Kamala Harris’s running mate urges popular vote system but campaign says issue is not part of Democrats’ agenda

Tim Walz, the Democratic vice-presidential nominee, has called for the electoral college system of electing US presidents to be abolished and replaced with a popular vote principle, as operates in most democracies.

His comments – to an audience of party fundraisers – chime with the sentiments of a majority of American voters but risk destabilising the campaign of Kamala Harris, the Democratic presidential candidate, who has not adopted a position on the matter, despite having previously voiced similar views.

“I think all of us know, the electoral college needs to go,” Walz told donors at a gathering at the home of the California governor, Gavin Newsom. “We need a national popular vote. We need to be able to go into York, Pennsylvania, and win. We need to be in western Wisconsin and win. We need to be in Reno, Nevada, and win.”


🗳️ Register to vote: https://vote.gov/

  • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    but campaign says issue is not part of Democrats’ agenda

    Fucking hell! Every time either of them says something truly based, some DNC lackey comes and spoils it by saying that! 🤬

    • Queue@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      And all interest in this statement was lost in record time. Even though it would help Democrats win every time, as swing states would stop being a thing, and the Democrat voters in Wyoming and Texas and every other sold-red state is now something to seriously count.

      • danc4498@lemmy.world
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        Not every time. Republicans have won the popular vote before. What would happen, though, is the Republican Party would have to adjust its platform to become more in line with the majority of Americans.

      • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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        Are you aware of what is minimally required in order to pull off this kind of change? There is no outcome to this election that will result in the Democrats having even the faintest possibility of doing this.

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        Isn’t this kind of missing the point, though? The reason neither party wants to change a thing about the current system is the whole point of abolishing the electoral college is to remove the spoiler effect that eventually leads to a two party system. If the electoral college ends, there’s no such thing as swing states, gerrymandering will be moot, candidates will actually have to have policies that people want, they’ll have to actually campaign, and many corporate “Democrats” will probably get outed by more progressive candidates.

        There are other benefits, but I really don’t see this getting any traction, regardless, until we can get money our of politics and a wealth tax that makes sense (like 70%+ on the ultra wealthy).

        I agree with your sentiment that Democrat ideas – more likely the progressive Democrat ideas – will likely be the candidates that win the most. However, we’ll likely never find out cause both parties will fight this with all of their being and financial ghouls.

        • Maeve@midwest.social
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          There are other benefits, but I really don’t see this getting any traction, regardless, until we can get money our of politics and a wealth tax that makes sense (like 70%+ on the ultra wealthy).

          Seems like an infinite loop by design.

        • Serinus@lemmy.world
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          Okay, a couple things here are way off. The electoral college is not a cause of the two party system. FPTP is the primary driver of that.

          No, both parties don’t want the electoral college. Pretty sure the Dems would love to win nearly all modern presidential races. This is a pretty lame “they’re both the same”.

          • Ænima@lemm.ee
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            Please don’t vote-splain. You’re arguing semantics. The electoral college just gives states the ability to decide to honor or ignore the will of the people. It also gives rural states more per-capita power than they’d othereise get. Until relatively recently, most states had nothing on the books to force delegates to vote the way the people wanted.

            Sure, some of the younger crowd may want to abolish the electoral college, it won’t happen unless states force an amendment. The fossils in Congress, as well as the enshrined political surnames, will all use their collective power and wealth to shut that shit down for as long as they can.

            In terms of they’re both the same, you are naive if you think the Democrats really care about you or power. They just don’t outrightly tell the populous to fuck off like the Republicans do. The party tolerates progressives, but does everything they can to keep them out of power. Look to Adam Schiff these last couple of years for a good example. If I recall, didn’t he politically champion and/or donate to a candidate running against a progressive Democrat in his state? When the Democrats, or even the Republicans for that matter, have all three branches, they still never seem to get anything done.

            Hmm, 🤔… It’s almost like they want the current status quo to persist, even when empowered to do something without barriers.

    • RaoulDook@lemmy.world
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      It’s not like Walz or Harris can do anything about it anyway. Legal scholars have said that it would take a Constitutional amendment to change the electoral college system to anything else, as it is mandated by the Constitution.

      Amending the Constitution requires ratification by 75% of the 50 US states after passing a 2/3 majority of Congress.

      It’s best to be realistic and not get worked up about things you can’t do anything about.

    • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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      For real, ENOUGH already with the milquetoast Dem leadership being so terrified of actually taking a stand about any issue.

    • d00phy@lemmy.world
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      This is just like all those times Republican candidates hedged about Roe v Wade… right up until they finally got it overturned. Sure, the majority of voters agree the EC is outdated and needs to go; but saying as much can scare moderates, and doesn’t get you any new liberal voters. Never forget, “undecided” voters in the US are just fickle assholes who don’t want to vote for someone who “feels” too conservative or liberal. Unfortunately, with FPTP voting, they carry a lot of weight.

    • jj4211@lemmy.world
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      I can understand the strategy this time

      One of the big motivators for the left is that Trump has made credible threats about undermining votes and folks have signed up for it. A fear of having your voice forever silenced in the political system is a strong motivator. You can see because pundits for Trump keep trying to turn it around and say “nuh uh, the Democrats are the ones that will take away your voice”, which generally rings hollow because there’s zero history or rhetoric in the Democratic party to even suggest that.

      This could be the sort of rhetoric those Republicans have been wanting. A Democrat proposing a fundamental change to the biggest election that everyone knows would usually prevent a Republican win for that office. We wouldn’t have had either Republican president in the last 30 years. This could energize scared Republicans or feed the “but both sides” distraction.

      It may make tons of sense, but it’s a huge risk of scaring people to vote against Democrats that might have otherwise sat it out.

  • foggy@lemmy.world
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    It is the single most logical and devastating blow that the democratic party could work on to stop fascism.

    Disallow corporate entities from owning residential property.

    Increase minimum wage.

    Break up monopolies and oligopolies to reintroduce competition. Get off this “stop price gouging greedflation” horse shit. Break up monopolies and oligopolies, lower the bar to competition.

    End forced arbitration outright.

    Set a maximum document length limit to stop frivolous lawsuits, “drowning in paperwork”.

    Set term limits for all govt positions, especially SCOTUS.

    Harsher punishments to corporations. No more of these fines that are simply the cost of doing business. C suite execs should do time on behalf of law breaking ‘corpirate citizens.’

    Tax the fuck of our anything making over $100M in profit. I mean, the fuck out of it.

    • GoofSchmoofer@lemmy.world
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      I agree with all of this and I think many people on Lemmy do as well. My concern is: Will the population that is excited to vote for candidates that are willing to push these changes through have the staying power?

      These are huge changes to a system that has been manipulated to benefit a small group of well connected, very powerful, very wealthy people. It’s not something that can change in one or even two presidential terms. These are changes that will take many election cycles to complete. These, and other big changes, need sustained focus.

      Not saying it can’t be done - it can. The republican party has proven that. Over the course of 40+ years they have reshaped America to fit their ideals. But it took 40 years. One part of how they did it was/is by keeping the pressure on their voting base even during non-election years through FOX news, rush limbaugh, alex jones, and other pieces of shit. So when it was time to vote their base was already “educated” on why they had to vote for the republican candidate. It made/makes it easy for the republican candidate to step in and just say the right words and phrases to the voting population and they were guaranteed a certain % of the vote.

      So if the left wants to re-shape how America looks and how it treats it’s population then they have to be willing to play the long game.

      • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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        I agree with everything here except the concept that there’s such a thing as a non-election year, which is a big part of the reason the engagement discrepancy you’re talking about exists in the first place.

      • Maeve@midwest.social
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        The candidates have to work hard to get and keep voters excited, no backpedaling on platforms.

    • Maeve@midwest.social
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      I’d be okay with execs and board members doing community service for first offense, if it means picking up trash on roadways, working in nursing facilities, harvesting crops, and other things Joe and Jane Average would be doing for community service.

    • LunchMoneyThief@links.hackliberty.org
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      Disallow corporate entities from owning residential property.

      And tax the shit out of second (and third and beyond) home owners. If you don’t reside there it is absolutely a luxury. Nobody on the face of this Earth needs more than one dwelling.

      • TheHotze@lemmy.world
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        There are reasons for owning one or two more houses. Maybe you just moved and need to sell the second house, or maybe you got a house for a friend or relative. Still think the tax is good, but should be applied to the fourth house and up unless you are renting to someone.

    • PresidentCamacho@lemm.ee
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      And none of this happens until we ditch the two party system. Because the Dems will just continue to do the bare minimum to win elections while still serving the billionaire class.

    • lilsip@lemmy.world
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      Agreed with everything except getting rid of ec, increasing the minimum wage, and taxing the fuck out of corps for an arbitrary profit margin.

      But damn. Solid otherwise.

      • undercrust@lemmy.ca
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        What possible reason do you have for wanting to keep such an incredibly shit voting system? Please elaborate.

        • lilsip@lemmy.world
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          Because it’s not ‘incredibly shit’ it’s just not what you want it to be. It was designed to not allow mob rule. And it’s done a pretty good job at it.

          Just because something doesn’t do what you want it to do doesn’t mean it’s bad.

          • undercrust@lemmy.ca
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            “Mob rule” in this case being…the will of the majority of voters? Some sort of national popular vote, perhaps?

            This is an insane take man, but I guess some puppets don’t want their strings cut.

            • lilsip@lemmy.world
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              “Insane take” Literally the founding of our country was built off that take.

              • undercrust@lemmy.ca
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                Yeah, you’re right, better to stay stagnant and not bother improving the system so that America stays true to its heritage. Everything was better back then, workers rights, women’s rights, slavery…gods the founding fathers really knew their shit. Why try to improve on perfection?

                (MASSIVE /s so I don’t get downvoted to oblivion)

                • lilsip@lemmy.world
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                  If any idiot here can’t tell your being sarcastic, that’s their issue.

                  But yes actually. Some things shouldn’t change. From what I’ve studied/learned we really were the first of our style of government. It’s been successful thus far, when plenty of other systems have come and gone.

                  Also just because the core of our system shouldn’t be changed doesn’t mean other things should/couldnt/havent changed. Soooo don’t put words in my mouth 👍

                  You said it best, why try to improve on perfection?

          • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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            https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/01-10-02-0065

            There was one difficulty however of a serious nature attending an immediate choice by the people. The right of suffrage was much more diffusive in the Northern than the Southern States; and the latter could have no influence in the election on the score of the Negroes. The substitution of electors obviated this difficulty and seemed on the whole to be liable to fewest objections.

            It was designed solely to allow southern states to launder the votes of their slaves, as explicitly said by James madison, the person who put it in place.

          • Pacattack57@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            If you exclude 2004 with Bush Jr (wartime president which all but guarantees reelection) the Republicans haven’t won a popular vote since 1988.

            Seems more like the EC ensures minority rule.

          • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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            It was designed to not allow mob rule.

            And it flat our fails at that. Under the EC, we have a ‘mob rule’ by the swing states. And candidates basically only ever visit the cities of swing states, and solidly red/blue areas for fundraising on occasion.

            One person, one vote. We are all born equal, so to should our votes be equal. Anything less is a failure of a system.

            • lilsip@lemmy.world
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              No, I get it. You don’t know how to have a discussion in which you disagree with the person and default to dismissing them completely instead.

              That’s fine, just own it.

              • Maeve@midwest.social
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                No you’re coming across as white privilege who wants to keep that. It’s not nice, cool or * admirable in any way, form or shape.

                • lilsip@lemmy.world
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                  Damn now talking like normal people is privilege. No wonder everyone else is fucking crazy.

                  And also thanks for commenting on all my comments. Love you

          • Maeve@midwest.social
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            So why don’t you want one wage earned to be able to support their entire family or corporations to pay their fair share so we all call have quality health and education? The EC is rubbish, btw.

            • lilsip@lemmy.world
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              It’s pretty simple really. Raising the minimum wage will cause inflation to everything else to balance out and we will be right back where we started. People can’t afford anything. But now with even higher and overly inflated prices.

              That’s just how economics works. None of that trickle down bs or any other partisan view.

              Simple cause and effect, and scarcity.

              • foggy@lemmy.world
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                Not if you’re also taking care of monopolies and lowering the barrier to entry in a way that creates meaningful competition.

                • lilsip@lemmy.world
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                  Yeah man I’m all for killing monopolies. Hasn’t happened, won’t happen. Money drives the world, those monopolies are spending a considerable amount of their time and money lobbying the gov to make it so they can make MORE money, not less.

                  Now. If we also get rid of lobbying and make it a federal offense or treason to manipulate the legislative branch for monetary incentives, we got something.

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                Corporate greed is why no one can afford anything. There’s no scarcity either. It’s a matter of logistics, but that’s going to quickly change if the very well off people and corporations don’t curb their insatiable appetites, and that can be done with the 50s era 93% tax rates on very high individual earners and adding that same rate to megacorporations. No more tax cuts for donating to self-serving, self -directed “philanthropic” causes anymore, either. That tax money can be used to clean up the environment, well - feed, educate, home and health for EVERY individual at the same providers. No campaign donations of any form, fashion or sort. Campaigns are debates and past voting history, only, and every broadcast radio station and television station will be required to air them multiple times. Every print newspaper too, and taxes can fund that. No corporate or wealthy lobbiests.

                Then let’s see how charitable the wealthy really are.

        • lilsip@lemmy.world
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          Easier to think I’m a troll than to believe someone could say those words and be serious?

          Well I’m not. So strengthen up buddy boy.

          • gmtom@lemmy.world
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            Yes, I would rather think you’re a troll than beleive someone is actually seriously that cruel and dumb. It’s better for my mental health.

      • jj4211@lemmy.world
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        Well technically the ‘minimum’ has almost no bottom. One tortured example, if you had a single voter per state for the biggest 11 states all vote for one candidate, but every other one of the 118 million eligible voters in other states voted the other way, then those 11 people will win.

      • Heikki@lemm.ee
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        Watched it. The video is 12 years old, and the article I shared is 8yrs old. I am tempted to do the calculations myself with current numbers, but I am excelled out for the day.

        I was showing my 3yo how to run a DOE with his hotwheels track and the cars that work best current tests are on mass. The favorite mass is 29-32g/car to complete the track. The range is 10g-43g/ car. Below those masses, they fly off the track most of the time. Above those masses, they fail around 1st to 2nd loop.

        Still have about 10 cars to test.Next steps measure wheel base, length, thickest section, car height, and running in reverse vs forward. Finally time trials.

      • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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        I like the legal maneuvering, but the places that have adopted this so far will almost certainly always go with the popular vote anyway.

  • TommySoda@lemmy.world
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    I think at this point pretty much everyone I’ve ever talked to thinks the electoral college is bullshit. Even my dad and he’s a trumper.

    • DacoTaco@lemmy.world
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      It makes sense to exist… In the 40’s.
      But with modern day society and how small the world has become, it makes no sense to me to still exist tbh…

    • variaatio@sopuli.xyz
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      Well one doesn’t necessary need to get rid of electoral college, if the electors were appointed by proportional vote and representation. At that point it would be just a smudging filter. National popular vote with extra steps and some added in accuracy due to one being able to do so much proportionality given how many electors there is.

      So the main problem is not electoral college, but the voting method. Just as note since also getting rid of electoral college isn’t a fix, if the direct popular election uses bad voting method. Like say nationwide plurality vote would be horrible replacement for electoral college.

      Though I would assume anyone suggesting popular vote would mean nationwide majority win popular vote. Though that will demand a “fail to reach majority” resolver. Be it a two round system (second round with top two candidates, thus guaranteed majority result) or some form of instant run-off with guaranteed majority win after elimination rounds.

      TLDR: main problem I winner take all plurality, first past the post more than the technicality of there existing such bureaucratic element as electors and electoral votes.

      • jumjummy@lemmy.world
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        Let’s not forget the unfair ratio of citizens to electoral votes across the different states. California, for instance, is on the low end of electoral vote fraction per citizen compared to smaller states. That absolutely needs to be fixed as well.

      • TommySoda@lemmy.world
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        For sure. It’s definitely a multi layer problem and our voting system is trash. We’ll always be stuck with a two party system as long as we stick with first past the post. And as long as we are stuck with two choices it will always be a shit show of “us vs them.” But at the same time the electoral college only makes things worse. I live in a very red area of the US even though I disagree with 70% of what they believe in. And even though I vote, I know for a fact that my vote literally means nothing outside of the popular vote. And it’s pretty disheartening to know that. I’m sure there are plenty of people like me that don’t even vote because they think it doesn’t matter so why even bother.

        I won’t lie and say the solution or the problem are super easy. I’m just saying it’s fucked and definitely needs to change. And I’m a strong advocate for a two round system or something similar so people don’t have to just vote against the candidate they don’t want.

    • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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      Which was the point of the EC in the first place:

      There was one difficulty however of a serious nature attending an immediate choice by the people. The right of suffrage was much more diffusive in the Northern than the Southern States; and the latter could have no influence in the election on the score of the Negroes. The substitution of electors obviated this difficulty and seemed on the whole to be liable to fewest objections.

      https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/01-10-02-0065

      • loutr@sh.itjust.works
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        and the latter could have no influence in the election on the score of the Negroes

        Could you explain this sentence please? English isn’t my first language and I can’t make sense of it.

        • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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          Southern states owned a lot of slaves, and thought the slave owners should get to have the slave’s votes in addition to their own. They thought that if they couldn’t do that, the South couldn’t have a loud enough voice in the election.

          It’s kind of related to the 3/5th compromise.

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          White slave owners in the south didn’t want abolitionists to vote away their supremacy over blacks, and thought the EC would be a good way to make sure the abolitionist voting bloc would be kept in check.

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            History is riddled with the results of people on the right side giving so much to the losers that the losers win in the long run.

            They were monsters that treated humans like property… fuuuuuuuuck them so hard.

            And here we are, back again cuz someone didn’t smack them hard enough

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              Now we’re all still property, but must find a way to feed, clothe, home ourselves and get to our mostly underpaid jobs. It’s fine if it’s extralegal, until we’re caught or turned in.

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          Madison was saying that blacks in the south were enslaved and couldn’t vote. They made up a significant portion of the southern states population which put them at a disadvantage giving them poor representation.

    • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      I think we can mostly agree that the electoral college system is not working as intended. It was designed to give people outside the cities an extra boost to their representation, But it was certainly never designed to let fascism take hold.

      Unfortunately there’s no such thing as a fair and representative voting system. In all their cases you either end up underrepresenting the rural, over representing the rural, or forcing people to pick between candidates that they don’t want.

      Don’t get me wrong, I’m perfectly down with what walls is calling for as it gives my intentions the best chance and at the same time will keep fascism from just popping in because they’re good at propaganda. But I’d still like to see some other way.

      • CompostMaterial@lemmy.world
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        I always hear that excuse about the rural areas not being represented without the electoral college, but my only reaction is GOOD. Rural areas are large in land ans small in people. Why should they get an equal voice as a Metropolitan area with the majority of people? A government is supposed to reflect the will of the people. The not ALL the people, that would be impossible, but but an average of the majority of the people.

        Additionally, the government at the federal level has relatively minor impact at the local level. The federal level is broad strokes, the local government is fine strokes, and the state level is somewhere in between. Rural dwellers can run their local government however they like as long as it doesn’t violate state or federal laws.

        • tmyakal@lemm.ee
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          The real problem is that the size of the House of Representatives has been frozen for 100 years. The number of electoral college votes a state has is equal to the number of reps and senators they have. Since the House hasn’t grown alongside our population, the relative representation for rural areas has steadily grown more and more.

          Ending the cap on the House would balance out the electoral college issues and help reduce the constant congressional deadlocks we’re seeing.

        • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          ent at the federal level has relati

          Not equal, but at the same time you don’t want to collectively just shit on all your farmers, although, they don’t seem to have any problem shitting on us so maybe?

        • chaogomu@lemmy.world
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          Can I persuade you to consider Approval or STAR?

          RCV has some structural flaws that make it less than optimal. Flaws that exist in an Ordinal voting system but RCV puts a slightly odd twist on them, in some ways making them worse.

          Approval or STAR on the other hand, are both Cardinal voting systems. They work on a different core principle and thus are immune to the flaws found in Ordinal systems.

          • turtletracks@lemmy.zip
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            Honestly, I’d be happy with any sort of ranked/cardinal voting system, and it looks like STAR is just a better RCV though. RCV just seems like the most likely to pick up steam in the US, tough I could be mistaken

            • chaogomu@lemmy.world
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              RCV does have some money behind it, but it also has some deep-seated structural problems that come up with disturbing regularity.

              Which leads to a situation where the results of an RCV election can be so bad that the district/state decides to axe voting reform entirely and go back to First Past the Post.

              This has happened a few times now, and it sets efforts for real voting reform back. If you walk into Burlington, Vermont and say “I have voting reform that will fix the problems of First Past the Post” They will tell you to fuck off because they tried RCV, and it failed horribly because it’s a bad system.

              So an attempt to get STAR going will face that much more pushback. So it’s better for everyone to resist RCV and push for STAR or Approval.

              Approval has gotten some wins, and is also picking up steam. I’d be happy with it, even though STAR is slightly better.

    • Lev_Astov@lemmy.world
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      And so we’ll remain until we can also get rid of the two party system. This would be a good start, but we also need to change our voting system to anything but this awful first-past-the-post system.

    • Maeve@midwest.social
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      Maybe I’m to clinical but I think this means the petty bourgeois is a safe bet for the ruler class. That needs to change.

    • PresidentCamacho@lemm.ee
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      Removing the electoral college does nothing to change our two party system so I don’t understand why you think it solves billionaire class rule.

      • Sweetpeaches69@lemmy.world
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        It absolutely does. Without Republicans gerrymandering everything to stay in the fold, they’re completely done. They’ll get bodied every election. The last time the Republicans won the popular vote was 20 years ago, and the party has radically changed since then.

        Hopefully undoing the electoral college is the first step to dismantling the two party system.

        • PresidentCamacho@lemm.ee
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          So thats on me, I said “does nothing to change our two party system” when I should have said “does nothing to remove our two party system”. All this does is concentrate power into the democrats which if they had no worry of winning elections would very quickly openly turn into the Billionaire Boot Licking Society overnight. We need more political parties.

          All this being said I’m not arguing against removing the electoral college, it needs to die. But Americas problems run so much deeper than the GOP

    • postmateDumbass@lemmy.world
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      You think the midwest will have any say in what happens in the USA without it?

      All the campaigns will spend time in NY, California, Texas, and nearby states. Campaign money goes where the votes go. Then government spending goes where the votes are.

      Coroprations will own the midwest while farms exist, and care not about voting because their lobbying is paying the ad spend on the coasts.

      This is a deep issue. The founders may have been white (mostly, remember hamilton isnt an opera) and flawed but they werent stupid.

      • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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        All the campaigns will spend time in NY, California, Texas, and nearby states.

        As opposed to spending all their time in cities in swing states like they currently do? The EC is an abysmal failure at preventing candidates from ignoring huge swaths of the country. Fuck the EC. What is even dumber about the EC, is that basically every other office in the US counts all votes equally, and yet this isn’t a problem at the state/local level.

        One person, one vote. We are all born equal, all votes should be equal. Nobody is more deserving of a voice than any other.

        Coroprations will own the midwest while farms exist, and care not about voting because their lobbying is paying the ad spend on the coasts.

        That’s already the case.

      • CandleTiger
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        Campaign money goes where the votes go. Then government spending goes where the votes are.

        You mean to say, power will be more evenly distributed per person instead of per acre?

        I’m ok with this.

      • AngryMob@lemmy.one
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        so what? We’re talking about a national vote for president. Your specific voice gets heard through local elections, not the president. Every person should have an equal vote. Period.

      • AFK BRB Chocolate@lemmy.world
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        The flip side is that people who live in states with a big land area but relatively small population have a way oversized vote compared to people who live in high population states. Why should a small number of people in the Midwest be able to outvote the majority?

      • rusticus@lemm.ee
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        I want my devalued vote back. Any other rationalization is an assault on “one person one vote”.

      • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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        Maybe.

        Walz really is the ideal politician but he might be rough around the edges after 8 years. He already looks a bit older than what he is and I don’t consider his speaking to be quite as good as Harris’s. It would preferential if we started looking towards building up younger politicians within the party with people like Walz providing support.

          • VinnyDaCat@lemmy.world
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            I feel that but society has been like that forever. Trust me, it used to be something that frustrated me excessively but I’ve just come to accept that even throughout history people are just shallow.

  • Veedem@lemmy.world
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    While I agree with him, it’s also a stupid thing to say out loud during the election when they’re CLEARLY trying to sway moderate and uneasy right leaning voters.

    • Furball@sh.itjust.works
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      I think the electoral college has become pretty unpopular with pretty much everyone except committed republicans in recent years

      • InverseParallax@lemmy.world
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        It’s become unpopular with everyone except the people who originally demanded it so they could count their slaves as 3/5 of a vote.

        • sygnius@lemmy.world
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          I’m pretty sure it’s still very popular for a lot of Republicans considering that conservatives have only won the popular vote once in the last 35-ish years. The only time they won was George W. Bush’s second term after the events of 9/11 and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

          • vxx@lemmy.world
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            Why though? We call baking people bakers, why shouldn’t we call enlaved people slaves?

            It’s not as if their circumstances become more human that way.

            • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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              This very succinctly summarizes what I hate about the “unhoused” brand of pedantry. Pretty sure they want shelter more than some rich college kid making sure everyone on the internet gets their fucking nouns right.

              • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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                Changing the language you use about a thing changes your perception of that thing. This is data driven reality of making small changes to the way you talk actively changes the thought process on it. You can be lazy and not do it, it’s your own language. But that’s all your doing. Being lazy, or actively reactionary.

                • WoahWoah@lemmy.world
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                  Honestly, I think people just find you annoying more than anything specific to what you’re saying, but that’s just a guess.

            • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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              It’s just good to reinforce the idea that enslaved people’s were people who were enslaved. Not a profession, slave was not their job, it was their status.

              Plus studies have shown that by using these people first language, especially while teaching the subject, results in higher empathy for enslaved people and reminds that their status as a slave was one forced upon them and continually so rather than the simple status they were born with.

              It’s not a huge problem or anything, but it isn’t hard to toss in every now and then and only does good.

              • bitjunkie@lemmy.world
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                “Good” like derailing conversations that were about content and making them about semantics. “Good”.

                • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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                  God forbid someone on a thread based system bring up a related topic on the side. Like, is that really your complaint? Oh no guys, the humanization of enslaved people’s is derailing this 3rd person’s quip. Quick, we must stop him!

                  Silly billy you are.

            • chaosCruiser@futurology.today
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              I think there’s a difference between the two. The term “salve” says nothing about what happened. It just tells you how things are. However, the term “enslaved” clearly indicates that the person used to be free, but was later forced into slavery by someone.

              • Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                Words have a definition, slave is the appropriate word to talk about enslaved people and them being enslaved is what makes them slaves therefore it’s implied that they are enslaved if they are slaves. Now stop with the PC bullshit to derail the discussion.

                • SmilingSolaris@lemmy.world
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                  Derail a thread with a small side suggestion. That’s a lot of pushback to a small request. Almost like you actively wish to not have enslaved people humanized in conversation.

                  You can always just not say it yourself. To actively try and start fights about it implies malice.

              • LustyArgonian@lemmy.world
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                Imo it’s more that “enslaved people” emphasizes their humanity, something that slavery itself typically removes from a person. Therefore “enslaved person” can be seen as radical phrasing that works against the goals of slavery

        • dwraf_of_ignorance
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          I think it was progressive who demanded it to be 3/5 if then conservative had their way they would happily count slaves as two people. It’s was in their favour to do so. Slaves could vote and it inflated their population count which will grant more seat. I’m neither American nor have I been there.

          • Mbourgon everywhere@lemmy.world
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            Nope, but not bad. The free states wanted them to not count for representative purposes, since they couldn’t vote.

            From Wikipedia:

            Slave holding states wanted their entire population to be counted to determine the number of Representatives those states could elect and send to Congress. Free states wanted to exclude the counting of slave populations in slave states, since those slaves had no voting rights. A compromise was struck to resolve this impasse. The compromise counted three-fifths of each state’s slave population toward that state’s total population for the purpose of apportioning the House of Representatives, effectively giving the Southern states more power in the House relative to the Northern states.

          • piccolo@sh.itjust.works
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            The progressives demanded none to be counted as they wanted slavery abolished. It was the centrists that made the compromise just so the southern states to ratifiy the constitution and join the union.

      • takeda@lemmy.world
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        Exactly, the result is decided but free starts and for example Republicans in California and New York feel their vote doesn’t matter at all.

        • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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          with the amount of money being spent to woo swing state voters I feel like being an “undecided voter” is some kind of career at this point

    • njm1314@lemmy.world
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      Maybe they’re finally realizing that instead of chasing right wing voters they should try to tap into the much larger pool of left-wing voters. Or at least one can hope.

    • The Assman@sh.itjust.works
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      His comments – to an audience of party fundraisers – chime with the sentiments of a majority of American voters

      I guess you missed this bit

        • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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          Just vote blue no matter who.

          It’s that simple, do that and you’ll uh somehow magically become a lefter country?

        • UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml
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          Appreciate the links. This is kind of my thing.

          Edit: As a big Ranked Choice voting advocate, this was a interesting and informative read. I never did think about this particular situation:

          RCV doesn’t take all rankings from all ballots into account and so is not the most accurate way of counting ranked ballots. If your first choice candidate is eliminated in later rounds your second, third, or fourth choices may never be counted. (Ranked Pairs, Schultz, and Bucklin Voting are much more accurate ways to count ranked ballots.)

          I will need to go over this a few more times, but it seems I am going to switch my preference to STAR as well because of your comment.

          Really anything other then First-past-the-post will do, but it’s nice to look ahead and plan for a future where people are free to vote for who best represents them.

          Thanks again.

          • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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            The sneaky thing about RCV that the second link points out is the the fact that RCV doesn’t actually eliminate the spoiler effect. A way to think about is that RCV is idential to FPTP, just done over several instant rounds. So it has some of the same issues, just lessened.

  • JackbyDev
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    Even if we keep the electoral college as a means of allocating points we need to get rid of the electors. I’ve been saying this since before Jan 6th 2021.

  • steventhedev@lemmy.world
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    The electoral college is good for one thing and one thing only: boosting confidence that election fraud in one place won’t impact the result of the election.

    Winner takes all was always stupid and needs to be replaced with proportional allocation, preferably with a more direct ratio to the actual population of votes. Basically, everyone doing what Nebraska and Maine do.

    • stewie3128@lemmy.ml
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      It’s also really good for making sure that whoever wins the most acres of land gets a huge electoral boost. Because that’s important.

      • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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        It’s also really good for making sure that whoever wins the most acres of land gets a huge electoral boost. Because that’s important.

        Is it? The most disproportionate representation in the EC belongs to the people of Delaware, last time I ran the numbers of EC votes per capita.

        State population is all that matters. Very small populations still get an EC vote for each Senator, which is the root of the problem.

        • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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          Delaware has 3 electoral votes and a population of 1.018 million.

          Wyoming has 3 electoral votes and a population of 584,000.

          Wyoming is almost twice as over-represented as Delaware in the electoral college.

          California currently has 54 electoral votes. If CA was as represented in the electoral college as Wyoming is, it would have 200 votes.

          So you could argue that both Wyoming and California can claim to be more disproportionately represented by the EC than Delaware.

          • stewie3128@lemmy.ml
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            Lol, wrong. Delaware’s surpassed by like 6 other states. Wyoming is the most disproportionally represented per voter.

          • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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            Ah, Wikipedia makes it really easy to list by per capita representation.

            The top 10 in “lowest population per electoral vote”:

             Wyoming
             Vermont
             District of Columbia
             Alaska
             North Dakota
             Montana
             Rhode Island
             South Dakota
             Delaware
             Maine
            
  • Steve@communick.news
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    I wish Walz was at the top of the ticket.
    I’d eagerly vote for him, as opposed to skeptically voting for Harris.

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      My hope is that she chose him, so she likes him, maybe for the same reasons we do.

        • Steve@communick.news
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          Now she’s trying to distance herself from the most progressive policies she supported in the past. That makes me a little concerned. She has a history of saying whatever she thinks the people want to hear. Then claiming “It was a debate” when pressed on comments she made in the past, as though it’s silly for anyone to think she believes what she said. That’s why I feel we don’t really know what to expect from her.

          I hope she’ll be as progressive as possible and actually try to take some big swings. But I have doubts. And actual fears she’ll remove Lina Kahn, and go back to more Clinton-esque, Corpo friendly, policies we’ve seen for the last several decades. That’s where the lions share of her donations are coming from.

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            you already seem to know her history of behavior. Why would she suddenly start acting like a different person than she was before? -Last time in your life you were put in a position where you were pressured to make big decisions, did you rely on what you knew, or did you completely pivot your behavior to try something new?

            • Steve@communick.news
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              Being the president with real power, is very different from being a single senator with very little power. And again most of her money is coming from big corpo donors.

    • yeather@lemmy.ca
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      I don’t get the downvotes, I’m in a similar position and I’m sure so mang others are as well.

    • index@sh.itjust.works
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      You wish they were at the top of the ticket and you would eagerly vote for him so i guess you agree with him that “the expansion of Israel and its proxies is an absolute, fundamental necessity for the United States to have the steady leadership there”