I've thought of a way to reform US presidential elections that might actually achieve a result closer to what people want, while preserving the Electoral College's role in preventing low population density areas being rendered irrelevant.
Currently, the election is fundamentally First-Past-The Post, in that the candidate getting more votes automatically wins all the electors for a state. I would change it to Single Transferrable Vote.
How STV works:
1. you rank candidates from most preferred to least preferred
2. they tally up the first-preference votes. if no candidate has over 50% of the vote, the lowest-performing candidate is eliminated, and they tally the second preferences of the eliminated candidate, adding the totals to the first preferences from before. This process continues until one candidate has over 50% of the vote. That candidate wins.
This would help in two ways. 1) it would mean third-party candidates may well get more first preferences, since someone could vote for a third-party candidate with their first preference, then one of the main two with their second preference ( or list two third party candidates and then a main party one, of course)
2) it may encourage parties to run more than one candidate for President- since it would be easier to prevent two Democrat candidates, for example, splitting each other's vote to the Republican candidate's benefit.
How this doesn't get rid of the electoral college is that states would still elect electors to the College- it would just make it clearer which of the final two candidates actually has the most support, since third party candidates would no longer irreversibly split the vote of a main party candidate.
States that could have swung if STV was in use ( going by any state where there were votes for other candidates totaling more than the margin of victory):
Clinton to Trump
New Mexico ( 5 electoral votes)
Colorado ( 9 electoral vote)
Nevada (6 electoral votes)
Maine at-Large ( 2 electoral votes)
New Hampshire (4 electoral votes)
Minnesota (10 electorla votes)
Total : 34 electoral votes
Trump To Clinton:
Pennsylvania ( 20 electoral votes)
Florida (29 electoral votes)
Michigan (16 electoral votes)
Wisconsin (10 electoral votes)
North Carolina (15 votes)(unlikely)
Total excluding NC: 74 electoral votes
Total including NC: 89 electoral votes.
That would translate to either a 40-elector or 55-elector swing to Clinton- the 40-elector option would mean it would depend on if the faithless electors again did it- if thye didn't, Hilary would win, if they did, neither candidate would win, so it would go to Congress. with a 55-elector swing, Clinton wins regardless.
Currently, the election is fundamentally First-Past-The Post, in that the candidate getting more votes automatically wins all the electors for a state. I would change it to Single Transferrable Vote.
How STV works:
1. you rank candidates from most preferred to least preferred
2. they tally up the first-preference votes. if no candidate has over 50% of the vote, the lowest-performing candidate is eliminated, and they tally the second preferences of the eliminated candidate, adding the totals to the first preferences from before. This process continues until one candidate has over 50% of the vote. That candidate wins.
This would help in two ways. 1) it would mean third-party candidates may well get more first preferences, since someone could vote for a third-party candidate with their first preference, then one of the main two with their second preference ( or list two third party candidates and then a main party one, of course)
2) it may encourage parties to run more than one candidate for President- since it would be easier to prevent two Democrat candidates, for example, splitting each other's vote to the Republican candidate's benefit.
How this doesn't get rid of the electoral college is that states would still elect electors to the College- it would just make it clearer which of the final two candidates actually has the most support, since third party candidates would no longer irreversibly split the vote of a main party candidate.
States that could have swung if STV was in use ( going by any state where there were votes for other candidates totaling more than the margin of victory):
Clinton to Trump
New Mexico ( 5 electoral votes)
Colorado ( 9 electoral vote)
Nevada (6 electoral votes)
Maine at-Large ( 2 electoral votes)
New Hampshire (4 electoral votes)
Minnesota (10 electorla votes)
Total : 34 electoral votes
Trump To Clinton:
Pennsylvania ( 20 electoral votes)
Florida (29 electoral votes)
Michigan (16 electoral votes)
Wisconsin (10 electoral votes)
North Carolina (15 votes)(unlikely)
Total excluding NC: 74 electoral votes
Total including NC: 89 electoral votes.
That would translate to either a 40-elector or 55-elector swing to Clinton- the 40-elector option would mean it would depend on if the faithless electors again did it- if thye didn't, Hilary would win, if they did, neither candidate would win, so it would go to Congress. with a 55-elector swing, Clinton wins regardless.
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