- Dec 6, 2004
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Ignoring the emotionally charged crap from this year's election, I want to take a look at our current winner take all electoral system and how it affects our voting power. This analysis is based off of the results of a paper published in 1968 titled One Man, 3.312 Votes: A Mathematical Analysis of the Electoral College. I'm going to try and distill it to its essence and update the math for 2016, but feel free to read the original paper if you're interested. For the most part, I'm going to stick to the facts and allow you to draw your own opinions from them.
The paper was titled that because they discovered that a voter in New York state has 3.312 times the voting power of a citizen in another part of the country. The popular argument in favor of the current electoral college system is that the inequality favors residents of less populous states, which this analysis will show is false. The electoral college actually weakens the voting power of residents of less populous states and strengthens the power of those in more populous states.
We can measure voting power quantitatively. The purpose of any voting system is to allow each voting member some chance, however small, to affect the decisions which must be made. Voting power is simply the ability to affect decisions through the process of voting. It can be measured by comparing the opportunities each voter has to affect the outcome. If all voters have an equal chance to affect the outcome in a given voting situation, we say that they have equal voting power. However, if some voters have a greater chance than others, we say that the voting powers are unequal.
The paper was titled that because they discovered that a voter in New York state has 3.312 times the voting power of a citizen in another part of the country. The popular argument in favor of the current electoral college system is that the inequality favors residents of less populous states, which this analysis will show is false. The electoral college actually weakens the voting power of residents of less populous states and strengthens the power of those in more populous states.
We can measure voting power quantitatively. The purpose of any voting system is to allow each voting member some chance, however small, to affect the decisions which must be made. Voting power is simply the ability to affect decisions through the process of voting. It can be measured by comparing the opportunities each voter has to affect the outcome. If all voters have an equal chance to affect the outcome in a given voting situation, we say that they have equal voting power. However, if some voters have a greater chance than others, we say that the voting powers are unequal.
- In our current system, voting powers are unequal. Citizens of large states have excessive voting power. Citizens of small and middle-sized states are discriminated against.
- In a direct election, all citizens would have equal voting power and an equal chance to affect the outcome of the election.
- In a proportional plan where electoral votes are divided in proportion to candidates' state-wide votes, voting powers are unequal. Citizens of small states have excessive voting power. Citizens of large and middle-sized states are discriminated against.
- In a district plan (presently used in Nebraska and Maine) voting powers are unequal and the presidential election becomes vulnerable to manipulation through Gerrymandering.