• 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.

      • chaogomu
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        11 year ago

        Yeah, that’s the second issue. Now, that might be able to changed with an act of congress.

        Congress can change the rules around elections, but the federal government tends to be pretty hands-off with elections at the state level, and we’d have to fix the supreme court to get anything like that to stick.

        It might take a constitutional amendment, which again, is almost impossible in today’s political climate.

        So the easiest thing to work towards is un-capping the House, because that would instantly make the government better represent the people, and being honest here, would deny conservatives the House and probably presidency for the foreseeable future. All because conservatives are not actually as popular as the slanted voting system makes them seem to be.