioeconomic
condition with a skin color?)
(plus, you might say, even if anyone accepted your portrayal of this
potential faithless elector [who just happens to have dark skin, but it
really doesn't matter, even though you spend great lengths implying
that it does] as being from an economically depressed area, not really
agreeing with the GOP [or at least not "ideological conservative"], and
conveniently having dozens of neighbors who consider him a "snake", how
we could then place this person into your scenario of finding one
or two more electors *just like him* to "sit around a kitchen table"
and deciding, for whatever reason, Gore would deserve their vote moreso
than Bush, such that it would be worth, uh, to paraphrase you,
uncommitting political treason.)
(some of the members of this year's electoral college are listed at
<http://www.nara.gov/fedreg/elctcoll/2000res.html>. perhaps you could
find the two or three electors who fit your scenario.)
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polygon
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response 35 of 57:
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Dec 17 00:12 UTC 2000 |
Re 34. I wrote that I could have left the black/white thing out
completely, but it would have been misleading. The word "race" may be
meaningless as a biological concept, but it still has tremendous power as
a socio-political concept. Black voters as a group have different views,
different loyalties, different religious practices, different residential
patterns than similarly situated white or Hispanic voters. If you talk
about politics, these differences are going to come up.
You ask why skin color should be any criteria of this. Well, it's not. I
do frequently use the word "black" interchangably with "African-American",
because the one-syllable term is much less awkward to use. It's not a
literal reference to skin color; it's a reference to a group
identification. Nobody I know, regardless of the color of their skin or
their group self-identification, uses the term "African-American"
completely to the exclusion of the term "black". And since I am in
politics, I hear these terms being used on an almost daily basis.
I thought I explained the word "opportunist" pretty thoroughly already. I
know lots of opportunistic people in politics. Public figures who I have
repeatedly called opportunistic include Jerry Kaufman (many times a
candidate for Michigan Supreme Court), and Ralph Reed (one-time head of
the Christian Coalition). An opportunist (in politics) is someone who
joins a political campaign or party or crusade for other than reasons of
belief or dedication. Often their lack of sincerity for the cause shows,
or perhaps their willingness to abandon it when something better comes
along is more telling.
Since I believe that the difference between the Democratic and Republican
party is pretty deep and significant, I think that a political activist or
politician who changes from one to the other is making (or acknowledging)
a major change in their views and values. But people change, and parties
change, so it is inevitable that individuals are going to have to go
through this kind of thing. I have known people who have done so, in both
directions. If you're a already a politician, changiing parties usually
means that you're leaving behind most of the political associates and
supporters, and even friends; it's a bit like moving from one world into
another, earning the animus of your old friends and never quite getting
the full trust of your new friends.
But when a person does this REPEATEDLY, as Jerry Kaufman has for example,
and especially when it's to personal advantage, as it is in his case, you
start to wonder at how flexible his political views must be.
Certain times and political situations seem to attract people like Jerry.
When your party is almost totally irrelevant, has never won anything and
seemingly never will be more than a footnote in your state or area, you
are in no position to question the sincerity of anyone who walks through
the door. You're just grateful for the help.
Yes, Detroit is an economically depressed area which also has districts
which are overwhelmingly populated by people who describe themselves as
black, and which vote for Democrats by gigantic majorities. But I didn't
say "economically depressed" because that by itself does not even begin to
explain why such districts have only tiny numbers of Republicans.
Some of the poorest, most economically depressed counties in the United
States are also overwhelmingly REPUBLICAN -- look at Hancock County,
Tennessee, for example. Even in cities like New York, Chicago and Los
Angeles, economically depressed districts which are ethnically diverse do
have MUCH more than trivial numbers of Republican activists and voters.
The reason why it was logical to single out the African-American
communities in my original message is that there is no other substantial
population group in the United States which votes Democratic so solidly.
And, despite rising incomes (which might be thought to make people more
politically conservative), this is even truer now than it used to be. Al
Gore got a higher percentage of black votes than Bill Clinton did in 1996,
which means that George W. Bush did worse among black voters than did the
seemingly hapless Bob Dole.
Those kinds of facts get the attention of politicians. And that kind of
reality, in areas where African-American voters make up the electorate,
creates an awkward situation for Republican organizations on the ground,
leading to the possible naming of electors who might not have the same
commitment to the Republican Party and its candidates as the average
Republican elector does.
I mentioned ideological conservatives because that is one obvious way to
develop a deep commitment to the Republican Party. I did not mean to
imply that there were not other ways. One important example of probably
many: Less than a lifetime ago, to be African-American meant that you were
a Republican politically. Every important advance for the rights of black
people across decades of American history (from the 1850s almost to the
1950s) was brought about by Republicans. I know that a small but
significant number still remember that and have stuck by the party from
those days to this.
I'm not interested in looking over the lists of electors and predicting
who will do what. I was, rather, putting myself in the future and
imagining that one or more electors HAD deserted Bush. Starting from that
assumption, who would it have been? Hence the speculation. No, I don't
think it's terribly likely -- we'll find out on Monday -- but Timothy Noah
in Slate thinks the chances are better than even that there will be at
least one.
The reason I envisioned three people sitting together is that it is not
often in history that as few as three ordinary people are given the power
to completely change the national course of events without committing
violence. One or two alone couldn't do it -- it would take three. I put
it with Scenario Two because the guy I imagined in Scenario One was a
loner.
Most people would not do it, even if they didn't care about political
parties and who won the election, because the act of breaking with
expectations under such circumstances would require tremendous chutzpah.
It would require facing the in-person rage of probably hundreds of people
on that day alone -- many of them people you know -- an almost intolerable
experience for the average person.
So who could possibly do that kind of thing? Maybe somebody who lives in
a community but dissents from its overwhelmingly dominant political
predilections. Somebody who advocates a political party that his
neighbors detest, and who is seen as a turncoat simply for doing so. That
is a fair description of a black Republican activist in an all-black urban
environment in the U.S.
That doesn't mean that an elector from say, urban St. Louis would
necessarily do this. Almost certainly not. But maybe alone among the
people in the room (on December 18), he or she would have the strength of
purpose to make that decision, defy the rage of the other electors and
officials.
That's what I meant by "willingness to go against the grain."
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gelinas
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response 36 of 57:
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Dec 17 02:14 UTC 2000 |
I've been trying to figure out why you say the Constitution envisions
independent electors, Larry. I see where it says that the states will
appoint them, and how their votes will be cast, but I don't see where it
says anything about how they might (or might not) be directed to vote.
At least one other disagrees that the electors are independent:
One misconception about the Electoral College is that the founders
intended for the electors to use their individual judgment in selecting
a candidate. A few people at the constitutional convention may have held
this view. But at the very first contested Presidential election (that
is, in 1796), electors were already pledged to a candidate. Indeed,
one Pennsylvania elector pledged to Adams voted for Jefferson,
prompting this complaint, not so different from something you might
see posted on the Internet:
What, do I chuse Samuel Miles to determine for me
whether John Adams or Thomas Jefferson shall be
President? No! I chuse him to act, not to think.
(From http://www.avagara.com/e_c/ec_unfaithful.htm)
I admit, if the electors had been directed to vote in a particular way,
it is difficult to see how each state would come up with three (or more)
candidates, but that clause didn't last long very long in practice,
even if it did continue in text.
If we are going to vote for unpledged electors, then their names should
appear directly on the ballots. As it is, we vote for electors pledged to a
candidate for President. As in 1796, I voted for them to act, not to think.
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carson
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response 37 of 57:
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Dec 17 02:31 UTC 2000 |
resp:35
(theory is more fun to work with than facts, isn't it? when you work
with facts, such as who the electors actually are, or why electors have
been faithless in the past, or even which states prevent their electors
from switching votes, you're boxing off such wonderfully fantastic
possiblities as two or three similarly-hued Americans sitting around a
kitchen table, planning how they could change the face of politics or
at least get their name in the paper. really, you could make a movie
with such a dramatic, colorful [*cough*] outcome. heck, they could all
sign multimillion dollar book deals, and then it wouldn't matter what
their neighbors thought about their actions.)
(I mean, you could have suggested a scenario where an elector or two
throws their Bush-pledged vote to someone like Nader, or Buchanan, or
maybe even Leiberman. it would only take two of them to throw the
whole election to the House, who would [likely] pick Bush anyway. no
lasting harm done, same message made.)
(you speak of people who make a habit of switching parties, or who are
insincere about the cause they're supporting. having worked on a
political campaign, I'm familiar with insincere people working for a
candidate in whom they don't believe. I'm not convinced that these
people are selected as electors; maybe they are in the third parties.)
(you also speak of this monolithic force you call "black" [or "African-
American" when it isn't _awkward_ for you] that, according to you,
doesn't refer to skin color, but rather some sort of self-described
socioeconomic description. how do you *think* this group came up with
whatever self-description du jour they happen to be using at any given
moment? do all these people get together and say, "we're 'black
colored African-American negroes' because 90% of us voted for Gore!"?
I don't think so. as much as I disagree with the concept, the self-
description comes from skin color. BUT, I would suggest that, in most
cases, these people didn't vote the way they did because of some
narrow, outdated self-description. rather, I would suggest they voted
based on one issue or another. isn't that how most people vote? or is
it that these people get together and say, "we're 'black colored
African-American negroes' who vote however Jesse Jackson says we
should, except for 10% of us!"?)
(ever looked at a map of Africa? it's especially interesting to look
at one before and after the Europeans pulled out. you'll see large
areas of land splintered because colonizers had no regard for keeping
tribes separate, tribes that were more often than not in direct
conflict. heck, they all look the same, they must all be the same,
right? it's that attitude that I see whenever I see the
words "black", "African-American", etc., used to describe a group that
really has almost no unifying characteristic save for skin color.)
(you speak of these people voting overwhelmingly for Gore. didn't
Democrats vote overwhelmingly for Gore too? oh, wait: you did
describe these people as "solidly" Democratic. I wonder what they make
of Colin Powell, who today described himself as "African-American".
maybe he's the exception? maybe he's an "opportunist"?)
(I wonder how many of these self-described "black Republicans" you
know, how many of them have earned the derision of their neighbors, how
many of them are waiting for that one day when they can do that one
thing that will get them a congratulatory phone call from Jesse Jackson
[speaking of an "opportunist"...] or at least that respect which you
imply they crave, at the expense of their self-respect.)
(again, I ask you what sort of twisted opportunity would be gained by
being a faithless elector. and, if you can't find even one elector
from St. Louis who fits your suggested scenario, then I suggest either
picking another city or revisualizing your scenario.)
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gelinas
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response 38 of 57:
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Dec 17 03:03 UTC 2000 |
Carson, you may find the story of Henry Irwin interesting. You can find
it at that URL I posted immediately above but will repeat:
http://www.avagara.com/e_c/ec_unfaithful.htm
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gull
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response 39 of 57:
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Dec 17 03:25 UTC 2000 |
carson demonstrates one of the reasons why racial divisions are so hard to
work on improving in this country -- we aren't even allowed to *talk* about
them. It's such a hot-button issue that you can't even mention the fact
that, for example, people tend to self-segregate by skin color, without
being accused of being a racist for describing the obvious.
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