EC supporters: Do you think any other place should have an "electoral college"? (user search)
       |           

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?
April 30, 2024, 05:16:58 AM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

  Talk Elections
  Presidential Elections - Analysis and Discussion
  Presidential Election Process (Moderator: muon2)
  EC supporters: Do you think any other place should have an "electoral college"? (search mode)
Pages: [1]
Author Topic: EC supporters: Do you think any other place should have an "electoral college"?  (Read 11414 times)
Shameless Lefty Hack
Chickenhawk
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 2,178


« on: March 09, 2017, 01:56:04 AM »

I think other places with a lot of really diverse geography/a lot of space and strong urban/rural divides would benefit from it. Other than Canada and Brazil though, the rest aren't *really * functional democracies (China, Russia) at the moment, sooooo.
Logged
Shameless Lefty Hack
Chickenhawk
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 2,178


« Reply #1 on: May 15, 2017, 10:17:14 PM »
« Edited: May 16, 2017, 02:28:42 PM by Shameless Bernie Hack »

Electoral College was a sordid compromise to solve a series of issues most of which no longer exist (and some no longer existed very quickly in the history of the United States) and were unique to Early America.

It's not a model you can export, even if you wanted to (and note that America when imposing democracy abroad a la Iraq plumbs for a parliamentary system).

America no longer has small, rural states?

(yes I'm aware of the current fad about claiming that the EC was about slavery, and I plain disagree)
Logged
Pages: [1]  
Jump to:  


Login with username, password and session length

Terms of Service - DMCA Agent and Policy - Privacy Policy and Cookies

Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines

Page created in 0.022 seconds with 13 queries.