Weekly Opinion Editorial
The Electoral
College is Under Attack- Again!
by Steve Fair
Last week, Congressman Steve Cohen, (D, Tennessee), a vocal critic of
President Trump, introduced a bill to eliminate the Electoral College. “In two
presidential elections since 2000, including the most recent one in which
Hillary Clinton won 2.8 million more votes than her opponent, the winner of the
popular vote did not win the election because of the distorting effect of the
outdated Electoral College,” Cohen
said in a statement. “Americans expect
and deserve the winner of the popular vote to win office. More than a century
ago, we amended our Constitution to provide for the direct election of U.S.
Senators. It is past time to directly elect our President and Vice President.”
At the 1787 Constitutional Convention, the
Electoral College came about as a compromise between large and small states. The large
states wanted presidential voting to be based on population, as in the House of
Representatives, while the small states wanted each state to have the same
number of votes, as in the Senate (and the Constitutional Convention itself,
for that matter). So they split the difference by giving each state a number of
electors equal to its combined total of seats in both houses of Congress and
establishing the Electoral College.
Critics of the Electoral College point out
that five times in our nation’s history (twice since 2000), the winner of the
popular vote did not win the electoral vote.
What they neglect to point out is that fifteen times the winner did not
get a majority of the vote. President
Clinton did not receive 50% of the vote in either of his presidential
elections. Most of those who want to
eliminate the EC are liberal, since both of the presidents elected in modern
times and lost the popular vote were Republicans- George W Bush and Donald
Trump. Funny there isn’t the same outcry for a clear majority for election. Two thoughts to consider regarding the Electoral
College:
First, America is a representative republic,
not a democracy. The Electoral College is
consistent with that representative republic model. Our
founders rejected a pure democracy because as James Madison said, “democracies have ever been spectacles of
turbulence and contention; have ever been found incompatible with personal
security, or the rights of property; and have in general been as short in their
lives, as they have been violent in their deaths.” A democracy is mob
rule.
Second, we are the United STATES of
America. Vertically Americans are one
people living under a rule of common law, but horizontally we live in sovereign
states. If the Electoral College were
eliminated, the rights of sovereign states would disappear with it. The college was established to protect state
rights and to insure each state had a voice in electing the POTUS. Under the Electoral College, every state is relevant. If it were eliminated, candidates would
ignore smaller states in favor of the larger metro areas.
Cohen’s bill has little chance of success
this year. To pass, it would require a
two thirds majority in Congress and ratification by three fourths of the
states, and that won’t happen, but conservatives should be diligent. The Electoral College and state’s rights continue
to be under attack and liberals won’t rest until both are eliminated.
The Founding Fathers, and the rest of the Founding Generation were dead for decades before state-by-state winner-take-all laws become the predominant method for awarding electoral votes.
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