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Letters to the Editor

 
Electoral College Compromises Democracy
By Akhil Reed Amar
In 1787, as the Constitution was being drafted in Philadelphia, James

Wilson of Pennsylvania proposed direct election of the President of the

United States. But James Madison of Virginia worried that such a system

would hurt the South, which would have been outnumbered by the North in a

direct election system.
The creation of the Electoral College got around that: it was part of the

deal that Southern states, in computing their share of electoral votes,

could count slaves (albeit with a two-fifths discount), who of course were

given none of the privileges of citizenship.
Virginia emerged as the big winner, with more than a quarter of the

electors needed to elect a president. A free state like Pennsylvania got

fewer electoral votes even though it had approximately the same free

population.
The Constitution's pro-Southern bias quickly became obvious. For 32 of the

Constitution's first 36 years, a white slaveholding Virginian occupied the

presidency. Thomas Jefferson, for example, won the election of 1800 against

John Adams from Massachusetts in a race where the slavery skew of the

Electoral College was the decisive margin of victory.
The system's gender bias was also obvious. In a direct presidential

election, any state that chose to enfranchise its women would have

automatically doubled its clout. Under the Electoral College, however, a

state had no special incentive to expand suffrage. Each got a fixed number

of electoral votes,

regardless of how many citizens were allowed to vote.
Now fast-forward to Election Night 2000. Al Gore appears to have received

the most popular votes nationwide but may well lose the contest for

electoral votes. Once again, the system has tilted toward white Southern

males. Exit polls indicate that Mr. Bush won big among this group and that

Mr. Gore won decisively among blacks and women.
The Electoral College began as an unfair system, and remains so. So why

keep it?

Advocates of the system sloganeer about "federalism," meaning that

presidential candidates are forced to take into account individual state

interests and regional variations in their national campaigns.
But in the current system, candidates don't appeal so much to state

interests (what are those, anyway?) as to demographic groups (elderly

voters, soccer moms) within states. And direct popular elections would

still encourage candidates to take into account regional differences, like

those between voters in the Midwest and the East. After all, one cannot win

a national majority without getting lots of votes in lots of places.
Direct election could give state governments some incentives to increase

voter turnout, because the more voters a state turned out, the bigger its

role in national elections and the bigger its overall share in the national

tally. Presidential candidates would begin to pay more attention to the

needs of individual states that had higher turnouts.
The nation's founders sought to harness governmental competition and

rivalry in healthy ways, using checks and balances within the federal

government and preserving roles for state governments.
Direct presidential elections would be true to their best concepts -

democracy and healthy competition rather than to their worst

compromises.
Akhil Reed Amar, a law professor at Yale,

is author of "The Bill of Rights:

Creation and Reconstruction."
Independent Investigation Needed in Saginaw
Dear Editor:
I wish to commend you on the excellent article in the last issue

concerning the State Representative race between Del Schrems and Carl

Williams.
It disturbs me as well that the Saginaw County Board of Canvassers

along with the State Board certified this flawed election.
Our state lawmakers should also eliminate such a stupid law that

prohibits hand recounts in precincts that have the worst problems. This

makes absolutely no sense. And they wonder why less than half the country

bothered to vote!
As a voter at St. Stephens that was not included in the recount, I

am angry and offended.  And I think our Saginaw City Council owes it to the

citizens and taxpayers of Saginaw to explain how Salinas ballots got mixed

up with those of my precinct along with the other precincts affected.  They

should appoint an independent counsel to get to the bottom of this.

Keep up the good work!

Sincerely,
B. Thomas

Saginaw
The Review welcomes your letters & comments. Please address all

correspondence to:
Letters to the Editor o Review Magazine
318 S. Hamilton St. 
Saginaw, MI 48602

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