Last year I posted about the National Popular Vote. This is a cool constitutional hack. State by state, a state agrees that it will gives all of its electoral votes to the winner of the national popular vote. This only goes into effect once enough states have entered into the deal that their combined electoral votes are above 270, which means they now determine the election.
At the time I wrote that, we were at 195 electoral votes. Today we are at 209. Only 61 to go!
One of the problems with any change that effectively broadens the voting pool is that it usually favors the Democrats, because they tend to have more votes. So Republicans tend to fight these kinds of initiatives. You could say Democrats are the party of voting and democracy, but perhaps that is less a moral cause than a strategic one. At some point they become the same thing.
For the first time since 2004, the Republicans indisputably won the national vote. That means that they should be more open to the National Popular Vote than before. It’s an unusual time in American voting patterns, maybe we use that to promote some good ideas, like this one.
So — take some action. Write your state legislators.
You can always count on your local paper to have a breathakingly stupid letter.
Yes… less angry, but more sad.
I agree, and was thinking the same thing. This should help towards passing the NPV. My state is already a member.
There was an editorial in my local paper of someone wanting Connecticut to drop out of the NPV because Trump would have won this time, and that would go against Connecticut’s vote. Like, that’s the whole point, dude.
The majority vote going to TFG makes me feel less angry, but more saddened, about the result of the election.