Ignoring Your Vote
Some Electoral College supporters say the magnification of the margin of victory that the institution creates is actually beneficial, at least to the President.  Their argument appears to stem from a hope that people might ignore the popular vote, focusing on the electoral vote instead and offering the administration more credibility and legitimacy.

Meanwhile fewer and fewer voices are heard in the nationwide contest.  In 1996 we saw the number of competative states drop from 1992.  2000 had fewer than 1996 and in 2004 the trend continued with just 11 states considered competative.  In 2008 we might well have less than 10 competative states.

More Options

Vague Values

Electoral Replacements

Electoral Tie

Favorite Son Effect

A Few States Wins

Constitutional Residence

State Size

Special Interests

Power of State Legislatures

Unlucky Luck

 
Electoral College Table of Contents


 
October 12th 2008
Let voters register on election day
Oregon Live

A Portland resident calls for instant runoff voting to end the spoiler problem.

October 10th 2008
Report: Campaign stops heaped on few states
Journal and Courier

The Journal and Courier picks up on FairVote's press release about the Shrinking Battleground in the 2008 Presidential Election.

September 21st 2008
Drop Out of College!
New York Post

Op-ed by National Popular Vote's John Koza featured in the New York Post

September 3rd 2008
Electoral College outdated; count each citizen's vote
Scarlet Scuttlebutt, NJ

Commentary argues that the electoral college should be abolished and supports the National Popular Vote plan.

September 3rd 2008
Obama-McCain contest: Should winner of popular vote always win the White House?
Christian Science Monitor

Article uses the 2008 Presidential race to explain the national popular vote plan.

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