I dont know the answers Im not near smart enough. I just know what we have now doesnt work. Cobalt_Kid said it much better than I have been.
If the majority of the country is urban, then why would we want to use a "rural style of thinking"?
Edited.
Welcome Cobalt
Who then...
Canadians didn't vote in the American election....
And since most of the country is urban, it would be logical for the style to be more urban than rural. Only one person can be president at a time so you can't really balance that, but each state is represented in the legislature anyway so that branch would be representative.It wouldn't be an "urban" style, but a more "balanced" style, which includes urban input.
thanks
The U.S. Supreme Court gave Bush the 2000 election. They stopped the vote recount in Florida which would have given the state to Gore.
Yes, my point was just that the legislature will represent the country in ways the executive branch never could.We're discussing the Electoral College which ONLY concerns itself with the Presidential election,
If the camapaigns were still dependent on actual time spent there, that'd be one thing. However, with technology now everyone will know what candidates' stances are on everything. It's not as though candidates will only travel to big cities and that's what matters (maybe I'm misunderstanding you, I'm not sure).and how rural states can compete with urban centers for Presidential candidates' attention.
A popular direct one man one vote system is not so simple, because it will
literally forever and ever take away a Presidential candidates' interest
in the rural states and the smaller states.
The way it is now, all regions get a pretty fair amount of attention.
I'm not sure I entirely got your point, but politicians tend to be entirely capable of betraying the people they voted for regardless of what kind of contact they've had with them.Agentkgb, your point that technology can replace the physical act of a presidential candidate's
visit to a rural area assumes its "virtually the same thing" as seeing the guy on TV.
I disagree.
You want the candidate bumping physically into the flesh and eyes of a person standing
there, representing themselves eye to eye.
On a fundamental psychological level that causes a different interaction.
Think about it. You might be more capable of being rude and particularly intransigent
on the phone than you would right there in front of a person.
It gets that fundamental, not to be blithely or easily discounted.
Why does it matter where a politician visits? What matters are her/his policies, and those have to do with who he/she's chosen to try to get votes from. The electoral college would fit this kind of if states were united in their interests, but they're certainly not. The geographic divisions make sense only in terms of travel, and I just don't see why that's important. Everyone knows what people (officially) stand for no matter where they speak.Each state's citizens get more attention than it would if we shifted to
just concentrated population centers.
Provinces? I wish I could say I was Canadian, but I'm not.Look how your own provinces complain of unequal attention ?
Why does it matter where a politician visits? --------------AgentKgb
Answer:
Watch what the candidates do. They apparently think it matters.
Because people feel that it's important, candidates will do it. Getting rid of the electoral college would mean that candidates (or their employees anyway) will continue to work out their schedules in the way they think will get them the most votes. It has no effect on the candidates beliefs or future policies, it just makes people feel special. Keeping the electoral college to make sure that the candidates go to rural areas won't actually have an effect on the way an elected candidate will run his office, it just makes it so some people's votes are worth more than other people's.While rationally accurate, your premise about virtual reality on a TV screen or a computer screen
being more important than physical proximity is too simple to be true.
Warren G Harding, campaigned entirely from his front porch in Ohio.
No candidate could get away with that today.
Nor can a best selling author. They're forced to do a book tour.
They serve no purpose (unless the candidates had a disease and somehow no one knew even though we are living in what is accurately described as the Information Age).Such physicality appears to be useless to you ???
Hmmm...