PicardRex Wrote:The system as it stands, should that situation occur, calls for a session of the House of Reps. to meet in order to elect a president. They choose from the top 3 candidates and vote by state. Each state is required to vote as one, winner is decided by whoever gets 26 of the 50 states. Voting continues until a winner is declared. This has happened twice in our history, once in 1800 with Jefferson and Adams and then again in 1824 with Jackson and Quincy Adams. Interesting reading by the way.
johntfs Wrote:See, I suppose that would be the only thing that would be worse than what FPW was describing. You vote for President. Your guys wins the popular vote. He even gets the highest total in the electoral vote. And then he's denied the Presidency because the House, which is dominated by the party opposed to him, votes their guy in.
I like the idea of proportional awarding of electoral votes, but I don't want to monkey with the system in such a way as to produce some kind of crisis every couple of election cycles or so. I don't know. I might post this concept on the fivethirtyeight.com site and see what Nate Silver makes of it.
PicardRex Wrote:Thats what happened in the election of 1824. Jackson won both the plurality of the popular and electoral vote, however, upon going to the House, where they were more inclined towards Quincy Adams, Adams was given the presidency by then Speaker of the House, Henry Clay. Huge controversy, not helped by the fact that Clay was then awarded with the Secretary of State position.
Though I do agree with you that something like that occuring again would be a travesty, I think that speaks more towards the two party system we currently have than the system itself. Its too easy to cut backroom deals when you are only dealing with two parties. You basically have an Us vs Them mentality. Introduce a few more parties into the system, parties with real clout and real differences, and this deadlock that we have would break down, I think.
johntfs Wrote:Actually, it sounds to me like you'd be far more likely to have backroom deals cut with multiple parties than with two. In other countries that have strong third parties you usually have coalition governments in which two or more parties specifically makes deals with each other to share power/interests. I'll also note that in those countries the position of president doesn't actually exist as we understand it. They have two positions, a head of state (to deal with foreign policy) and a head of government (to deal with domestic issues). I'm not saying that proportional awards in conjunction with a strong third (or fourth or fifth) party would be a bad thing, but it would likely lead to some serious structural changes in the government and probably the Constitution.
t4terrific Wrote:Actually we should just keep going the way we are.
Got it.
johntfs Wrote:Actually, it sounds to me like you'd be far more likely to have backroom deals cut with multiple parties than with two. In other countries that have strong third parties you usually have coalition governments in which two or more parties specifically makes deals with each other to share power/interests. I'll also note that in those countries the position of president doesn't actually exist as we understand it. They have two positions, a head of state (to deal with foreign policy) and a head of government (to deal with domestic issues). I'm not saying that proportional awards in conjunction with a strong third (or fourth or fifth) party would be a bad thing, but it would likely lead to some serious structural changes in the government and probably the Constitution.