The U.S. President Should be Elected by Popular Vote
PRO (3 arguments)
Links to more PRO research:
States passing legislation to stop electoral college
This is an news article that states that there is a movement already to end the electoral college.
National Direct Election is good for California
This news article provides historical examples explaining how direct election is better for Americans.
Observation 1: The Electoral System in the U.S. has worked well for centuries, there needs to be an extremely compelling reason to re-form our entire election process. We ought not reform legal precedent based off status quo unless we can conclude that A) The status quo has a problem, B) The problem will not go away by itself, C) changing the status quo will fix this problem, and D) the unintended problems from changing the status quo have been evaluated and considered of less significance than the current problem. If my Opponents arguments do not meet all these criteria, you vote Con by default.
Observation 2: The resolution calls for a comparative analysis between DPV (direct popular vote) and Electoral Vote. My Opponent’s position is advocating a change in the status quo, so he must present a coherent voting system in replacement. This means, essentially, that if we want to affirm this resolution we need to have some framework of what our new voting system ought to be. (IE, are votes counted state by state still? Will minority presidents go to the house of representatives? Will all votes still be taken on the same day? ETC.) The proposition must bring this up in order for their case to be valid.
Under the current system, it is possible for a Presidential candidate to lose the popular vote, but to be elected by the Electoral College. This has happened four times in the nation's history, most recently in 2000. This is completely undemocratic as it doesn't represent the will of the people. Moreover, the electoral college system does not properly take into account population changes within states because the census only happens every decade. Often, people can be under- or over-represented. The system fails to serve the people.
Four candidates for President have won the White House despite having lost the popular vote: John Quincy Adams in 1824; Rutherford B. Hayes in 1876; Benjamin Harrison in 1888; and George W. Bush in 2000. And in 2004, a shift of 60,000 votes in Ohio would have given John Kerry a majority of the electoral votes, despite President Bush's 3.5 million-vote lead in the nationwide popular vote.
Under the current Electoral College system, candidates focus only on a handful of contested states and ignore the concerns of tens of millions of Americans living in other states; A candidate can lose in 39 states, but still win the Presidency; A candidate can lose the popular vote by more than 10 million votes, but still win the Presidency; A candidate can win 20 million votes in the general election, but win zero electoral votes, as happened to Ross Perot in 1992.
A candidate can win a state's vote, but an elector can refuse to represent the will of a majority of the voters in that state by voting arbitrarily for the losing candidate (this has reportedly happened 9 times since 1820).
More than 6 out of 10 Americans believe we should abolish the electoral college system. To be democratic, we must adhere to the views of citizens.
The electoral college tries to give every state whether small or large a say in the elections. But, they fail to see that they give too much power to certain citizens over others, and they give too much power to certain states over others.
For example, a vote by a resident of Wyoming counts about four times more--electorally--than a vote by a California resident. The 10 smallest states in America, by population, control 32 electoral votes. That's 6% of the votes in the Electoral College, yet their population is 7.6 million, or 2% of the national total. Thus 2% of the population controls 6% of the votes for the presidency. Texas has 1 electoral vote for approximately 750,000 voters whereas Wyoming has 1 electoral vote for every 150,000 votes. This is fundamentally unfair to the voters. Smaller states have a disproportionate advantage over larger states because of the two "constant" or "senatorial" electors assigned to each state; In the event of a tie in the Electoral College, the outcome of the election for President is decided by a single vote from each state's delegation in the House of Representatives. This would unfairly grant California's 37 million residents equal status with Wyoming's 500,000 residents. In case of such a deadlock, House members are not bound to vote for the candidate who won their state's election, which has the potential to further distort the will of the majority. Furthermore, voters in regular tossup states have more power than their counterparts in other states.
Under the electoral college system people have less incentive to vote in states that have been reputed to be strongly Democratic or strongly Republican. They feel their votes don't matter. In a democracy, it is essential to try to increase voter turnout in order to serve the people. Professor Richard J. Cebula, after analyzing elections in various years, concludes in his study that states where one political party strongly dominates the other, the voter participation rate is lower the greater the degree of domination.†Professor Victoria Shineman from the Princeton University further concludes in her study that the abolition of the electoral college would uniformly increase voter turnout throughout the U.S.