Jay wrote:
FEOS wrote:
Again. Read previous posts a bit more. And look at overall election results. There were plenty of examples of representatives/senators of one party being elected, while the state overall went for the candidate of the other party (which would give that person an extra two electoral votes under my proposal, as well).
Look, it's just a bad idea. There's no way to keep bias out of the process that defines district boundaries. Everyone has an agenda of some sort. Your way is just a masked vote by the House. My way is a masked direct democracy vote with a slight lean favoring rural states. Neither is perfect, but at least mine eliminates arbitrariness.
Look, it's not.
When you look at the data, my proposal makes the race dynamic far more reflective of the popular vote than either the current system or your proposal, while also maintaining the intent of the electoral college to balance rural and urban vote weight.
You incorrectly assume that 1) the presidential vote will go to the same party as the representative race's vote in a given district--
there is plenty of proof that is not the case; 2) gerrymandering will be more prevalent than it is today--an assumption I disagree with, as my proposal puts the spotlight on any attempts to gerrymander; and 3) the same party is always elected to the House from a given district--if that were a valid assumption, the House would never change control.
I'm fairly certain that under my proposal, Romney would still have lost, but the electoral margin would've been far closer to the margin of the popular vote. 2000 is an outlier...otherwise, the proposed system brings the results closer to the actual popular vote results, while still maintaining the intent of the EC. In 2000, 86 districts flip-flopped (dem for rep, rep for dem). In 2004, 59. In 2008, 83...with McCain getting 15 more democrat districts than Obama got republican.