ldrews, on 2018-October-25, 21:16, said:
Wasn't there a lot of whining about the 2016 election not being decided by national popular vote? The argument is that the US wasn't really democratic since the Electoral College determined the winner and not the popular vote.
Keep in mind that this is not an isolated incident. In two of the last five presidential elections the candidate with fewer votes has been the winner (the other being 2000). This also happens in the House of Representatives, where in 2012 Democrats won the popular vote and Republicans retained control. Of course the Senate is not even designed to be majoritarian, where California has two senators just like Wyoming despite some 60x the population. At the level of individual states things are even worse; in North Carolina the Republicans were able to control a super majority (2/3 of the legislature) with less than half the votes.
When this sort of thing is happening a LOT, and almost always to one party’s advantage, and that party further works to change the rules to make this situation even MORE common (making voting more difficult by cutting down polling places and early voting hours, removing people from voting rolls, creating extreme gerrymanders and appointing judges who strike down the voting rights act, and even suggesting we should let senators be chosen by gerrymandered state legislatures instead of statewide popular vote) things look less and less democratic (or Republican if you prefer) and more like an oligarchy.
Keep in mind that Iran and Russia have regular elections too! We don’t think of them as “democracies” though... what should we think about a USA where one party frequently wins elections (in some states virtually always wins elections) despite getting fewer votes than their opponents?
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit