Originally
posted by
Oceana:
For real?
Do you live in the united STATES, we created a weak federal system for a reason, I really do not give a fluff about the person in Mass. any more then the one in Cal. It makes even small states important to win. To say no one campaigns for calif. ?
Small states like Florida and Ohio?
Im guessing you dont pay attention, as yes cal is Dem by a few % not much more when a presidential election. And the only reason I can see problems about the current system is that it is very difficult for a 3rd party,
Also true. A 3rd party candidate like Ross Perot back in 1992 could get 15% and still not get a single win. I'm not sure it makes a difference in the big picture, but it certainly shows a different story when you just look at an electoral map. And furthermore, we didn't create a weak federal system. If the states wanted to keep a truly weak federal system, they would have kept the Articles of Confederation. They adopted and ratified the Constitution which greatly strengthened the federal government, and of course, the balance of power has shifted more and more as time has passed towards a stronger federal government. Trying to go back in history over 200 years to show how we have a weak federal government is grasping at straws. Furthermore, other than a few states like, again, Ohio and Florida, how does this empower the states to be on the electoral college. I don't get why having a ridiculous system like the electoral college is a states' rights issue. The only time I see any of the small states really being empowered by these silly rules is during the primary season, and for all I care, the parties themselves can keep doing it the way they want.
Numerous times we have had an election not be the popular vote?? for real I can cut off half my fingers on one hand and still count them on that hand, and it would still be so close that it wouldn't even be convincing that the declared winner didn't.
So because it doesn't happen often we shouldn't care? (For the sake of being clear here, it has happened 3 times, Presidents Hayes, B. Harrison and Bush were all elected despite losing the overall popular vote--two of these instances, you might say that due to how long ago they were, the electoral college was a necessary evil due to the technology available for running an election, however in 2000 this obviously isn't the case. And no, this isn't any type of sour grapes. I'm not saying Gore should've been President. Bush won by the rules that were in place, even if those rules are, in my opinion, incredibly stupid).
Regardless of whether it happened once, three times or thirty times, isn't even once one time too many? We say we believe in a system where everyone's vote is treated equally, yet more people said they wanted Al Gore for President in 2000 than George Bush, and that didn't happen.
And No candidate panders to your wishes either way, which is obvious when you look at senate and House of rep elections as they are the system you think is going to fix something. They have there pockets lined with corp. money that is as much owned by foreigners as it is Americans they couldn't give a RAts ass whether or not you vote or have a job just as long ss some how you buy their BS, and their Sponsors products.
True to some degree. There certainly is far too much of a problem for both parties with different lobbying groups having the politicians in their pockets. At the same time, many of the biggest talking points about how stimulus money was spent seems to deal with Ohio and states that border Ohio. I don't believe this is coincidental.
No how about a campaign law that requires a SS #, or Voter Register #, attached to the check and only money from people living within the district of the person running, so yes All US Registered Voters could send Campaign Money to the Candidate they support, an all congressman would actually get support from their own district instead of Saudi Arabia, China, Europe and everywhere Else that should not be involved.
Sounds good to me. I'd be curious what SCOTUS would think about the Constitutionality of that though, given the way that Citizens United ruling came out.