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< < | It is strongly recommended that you include your outline in the body of your essay by using the outline as section titles. The headings below are there to remind you how section and subsection titles are formatted. | > > | | | Elevating Participation in American Presidential Elections
Problems with the Voting System
The oft repeated goal of the American voting system is to provide each citizen an equal say in choosing his representatives. In every election, both candidates make a point to tout the continued success of the electoral system and how it represents quintessential American virtues: participation, freedom, choice, democracy. But a quick look at our voting system as compared to the other liberal democracies tells a different story. Voter turnout and registration in the United States remains comparatively lower than that of other Western democracies. Even in the most hotly contested presidential elections, turnout among the voting eligible population hovers around 60%, and in legislative elections with no presidential vote, turnout is around 40%. Given the amount of media coverage around a Presidential election, this seems a strange phenomenon. Western Europe, by contrast, has consistent voter turnout between 75-80%. | |
< < | Sometimes, candidates who win the popular vote do not win the Presidency, as we saw in 2000. Results like these only encourage political parties to pursue a strategy of total war in 10 or 12 states, while ignoring states they consider lost causes or easy wins. Additionally, the system disenfranchises voters in states considered solidly in one camp or another. If a party knows they will get 50% plus one vote, they have no incentive to campaign in a non-battleground state beyond rousing the base for donations. | > > | Perhaps the people who
do not vote in the United States because they believe politics has
nothing to offer them find in European electoral systems, mostly
based on proportional representation, something worth voting for?
Sometimes, candidates who win the popular vote do not win the Presidency, as we saw in 2000. Results like these only encourage political parties to pursue a strategy of total war in 10 or 12 states, while ignoring states they consider lost causes or easy wins.
One has nothing to do with the other.
Additionally, the system disenfranchises voters in states considered solidly in one camp or another. If a party knows they will get 50% plus one vote, they have no incentive to campaign in a non-battleground state beyond rousing the base for donations. | | Historical Underpinnings | |
< < | The Electoral College was created at a time when the Founders did not trust the mob to cast informed votes for President. Despite the names on the ballot being for presidential candidates, voters today still vote for slates of electors, who are technically free to cast their ballots for any presidential candidate they choose. By federal statute, Election Day is set for the Tuesday after the first Monday in November because in pre-industrial America, multiple days were required for travel, which could not coincide with the Sabbath or late-week market days. Tuesday is now within the traditional 40-hour, 9-5 work week, and commuters are forced to vote after work. Also, we no longer publicly hold a view that it is unwise for the people to directly elect the president, rendering the main purpose of the Electoral College an anachronism. | > > | The Electoral College was created at a time when the Founders did not trust the mob to cast informed votes for President. Despite the names on the ballot being for presidential candidates, voters today still vote for slates of electors, who are technically free to cast their ballots for any presidential candidate they choose.
No. The Electoral
College is a component of an envisioned system, in which State Legislatures chose both the United States Senate and the
Presidential Electors.
By federal statute, Election Day is set for the Tuesday after the
first Monday in November because in pre-industrial America, multiple
days were required for travel, which could not coincide with the
Sabbath or late-week market days. Tuesday is now within the
traditional 40-hour, 9-5 work week, and commuters are forced to vote
after work. Also, we no longer publicly hold a view that it is unwise
for the people to directly elect the president, rendering the main
purpose of the Electoral College an anachronism.
No. The main purpose of
the Senate and the Electoral College was to give the State
Governments a decisive role in the selection of the imperial Federal
Government. Even when popular vote elects both the Presidential
Electors and the members of the Senate, the voting rules and
apportionments of power in both bodies give State polities far more
clout than they would have in a more unitary national structure,
where the state governments would soon be nothing but regional
administrators. All the "anachronism" bullshit fails to understand
what the Electoral College does for the state governments made of
political party members that would have to agree to abolish it, and
who are quite obviously uninterested in doing
so. | | Possible Solutions
Reform Election Day
Low voter turnout cannot simply be explained by an Electoral College system that encourages parties to concentrate attention and resources on a few battleground states. Even in "high excitement" states like Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Florida, and Ohio, turnout is rarely over 70%. The problem of how to increase voter turnout on days when people are expected to go to work and take their children to school is a not a new one, and the solution is simple, either move Election Day to the first Saturday in November, make it a national holiday, or do both. | |
> > | You're twenty years late
with this suggestion. Vote by mail will take over in mainly places,
as in Oregon, eliminating the concept of election day. In the end,
which isn't more than on generation off, network-based voting will
become the rule, and election day, as a shared moment rather than a
deadline, will disappear altogether. | | Same-Day or Automatic Registration
Same day registration, where voters can register at the polls, has long been opposed on the grounds that it will encourage voter fraud and increase lines at polling places. A system of automatic national voter registration, similar to the Selective Service System or European systems, would be the most efficient solution. Voter registration is the province of state governments, and so any solution here will need to be instituted state-by-state or by Constitutional amendment. | |
> > | You don't explain the
consequences of the fact that in a two-party system conducting
elections in an aristocracy pretending to be a middle-class republic,
there is always one party that does not want to expand participation.
Under unusual circumstances, this may be the "popular" party. Almost
all the time, it will be the party whose policies reflect the desires
of the wealthy. Systems of automatic or required participation will
always meet with one party's vehement opposition, and will therefore
be almost impossible to achieve. Motor Voter, the most sought-after
measure of electoral expansion in the Democratic Party's list of
possible enfranchisement devices, which was finally achieved during
the Clinton Administration, produced a significant increase in
registration, but the ultimate participation increase was, as a
number of political scientists had predicted on the basis of past
similar enfranchisement measures, on the order of 2-3%. Why you
don't even mention compulsory voting, which is no longer only an
Australian phenomenon, is something of a mystery. Political
practicability is either a consideration or it isn't.
| | The National Popular Vote
The proposal that would engender the most criticism would involve eliminating the Electoral College through a constitutional amendment, or convincing enough states to sign legislation awarding all of their votes to the candidate with the most popular votes. This would force candidates to campaign nationally, widening people's direct exposure to national politics. A few states have already passed laws requiring the electors to cast their ballots for the winner of the presidential popular vote, and once enough states pass these laws they will go into effect. | |
> > | First, there's no
particular reason to isolate participation in presidential elections
from participation in other elections, which means the conflation of
the particular electoral machinery of that one selection and all
other political participation issues is particularly confusing. In
revision, the presidential election material should either be what
the essay is about, or it should be removed. If we are actually
talking about the mechanisms of presidential elections, you have it
exactly backwards. Elimination of the Electoral College would make
rural America a presidential wasteland. Elections would be fought in
the high-population areas on the two coasts, the industrial cities of
the heartland, and the high-population rings of suburbs that surround
the continental urban cores. It's difficult to explain what would
happen in such a system, because we are also about to undergo the
melting of television into the net, which is going to have immensely
far-reaching and quite independent effects on American electoral
politics. If your idea of "direct exposure" is "personal interaction
between voter and political process," direct exposure is about to
increase by half an order of magnitude. If it means "personal
interaction between the voter and the candidate," nothing of the sort
can or will happen. | | The Interests Opposed to Change
The rhetoric used by the opposition will appeal to voters' sense of patriotism, history, tradition, and individualism. There will be appeals to the Founding Fathers "if the Electoral College was good enough for them, why isn't it good enough for you?" and to the mythical "good voter", "why should we change what the responsible, informed voters have been successful at for so long?" This rhetoric, however, is not fundamentally different than the rhetoric always used to stifle reform. What will allow for real change in the system is to understand the interests that will oppose change. | |
> > | So why didn't you explain them? | | The national parties have been fighting the same familiar, straightforward battles for decades. With a national popular vote, however, the side that wins will not only need to convince independents, but also increase turnout in high-population states or states where they already have a strong base. This will require many different messages for different kinds of voters. A New England Republican, after all, is a different breed than a Texas Republican. Factionalism that would normally be present only during the primaries would spill over into the general election, as voting for third party candidates is now a viable option. | |
< < | Five or six states can consistently be classified as battleground states with another 10 or so "on the bubble." These states understand the power they wield in national elections. Local politicians of both parties know that zealous advocacy for a national candidate on the local level can translate into rewards when the party comes into power. Powerful politicians from these states understand that they are in high demand when it comes time to select a Vice President. These states will be vehemently opposed to any election reforms that dilute the extraordinary pull they have in presidential elections. Any reforms that increase the participation of the lower class, who have the lowest turnout of any socioeconomic group, would be opposed by corporate interests and any politicians reliant on their backing. | > > | No, this is not good
analysis at all. Because only one person can be elected president,
minor party candidates will never be a good option. How platforms
would change in a national popular vote is straightforward enough:
the parties would divide around the urban/suburban distinctions that
roughly bisect the available voters, with more votes in the suburbs
and more deactivated voters in the urban cores. Regional message
modulation would be little different than it is now, except for the
absence of the components that are basically where Dick Cheney
campaigned in 2004, and where—given the closeness of the
vote—the presidential election in Ohio (which decided the
national election) was decided. In a nationalized election, no one
would have bothered with the farmers anywhere. Not even in Iowa.
Five or six states can consistently be classified as battleground
states with another 10 or so "on the bubble." These states understand
the power they wield in national elections.
Yes, and that would be
true in national popular elections too, because those states also
produce an high numbers of votes overall, and winning the national
election without producing large margins in those states would be
hard. Of course, Democrats would have to spend more time in
California and New York, and Republicans would have to spend more
time in suburbs with lots of aging white people all over the place.
Local politicians of both
parties know that zealous advocacy for a national candidate on the
local level can translate into rewards when the party comes into
power. Powerful politicians from these states understand that they are
in high demand when it comes time to select a Vice President.
As proven vote-getters
in high-population regions always would be. Unless the States
themselves were dissolved, these would be state
politicians.
These states will be vehemently opposed to any election reforms that
dilute the extraordinary pull they have in presidential elections. Any
reforms that increase the participation of the lower class, who have
the lowest turnout of any socioeconomic group, would be opposed by
corporate interests and any politicians reliant on their backing. | | | |
> > | Not "corporate
interests." Rich people. | | -- By JonathanWaisnor - 17 Feb 2010 | |
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