The campaign for a national popular vote for president has been quietly gaining steam in recent years. From today's
column at IVN:
As many Americans discovered for the first time following the
contested presidential election of 2000, the way in which Electoral
College votes are currently awarded allows for the possibility that a
candidate for president can win election to the nation’s highest office
without receiving a majority of the popular vote. The national popular
vote compact seeks to ensure that the winner of the national popular
vote wins election to the office of the president.
The plan is
simple: states that sign on to the compact agree to award their
Electoral College votes to the winner of the national popular vote.
However, the compact does not come into effect until until enough states
have signed on to ensure that a majority of Electoral College votes,
i.e. 270 or more, have been pledged in the agreement. On that score, the
national popular vote movement is already halfway toward its goal.
Eight states and the District of Columbia have already passed
legislation endorsing the plan, pledging a total of 132 Electoral
College votes to the compact. California Governor Jerry Brown signed
legislation in support of the drive last summer . . .
The plan’s opponents face an uphill battle. A Gallup survey
conducted in October found that 62% of those polled supported the idea
of amending the US Constitution to institute a national popular vote for
the office of the president. There was majority support for such a
proposal across partisan lines, including 71% of Democrats, 61% of
Independents and 53% of Republicans.
In this context, it is
noteworthy that the National Popular Vote Compact does not actually seek
to abolish the Electoral College. Currently, all but two states award
their Electoral College Votes to the winner of their state’s popular
vote. Yet, there is nothing in the US Constitution stipulating that
states must or should award their Electoral College votes in this
manner. Rather, Article II, Section 1 of the US Constitution says that a
state’s electors shall be appointed in a manner directed by that
state’s legislature: “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 fact that two states currently award
their Electoral College votes on a proportional basis demonstrates the
freedom of states to delegate their electoral votes as they see fit.
National
Popular Vote bills are currently pending in fourteen states – from
Alaska to West Virginia – with a total of 146 Electoral Votes. If these
bills were to pass into law over the course of the next three years, the
compact will have secured 278 Electoral Votes and would come into
effect for the 2016 presidential election.
Read the whole thing. Some critics of the plan have asserted that the national popular vote initiative could undermine the two-party system and lead to more viable third party and Independent candidates for president. Ironically, if true, this would be a major reason to should support any such initiative. Here in New York, the State Senate has already passed a version of the National Popular Vote bill, but it has stalled in the Assembly. However, we may see some real action on this front in the new year.
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