• @kescusay
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    761 year ago

    Yep. Polls are getting less reliable anyway, because so many of them rely on landlines, and some segments of the population are less likely to respond to surveys than others.

    • chaogomu
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      291 year ago

      Which is telling, because the land line polls tend to over inflate Conservative voices, and it still has Trump losing in a landslide.

        • chaogomu
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          241 year ago

          To be fair, Clinton won the popular vote by a large margin, it’s just that the House has not been expanded in 100 years despite the population more than tripling, so some states have outsized impact during a presidential election.

          • Jordan Lund
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            -171 year ago

            District sizes have nothing to do with Presidential or Senate elections, they are state wide.

            • @AbidanYre
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              151 year ago

              Except that California should have like 60x as many votes as Wyoming.

              • Jordan Lund
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                -141 year ago

                If you increase the members of congress, then that’s going to increase the number of electoral college votes needed to win as well. So, proportionally, it all stays the same.

                • @AbidanYre
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                  81 year ago

                  The number of votes per state would go up based on the population of each state, not a straight multiply by x.

                  • Jordan Lund
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                    -91 year ago

                    They wouldn’t though, the people in charge of changing this would not allow states like California and New York to dominate the process, which they would if it were based purely on population.

            • svtdragon
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              61 year ago

              Congressional districts are divided among states based on the census, and then become the count of electoral votes, which in turn award the presidency. So they have a lot to do with presidential elections.

              • Jordan Lund
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                -121 year ago

                Increasing the number of congressional districts would also necessitate increasing the number of votes needed to win.

                Right now, each state has 1 per Congressman and 1 for each of 2 Senators.

                538 total with 270 needed to win (50.18%).

                So if you add house members, let’s say we do something crazy and double it for everyone:

                976 electoral college votes (538-100 because the Senate votes are fixed. 438*2 then add the 100 Senators back in).

                Now you need 488 to become President. The problem remains, all you did is change the scale.

                • jpj007
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                  1 year ago

                  But you wouldn’t just double it for each state. You’d increase the total number of House seats, and then portion them out according to the populations of each state. That’s how it was always done before they capped the size of the House.

                  Currently, Wyoming has just one House seat. If you double the number of total House seats, Wyoming still only gets one. They currently have a larger impact on Presidential elections than they should if it were decided strictly by population, and that’s due entirely to the Electoral College and the cap on the size of the House.

            • chaogomu
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              51 year ago

              The size of the electoral college is based on the size of the House, because the House (currently) has a fixed size, the states each get a set number of electoral votes, that do not actually match the populations of those states.

              This is due to a law passed in 1929 called the permanent apportionment act, which froze the size of the House, despite the fact that we’ve added two new states since then.

              So States like California have less electoral power than they should, while states like Rhode Island have more than they should. Well, technically Rhode Island should have more as well, every state should have more.

              • Jordan Lund
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                -131 year ago

                Increasing the number of congressional districts would also necessitate increasing the number of votes needed to win.

                Right now, each state has 1 per Congressman and 1 for each of 2 Senators.

                538 total with 270 needed to win (50.18%).

                So if you add house members, let’s say we do something crazy and double it for everyone:

                976 electoral college votes (538-100 because the Senate votes are fixed. 438*2 then add the 100 Senators back in).

                Now you need 488 to become President. The problem remains, all you did is change the scale.

      • Nougat
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        121 year ago

        Overinflating conservatism in the US is par for the course. See: the three-fifths compromise and the electoral college.

        • chaogomu
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          81 year ago

          The electoral college isn’t bad per se, it’s just been allowed to become bad in a way that hints at a deeper issue.

          Notably that the House has not been expanded in 100 years, even as the population has expanded, and two states have been added.

          We need to un-cap the house and get it to the point where it’s actually representative again. Doing so would take a single act of congress.

          • Nougat
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            101 year ago

            Because the electoral college includes the sum of all Senators and Representatives in a given state, rural states with low populations presidential votes carry much more weight than urban states with large populations. You’re right about the House not expanding, that’s also shifting things around - but a huge reason the electoral college exists at all was to assure the southern states that the institution of slavery would be protected in order to get them to ratify the Constitution. It shifted power to shitheads on purpose.

            The electoral college is bad.

            • chaogomu
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              51 year ago

              It is unneeded in the modern era.

              The electoral college didn’t shift power to slave states. That was the 3/5ths compromise.

              No, the electoral college was created because the fastest way to travel in the 1780s was via foot. There weren’t even good roads between the new states. So it could take months to get from Georgia to Washington, DC.

              We don’t have that problem anymore, but changing things like that would require a constitutional amendment. Something that is fairly hard to do in today’s political climate.

              And it still wouldn’t fix the problem with the House not being representative. But one act of congress to repeal the permanent apportionment act of 1929 would fix both issues.

              Massively expanding the size of the House would make it representative, and it would make the electoral college better represent the populations of each state.

              • Nougat
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                1 year ago

                It sure did shift power to the slave states. The Senate gives equal power to each state, regardless of population. That’s why, as states were allowed to join the union, they were done for quite some time in pairs - one slave, one free - in order to maintain a balance in the Senate.

                • chaogomu
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                  21 year ago

                  You’re mixing two different things and not quite understanding history.

                  The House and the Senate are very different things, and together they add up to the electoral college.

                  The electoral college was created for one reason and one reason alone. To allow people to actually vote in a national election when the fastest way to get from one end of the country to the other was via footpath.

                  The Senate was actually a check on the power of the slave states, as was the 3/5ths compromise.

                  Although, the northern states were also slave states at the time the constitution was signed. People often forget that fact.

                  The problems with slavery were painfully obvious, even then, but rich white guys wanted to own people. This lead to even more problems as the North slowly banned slavery. But that’s a different section in the history book.

                  • Nougat
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                    11 year ago

                    I’m sorry, but you have this completely backwards.

                    Yes, I am aware of how the electoral college works, and what the House and Senate are. I have been voting since 1988. Specifically because the electoral college votes from a particular state include those granted by having two senators, low population states’ popular vote carries more weight in electing a president (and vice president). I may have worded that badly before, I hope that was clearer.

                    The three-fifths compromise made it so that, for purposes of counting population, to decide how many representatives in the House a state had, every five slaves were to count as three persons. This gave the southern states a huge boost of power in the House - because slaves got counted to find out how many representatives they had, even though those slaves were in every other way property, with few rights, certainly not the right to vote in the elections for the reps their number served to create seats for.

                    Again, the fact that each state had two senators, and that those states were kept evenly split between slave and free states (or states which wanted to expand slavery and states which wanted to curtail or outlaw slavery) demonstrates how the balance of power in the senate was kept that way in order to avoid a conflict over the issue of slavery. Since states had different populations, and since much of the concentration of free people was concentrated in the northeast, the Senate (then as now) gives disproportionate power to (I mentioned this before) lower population and more rural states. Then, those states were largely southern slave states. Today, those states are largely rural conservative states.

                    Yes, of course, there were slaves in northern states, too, but far fewer, and many northern states were curtailing or outlawing slavery while the south was doing everything in its power not only to protect it in the south, but to expand it for all states.

                    Slavery was a divisive issue in the US from the very beginning, and the issue got kicked down the road many, many times before Lincoln was elected and the south seceded. Everything that happened at the federal level.

              • @arensb
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                51 year ago

                The Electoral College did give the slave states more power, by way of the three-fifths compromise: the number of Electors depends on the number of Representatives, which depends on the census of inhabitants, not vote-eligible citizens, including, at the time, 3/5 of the slave population. So a state like Virginia, with more slaves than free people, got a boost compared to a state with only free residents.

          • @arensb
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            21 year ago

            Allow me to evangelize the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, which aims to bypass the Electoral College and elect the president by popular vote.

            • chaogomu
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              21 year ago

              Which still doesn’t fix the problem with the House not being representative.

          • @markr
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            21 year ago

            It’s bad per se and also ludicrous. It gives way too much power to states with small populations, which tend to be rural and very right wing. But it is also ludicrous, we should all vote for the person selected to rule the nation, and every vote should have equal weight. Those same states - the right has a hugely unbalanced say in the senate for the same reason, small rural states have massively disproportionate representation. Reforming presidential elections can be done by amendment or by efforts like the popular vote compact, by agreement between enough states. The stupid constitution forbids amending the way the senate is apportioned, so there might have to be a court fight over changing that rule.

            • chaogomu
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              21 year ago

              Again… The outsized power of smaller states is 100% an artifact of the permanent apportionment act of 1929. It decreed that the size of the House would be set at 435 members. And then we added two states and tripled the population.

              And the House is still 435 members. Some congressional districts have more than a million people. How the hell can a Representative actually be said to represent 1 million people?

              To fix this would take a single act of congress. Just a simple repeal of one law, and the adoption of a new apportionment standard. That’s it. Then the popular vote would mostly line up with the electoral college, because the votes would have to line up. Because it would actually be representative of the actual population.

              Just massively increase the size of the house to match the actual population.

              • @markr
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                11 year ago

                I agree the house needs expansion, however I also think that would only moderately address the electoral college skew toward rural states. Also it is in my opinion irrelevant as it does not address the core problem: the president should be elected by a direct national vote, each person getting one vote of equal weight to every other vote.

                • chaogomu
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                  11 year ago

                  I’m saying that if you expand the house, the skew that you are complaining about goes away.

                  Here’s a Time article on the subject that uses the current algorithm to find the most representative number of Representatives while still being a fairly low number. The answer comes out to 930.

                  That’s the on the lower end of fixing the House. There are proposals that go much higher.

                  And all it takes to get to any of them is a simple act of congress. No need for a constitutional amendment, no need to get the states on board, just one law passed.

                  Fixing the House would also massively curtail gerrymandering. Particularly the packing and stacking tactics.

                  And again, all it takes to do this is a single law passed by congress.

                  Ditching the electoral college completely? That’s either get the states to agree to the National Interstate Compact, or a constitutional amendment.

                  Both would be very hard to actually accomplish.

                  • @markr
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                    11 year ago

                    The skew in the house would be reduced, it might even go away, but with 2 exceptions the states do not allocate electoral college electors proportionally , it’s winner takes all, and doesn’t even require a majority. The small population rural states would continue to have inordinate representation in the presidential vote.

      • @Astroturfed
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        71 year ago

        The polls showed him losing solidly to Clinton right up until he won though… The numbers are looking worse this time, but still.

        • @kescusay
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          121 year ago

          It’s a little more complex than that. The national polls had him losing solidly to Clinton on the popular vote, which actually happened. The real polling errors occurred at the state level, in a few key states.

      • @psysop
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        21 year ago

        This actually kind of sucks because then if/when the votes don’t look close to how they expect according to polls they automatically assume something fishy happened.

        And yes, I realize many will think that regardless.

      • @Ryumast3r
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        21 year ago

        Polls have evolved since then you know.

        I’m not saying they are perfect, but they understand, generally, that landlines aren’t key anymore. It’s literally their job.

    • mrnotoriousman
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      71 year ago

      From the article:

      Interviews were conducted in English, and included 319 live landline telephone interviews, 480 live cell phone interviews, and 111 online surveys via a cell phone text

      But you are right on polls not really meaning that much. Especially over a year away.

        • @kescusay
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          31 year ago

          That’s a valid point. Not many people do. Pollsters have a tough road ahead of them, because actually doing a scientifically valid poll is getting harder.