By Donna Carol Voss
Thursday, December 01, 2016
If you want to get rid of the Electoral College, you
don’t understand how it works. I mean the royal “you,” not the partisan “you.”
Opposition to the Electoral College tends to break down along partisan
lines—especially lately, for some reason—but even President-elect Donald Trump
said he’d prefer “simple votes.”
You can hardly be blamed for your ignorance if you went
to public school, attended an elite university, or get your news from Yahoo.
Some very nice, apparently well-educated people—Barbara Boxer—are peddling
absolute Pablum about the Electoral College. “The Electoral College is an
outdated, undemocratic system that does not reflect our modern society, and it
needs to change immediately. Every American should be guaranteed that their
vote counts.”
You are one of them, with all due respect, if you’ve said
or thought any of the following.
The American
Founders set up the Electoral College as a members-only club for white, male
property owners.
You’re right. Only white, male property owners could
serve as electors. Only white, male property owners could vote, for that
matter. Women, the poor, and—with special brutality—slaves were treated like
dogs who might be lucky enough to get a scrap from their master’s table. From
our twenty-first century lives, we can’t begin to register that sort of
inhumanity.
But this isn’t Social Justice 101; that class is down the
hall. This is America 101. This class is the awe-inspiring story of tragically
flawed people who somehow managed to win an unwinnable war and devise—despite
their racist, sexist, classist limitations—a document like no other: our
Constitution.
They rose above powerful cultural blinders to set forth
an ideal that transformed man’s relationship to government and to his fellow
man. What is seen by some as their hypocrisy—all men are created equal—is
really a testament to their vision. Nobody’s mad at John Lennon for singing
“Imagine” about a world that didn’t exist. Why are we mad at the Founders for
envisioning freedoms for all that were unimaginable at the time?
The Founders knew the Electoral College was “not
perfect,” but Alexander Hamilton deemed it “excellent” in that it united “in an
eminent degree all the advantages” of our new union. It decreed first and
foremost that the people, not permanent ruling bodies, were in charge. It was
the people who would elect the men who would elect the president.
Why the middlemen? Because it was “peculiarly desirable
to afford as little opportunity as possible to tumult and disorder.” Or, as Ben
Franklin put it, “Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding what to have for
dinner.”
The people were to elect the “most capable” men as
electors, which designation sets on edge the teeth of our modern, egalitarian,
would-be utopia. Would it sound better if we said the “most qualified” men?
Even in our paroxysm of sameness, we allow (in theory) only qualified people to
vote: 18, American citizen, of sound mind, etc. What qualified men as electors
in 1787? How about literacy and education?
That our earliest recorded literacy rates are from 1870
says something about literacy rates 80 years earlier. Thomas Jefferson called
for a public school system after the American Revolution, but it wasn’t until
1852 that the first compulsory school laws were enacted. We can wring our
backward-looking hands that education was afforded only white children—to boys
and later to girls from wealthy families—or we can put on our big girl panties
and accept that human social development is messy. Like it or not, white, male
property owners were the most qualified to be electors at that time.
The Electoral
College was all about slavery and protecting slave owners’ rights.
No, it wasn’t, and shame on whomever taught you it was.
Maybe it was one of the elite college gang like Professor Akhil Reed of Yale
University. Described as a specialist in constitutional law, he “is among
America’s five most-cited legal scholars under the age of 60.” When asked why
the Electoral College exists, he responded:
In my view, it’s slavery. In a
direct election system, the South would have lost every time because a huge
percentage of its population was slaves, and slaves couldn’t vote. But an
Electoral College allows states to count slaves, albeit at a discount (the
three-fifths clause), and that’s what gave the South the inside track in
presidential elections.
How does a specialist in constitutional law miss the word
“compromise” in “three-fifths compromise”? How does one of America’s most-cited
legal scholars fail to consider that five-fifths (that’s one) and three-fifths
weren’t the only options available?
It wasn’t pretty that day around the Constitution.
Northern and Southern states fought bitterly over how to count slaves, who
couldn’t vote, in population numbers. Since population numbers determined
legislative power, Southern states of course wanted to count slaves like they
counted everyone else. Abolition-conscious Northern states wanted to eliminate
slaves from population counts completely.
Northern states argued that if Southern states could
count their property (slaves),
Northern states could count theirs
(horses, chickens, etc.). Because executive fiat by phone and by pen had not
yet been invented, the two sides had no choice but to compromise. That’s why
it’s called “the three-fifths compromise.”
As Reed points out, the three-fifths compromise
“discounted” the value of slaves relative to white men, but it enhanced the
power of slaves relative to white men in reducing by two-fifths the South’s
power to preserve slavery legislatively. The Electoral College set the stage
for legislative abolition of slavery, so you can say it was about slavery if
you want, but tell the whole truth.
Food for thought: had the Southern states gotten their
way and counted each slave in full, slavery would have been much harder to
eliminate. Yet from our twenty-first century, poorly informed lives, we would
likely have praised their full count cause as noble.
A system that
ignores millions of Americans’ votes can’t be fair.
You’re so right! Let’s make it a law that all absentee
votes must be counted before popular vote totals are announced. States don’t
count absentee ballots if the margin between candidates is larger than the
number of absentee votes to be counted. Practical. But disgraceful, and
deceptive.
Who votes absentee? The military. When I was growing up
in what happens to be Navy Seal Central-West, there was a bumper sticker that
read, “If you can read this, thank a teacher. If you can read it in English,
thank a soldier.” Forget thank you, we don’t even count their votes. Add to
these uncounted votes more by students overseas and businesspeople on trips,
and you have a whole lot of Americans whose votes are being ignored.
The kicker is that—when counted—absentee ballots
historically break about 67-33 percent Republican. No one is suggesting the
popular win would go to Trump were they counted, but if the popular vote margin
between Hillary Clinton and Trump is the oil on this gasoline fire, let’s not
fan the flames deceptively.
The Electoral
College makes my vote worthless unless I live in a battleground state. The same
handful of states have all the power all the time.
This is such low-hanging fruit, I have to pinch myself to
make sure I’m not dreaming. It doesn’t matter whether you call it a state, a
tribe, a planet, or a concept. Certain areas are more divided politically than
others, and those areas will naturally draw more attention from candidates.
It isn’t the Electoral College doing this; it’s human
nature and the physics of election wins. If you’re holding your breath in New
Mexico that a popular vote will magically transform your state into a
resource-rich, politically vibrant enclave, I’m sorry. It doesn’t work like
that.
If you currently live in a battleground state, don’t get
too comfortable. Over the long haul, states move in and out of electoral
importance. New Jersey was a swing state and is now safe. California was “safe”
Republican until 1988 and is now the epitome of “safe” Democrat. Should you be
muttering, “Not fair, I want my vote to count now,” congratulations, you are the one JFK was talking about when
he said, “Ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your
country.”
The
winner-take-all system of awarding electoral votes is not in the Constitution
and isn’t what the Founders envisioned.
Really? It seems to me they envisioned just about
anything and everything:
Each State shall appoint, in such
Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors, equal to
the whole Number of Senators and Representatives to which the State may be
entitled in the Congress. (The Constitution, Article II, Section I, Clause 2)
“…in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct…”
I see no asterisk that says “except for winner-take-all systems.” If you don’t
like winner-take-all systems, take it up with your state legislature; they’re
in charge of that ride.
We need the
National Popular Vote bill to make every vote count.
The National Popular Vote bill is to elections what
Obamacare is to medicine. They are each misguided attempts to be fair that hurt
far more people than they help. If the National Popular Vote bill passes (and
it is already 61 percent of the way there), we will go from the frying pan into
the fire.
Do Jane in Utah and Joe in Duluth want the national
popular vote? We’ll never know, because no one is going to ask them. The people
will not be allowed to vote yay or nay on the measure. This is a state
legislature by state legislature slog that will eat its own when it reaches the
magical majority number of 270 electoral votes. Citizens in the remaining 269
electoral vote states will no longer (supposedly) give up their power to the
Electoral College; they will (definitely) give it up instead to the states who
wanted to get rid of the Electoral College.
Ask Jane how important Utah’s electoral votes were this
time around. Ask her if she voted for Evan McMullin (don’t really, that’s
impolite) hoping the Mormon Mafia would thwart Trump’s win. There was real
concern that Utah with its six little electoral votes could throw the whole
election. Clinton paid for ads in a state that hasn’t voted Democrat since 1964.
Ask Joe how the Electoral College worked for him this
time. Clinton won Minnesota’s 10 electoral votes by 43,785, a margin of 1.5
percent. Without the Electoral College, Trump would have campaigned very
differently: “If the election were based on total popular vote I would have
campaigned in N.Y. Florida and California and won even bigger and more easily.”
If there is anyone left who doubts he would have, my hat
is off to your dogged delusion. Trump would have campaigned only in big bang
for his buck states, and that does not include Minnesota. Thanks to the
Electoral College, the majority of Minnesotans who voted for Hillary saw their
state’s votes go to her column. Without the Electoral College, Joe and his
buddies would have watched their state’s votes go automatically to the winner
of the national popular vote, likely Trump.
As it is now, a Republican in California or a Democrat in
Texas has little hope of influencing the national election because they have
little hope of influencing their state election. Oh well. In the newer, better
tomorrow promised us by a popular vote, even fewer Americans will have
influence.
Looking at the 2016 results, because Clinton won the
popular vote, every single state whose electoral votes went to Trump would be
required to give them to Clinton. The National Popular Vote bill closes a gap
by driving a Mack truck through it.
Perhaps, just perhaps, I am unfairly judging the
anti-Electoral College crowd as ignorant. It’s possible they understand it only
too well, which would explain why they want to get rid of it. But not before
4.3 million of them petition it to make their dreams come true.
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