Everyone's vote should be equal when electing the president, no matter where they live. FairVote is a leader in the campaign to establish a national popular vote for president, and recommends that political parties establish a schedule and rules to promote all states having a meaningful vote in nomination contests.


New Jersey Set to Shift Primary Date
presidential primary map 2004On June 24 New Jersey’s state senate voted to join the growing list of states ready to shift their primary date earlier in the election cycle. The proposal would reschedule New Jersey’s primary to late February, a move designed to increase the state’s influence in presidential elections. Acting Gov. Richard Codey is expected to sign the legislation.

In response to recent presidential elections effectively being decided within the first three weeks of the primary season, a number of states have either advanced their primary date or are seriously considering do so.

An alternative plan for scheduling primaries is the American Plan, developed by political scientist Thomas Gangale. The American Plan takes into account the interests of both large and small states.

Update: New Jersey Acting Gov. Richard Codey signed the legislation on Thursday, July 7.

[See Newark Star Ledger story]
[See Fairvote's press release]
[More on the American Plan]


LA State Senate Passes Resolution Calling for the Abolition of the Electoral College

Louisiana State Capitol BuildingOn May 19, the Louisiana State Senate passed a resolution advocating that Congress abolish the Electoral College.  The bill passed with a 29-vote majority and garnered support from both Democrats and Republicans.

A safe “red” state, Louisiana hardly benefits from the Electoral College. Safe states are routinely ignored by presidential campaigns, which pour resources and attention on battleground states – large and small. Because of the Electoral College, less than half of all voters nationwide are able to cast a meaningful vote. The president should be responsive and accountable to all of us, not a handful of states that happen to be closely divided.

[Read more about concerns with the Electoral College]

[Senate notes on the passage of LA Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 25]



Call to Action on December 13th
The Real Election Day
The Electoral College meetingThough some 120 million Americans cast ballots in the 2004 presidential election, the decisive vote will take place this Monday, December 13th, when 538 members of the Electoral College meet to officially elect our next president.

A relic of the 18th century, the Electoral College is a ticking time bomb. In an era of increasingly narrow presidential elections, this anachronistic system perennially risks fraud, disenfranchised voters, and electoral deadlock, operating on the unfair principle of "winner take all."

We need your help to put a spotlight on the Electoral College, and join the growing chorus of voices calling for direct election of the president by majority vote. Take a look at FairVote's Call to Action to learn more about the Electoral College's flaws, and find out what you can do to change this system.




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Fuzzy Math Report

Presidential Elections Inequality Report
August 10th 2009
Commentary: A cure for the political nomination process
Cleveland Plain Dealer

FairVote's Rob Richie and Paul Fidalgo offer a way to give everyone a say in presidential nominations while retaining the valuable state-by-state evaluation process. This piece also ran in McClatchy's newswire.

July 13th 2009
Albatross of U.S. democracy
Indianapolis Star

FairVote research is cited in support of the National Popular Vote plan in Indiana, because "every vote cast for president should be equally important and equally coveted, whether it originates in California, Connecticut or Crawfordsville."

July 9th 2009
Winner-take-all can elect a second-place president
San Diego Union-Tribune

The founder of National Popular Vote lays out the shortcomings and injustices of the Electoral College system, and shows why the National Popular Vote plan is the right solution.

May 17th 2009
Why states should adopt the National Popular Vote plan for president
San Diego Union-Tribune

FairVote's Rob Richie writes that the Electoral College deepens political inequality, and explains why the National Popular Vote plan is our best opportunity to ensure that every vote for president is equally valued.

May 14th 2009
Let's Make Every Vote Count
The Nation

Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of the Nation magazine, highlights FairVote's research in an important piece on the "broad support" growing in the states for the National Popular Vote plan to elect the president.