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California devises end-run around electoral college (Passed!)
CoCoTimes ^
| 5/28/06
| Jim Sanders
Posted on 05/31/2006 3:09:09 PM PDT by BurbankKarl
Six years after Democrat Al Gore won the popular vote but lost the presidency to Republican George W. Bush, there's a new move afoot in the California Legislature and other states to ensure that such things never happen again.
The linchpin is a proposed "interstate compact," designed to guarantee that presidents will be selected by popular vote, without amending the U.S. Constitution or eliminating the electoral college.
Assemblyman Tom Umberg, a Santa Ana Democrat who chairs the Assembly Election and Redistricting Committee, said the basic premise is understandable even to children.
"When you're in first grade, if the person who got the second-most votes became class leader, the kids would recognize that this is not a fair system," he said.
Umberg's Assembly Bill 2948, proposing such a compact, passed the Assembly's elections and appropriations committees on party-line votes, with Republicans opposed.
"We have a system that's worked effectively for more than 200 years," said Sal Russo, a GOP political consultant. "We probably should be very hesitant to change that."
John Koza, an official of National Popular Vote, which is pushing the proposal, said sentiment has not split along party lines in other states.
"I don't think anyone can convincingly put their finger on any partisan advantage," said Koza, a consulting professor at Stanford University.
Though Republicans disproportionately benefited from the electoral college in 2000, when Bush edged Gore despite getting 544,000 fewer votes, Democrats nearly turned the tables four years later.
(Excerpt) Read more at contracostatimes.com ...
TOPICS: Extended News; Government; Politics/Elections; US: California
KEYWORDS: ab2948; callegislation; electionpresident; electoralcollege; popularvote
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To: KoRn
Here in Colorado. After Gore lost. The Dem tried to push a bill throgh that would have split the electoral vote where the popular candidate would get 6 of the electoral and the loser 5 votes. It was SLAPPED DOWN BIG TIME.
The electroal college must stand as it is. As it is a check against heavy populated states. I would not vote in agreement to any change in the electoral college period.
161
posted on
05/31/2006 5:41:12 PM PDT
by
Don_Ret_USAF
( "TO CONGRESS, as one of your employers (the people of the USA ) I FIRE YOU.")
To: Smartass; kabar
Read the link there from kabar like he says look at 5.12.
To: BurbankKarl; Arizona Carolyn; scpg2; Prime Choice; NormsRevenge; MeekOneGOP; neverdem; ...
...ping to #1 ...and here is a little more from Google...
163
posted on
05/31/2006 5:42:05 PM PDT
by
Seadog Bytes
(OPM - The Liberal 'solution' to every societal problem. (Other People's Money))
To: NinoFan
Read Article I, Section 10. This is unconstitutional unless Congress approves it.Congress doesn't have the power to dictate to the states how they may exercise their constitutional powers, including divvying up electoral votes. Such a compact among states would be illegal -- in the sense that it cannot be legally binding on any of the states that voluntarily enter into it -- unless Congress approves. But Congress lacks the power to void any individual state's actions under it.
Basically, the proposed "compact" amounts to an informal gentlemen's agreement that provides political cover to state legislatures because any state that goes it alone will be at a political disadvantage relative to others.
No one wants to be the one to go it alone, so they need the assurance that others will be right behind. It's not a binding compact anymore than the Contract with America was a binding contract. It's a political arrangement.
To: tx_eggman
Corrected stats:
Game 1: New York 4, Pittsburgh 6
Game 2: New York 16, Pittsburgh 3
Game 3: New York 10, Pittsburgh 0
Game 4: New York 2, Pittsburgh 3
Game 5: New York 2, Pittsburgh 5
Game 6: New York 12, Pittsburgh 0
Game 1: New York 9, Pittsburgh 10
165
posted on
05/31/2006 5:48:24 PM PDT
by
FreedomCalls
(It's the "Statue of Liberty," not the "Statue of Security.")
To: NinoFan
It may very well take the Supreme Court to make the final decision on this one. It is obvious that this group is lawyered up and the fact that state legislatures are voting on it indicate that there is a legal basis to their argument. As I stated previously, this is a serious effort and should be viewed as such.
166
posted on
05/31/2006 5:57:45 PM PDT
by
kabar
To: nicmarlo
With the Democrats, murdering babies is number one.
167
posted on
05/31/2006 6:00:04 PM PDT
by
Smartass
(Vaya con Dios - And forgive us our trash baskets as we forgive those who put trash in our baskets)
To: Arizona Carolyn
That does not apply to changing the electoral college?
Some dem politician read, blinked, and made his colleagues blink twice.
POOF, California law.
168
posted on
05/31/2006 6:03:22 PM PDT
by
Smartass
(Vaya con Dios - And forgive us our trash baskets as we forgive those who put trash in our baskets)
To: Don_Ret_USAF
"I would not vote in agreement to any change in the electoral college period."I'm in total agreement. I was just wondering what they hope to accomplish by doing this. Sometimes they really prove how stupid they are I guess.
169
posted on
05/31/2006 6:13:36 PM PDT
by
KoRn
To: Smartass
They truly are an evil party.
To: BurbankKarl
Just imagine their outrage if it is a Republican that wins the popular vote but loses the electoral college and he wins anyway.
The left always tries to have everything both ways, just so long as they win.
To: Arizona Carolyn
More phone banks.
My problem with mail in ballots is the anonymity. I don't even like to fill in the Census form. When I vote, I want it to be private. Maybe that is why the response is (partially) low.
No elected government should know which people voted for them, and which voted for their opponent.
To: Arizona Carolyn
What I mean by phone banks is that with mail voting candidates can canvass lots of home by phone, encouraging people to pick their candidate right there and mail it in. They can (and will) use scare tactics and other tactics over the phone to "get out the vote".
We have a 50(?) yard rule - no campaigning within X yards of a polling station. With phone banks calling people telling them how to fill out the application, it is a violation of that spirit.
To: nicmarlo
Any political party that condones the killing of over 50 million human fetuses, IS EVIL. The Democrats are that party! Imagine a Spotted Owl, or Turtle's eggs having priority over a human life. I can't.
174
posted on
05/31/2006 6:25:20 PM PDT
by
Smartass
(Vaya con Dios - And forgive us our trash baskets as we forgive those who put trash in our baskets)
To: Smartass
Imagine a Spotted Owl, or Turtle's eggs having priority over a human life. I'd rather not; for me to imagine that, I'd have to be depraved. Yet I know that it's the truth.
To: jwalsh07
I guess. The concept of a state throwing out it's vote results if people in other states votes differently... is extremely bizarre.
176
posted on
05/31/2006 6:33:07 PM PDT
by
mrsmith
To: ReignOfError
Basically, the proposed "compact" amounts to an informal gentlemen's agreement that provides political cover to state legislatures because any state that goes it alone will be at a political disadvantage relative to others. Not at all, a compact is a constitutional instrument that contractually obligates the parties. But Congress as constituted will never approve such a contract and the SCOTUS as currently constituted will agree with their power to do just that.
To: mrsmith
No more bizarre than democrats lobbying to disenfranchise military votes in Florida.
To: BurbankKarl
Well....anyone know the loophole that allows this not to stand if a Republican wins?
To: BurbankKarl
The bill is part of a 3-month-old movement driven by a Bay Area lawyer and a Stanford computer science professor. The same 888-word bill is pending in four other states and is expected to be introduced in every state by January, its sponsors say. The legislation would not take effect until enough states passed such laws to make up a majority of the Electoral College votes a minimum of 13 states, depending on population. And how would it be determined that such a thing had actually happened? What if, in a state that was party to the contract, it was challenged in court? Would the contract be in effect or not in effect in the other states?
180
posted on
05/31/2006 6:49:37 PM PDT
by
supercat
(Sony delenda est.)
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