Your problem only gets worse if we go to a purely popular vote. That's because the states with a small population are going to lose those two extra electoral votes and just put their votes in with the huge bucket, into the noise floor. The majority of the time, the elections would be decided by only 9 states based on popular vote. In virtually every case, no more than 20 states will be decisive. There are counties in NY and CA that would have far more popular votes than small states.45 4 life wrote:My problem with the electoral college is that those heavy populated areas of the country can in fact determine who wins our federal elections, and I feel did in the last Presidential race. Obama spent hours upon hours and dollars upon dollars campaigning for the inner city votes. He got all of those electoral votes from california based on winning the popular vote in 2 or 3 counties....
Should we have a system where the Presidential Election could be determined by 2 counties in a single state, and those 2 counties having the highest unemployment rates, and goverment assistance in the state. Or am I being to hypothetical?
For example, according to the numbers I can research right now (reported on wikipedia), Al Gore would have won the 2000 election if it were a purely popular-vote election.
Also, what happens when there is no popular-vote majority, such as with 18 of our Presidents to date? Do we have a run-off? I would have liked to see the run-off results of the 1992 election if it was run-off between Clinton and Bush without Perot in the mix. But the point is that the electoral college fixes this run-off problem as well. We may not have had Lincoln, Clinton, Wilson, Adams, etc. if there was a two-person runoff for the popular vote.
Purely popular vote will exacerbate the problem of a small number of states or counties, narrow demographic groups, etc. having greater influence over Presidential elections. It would be an enormous step backwards, and if the 17th Amendment is any indication, a mistake which would be impossible (politically) to ever correct.