chicago51
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This is just my personal theory, but I think that the Electoral College suppresses voter turnout. If you are a liberal in a solid red state or a conservative in a solid blue state (like me) you start to feel that your vote really does not matter with regard to presidential elections. You feel like your vote has absolutely no bearing on the national outcome because the other side posted better numbers. The office of the President is the only truly national office and I think a person's vote should have bearing outside the confines of his state.
The common arguments in favor of the Electoral College have always rung false to me. People say that with direct popular vote, the candidates will just focus their campaigning on large states with big populations and ignore the smaller states. But that's what happens anyway with the EC. Delaware, with its measly 3 EC votes barely gets any attention. The only reason Obama made a stop here in his first go round is because Biden was his VP candidate. And I assume the EC is not compatible with Chicago51's runoff plan, which I support.
As for public campaign funding, how many of us check off the box on our federal tax return that reads "Yes, I want $3 to go to the presidential campaign fund?" As cynical as I can be, I've always checked "yes." But so many people check "no" either out of ignorance and/or spite. Then those same people whine that corporations and unions are buying elections. Well, the money has to come from somewhere, so if the people won't support campaign financing, there's plenty of deep-pocket groups who will open their checkbooks.
I agree with all of this.
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