The electoral college has only differed four times, and in your example 49/50 states wanted Reagan. The electoral college works.
Where a candidate can win 40% of the popular vote, but less than 3% of the Electoral vote.
Differed only 4 times? Every election after 1984 has had the Electoral College percent differ from the Popular Vote percentage significantly except for the 2004 one.
QuoteWhere a candidate can win 40% of the popular vote, but less than 3% of the Electoral vote.Look at the map of the popular vote for that election and tell me Reagan didn't deserve the win.QuoteDiffered only 4 times? Every election after 1984 has had the Electoral College percent differ from the Popular Vote percentage significantly except for the 2004 one.1988: electoral and popular votes agree1992: electoral and popular votes agree1996: electoral and popular votes agree2000: electoral and popular votes disagree slightly2004: electoral and popular votes agree2008: electoral and popular votes agree2012: electoral and popular votes agreeAmerica is a democratic republic, meaning we don't elect directly from the popular vote because it tends to disenfranchise minority parties in large states.
I'm not sure how you can say Reagan deserved the win but Bush didn't. The margins in 2000 were much smaller.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on April 28, 2015, 08:40:53 PMThe electoral college has only differed four times, and in your example 49/50 states wanted Reagan. The electoral college works.You can't cite examples where it didn't work, and then say it works. Just saying.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on April 28, 2015, 09:19:46 PMI'm not sure how you can say Reagan deserved the win but Bush didn't. The margins in 2000 were much smaller.Because Reagan actually won the popular vote in 1984, and Al Gore won the popular vote in 2000? Is that not a good enough reason, or should we just be saying that the popular vote should mean absolutely nothing now...Al Gore won the election, but the Electoral College stole it from him. Does that not underline any problems with the Electoral College?
Comms, for the presidential election the popular vote is not what matters. Typically electoral voters align with how their state is voting, which is the purpose of the general election. The election wasn't stolen from Gore because he lost the electoral vote.
Quote from: Not Comms Officer on April 28, 2015, 09:22:38 PMQuote from: HurtfulTurkey on April 28, 2015, 09:19:46 PMI'm not sure how you can say Reagan deserved the win but Bush didn't. The margins in 2000 were much smaller.Because Reagan actually won the popular vote in 1984, and Al Gore won the popular vote in 2000? Is that not a good enough reason, or should we just be saying that the popular vote should mean absolutely nothing now...Al Gore won the election, but the Electoral College stole it from him. Does that not underline any problems with the Electoral College?The Electoral College didn't really steal it from him, the Supreme Court anointed Bush Jr.
I didn't say it didn't work in those examples. If the electoral college was designed to always reflect the popular vote, it would be unnecessary and redundant.
In the cases where it doesn't agree with the popular vote, it's because it's serving its purpose of adjusting the weight of certain states. In fact, I'd say the only time the electoral college actually had a purpose is when it disagrees with the popular vote.
If more people live in California, all that means to me is that, yeah, the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the fewer. That's the whole idea behind democracy, right? And if California is made up of a bunch of partisan morons, then that's an issue with public education, not the voting process. And the electoral college ain't gonna solve that problem.