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Published byPatience Charles Modified over 9 years ago
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The National Popular Vote for Presidential Elections
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The National Popular Vote Plan: Why Now? Voters in two-thirds of states are ignored Decreases turnout in these spectator states 70% of public wants a popular vote
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The Current System Weakens Participation of Key Constituencies Elections come down to fewer and fewer battlegrounds every election National trend of “hardening” partisanship Hurts participation of people of color and youth
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Fewer and Fewer Battlegrounds 1976: 24 states in play (345 electoral votes) 2004: 13 states in play (159 electoral votes)
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Partisanship is Hardening States are becoming less and less competitive and more and more fixed in their status Blue states becoming bluer Red states becoming redder
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Sharp Decline in Battlegrounds: Both Big and Small States Hurt 1976: 10 of 11 biggest states contested 2004: only 4 of 11 biggest states contested Ignored states include NY, CA, MA, NJ, IL, TX 1976: 5 of 13 smallest states contested 2004: only 1 of 13 biggest states contested 6 red states, 6 blue states, only one swing: New Hampshire
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Impact of the Current System in 2004: Advertising and Campaign Visits Florida had more ads than 45 states and DC combined. 18 states had 0 candidate visits and TV ads Advertising by state
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Racial Disparities in Battlegrounds Whites: 30% live in battlegrounds, 70% in safe states Blacks: 21% live in battlegrounds, 79% in safe states Latinos: 17% live in battlegrounds, 83% in safe states
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Voter Turnout Suffers Large and persistent gap in participation Biggest gap with youth turnout – 18% in 2004
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Warping National Debate Al Gore and 2000: “Climate change doesn’t play in the rust belt” -- key consultants Hard line on Cuba: Cuban-Americans in Florida High-tech industries in spectator states are ignored relative to rust belt issues
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The Case for Participation With national popular vote, campaigns would no longer ignore 2/3 of our states Every vote and effort to urge others to vote is equally meaningful everywhere Encourages a culture of higher voter turnout
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Why Proposed “Congressional District Systems” Fail Some suggest dividing states’ electoral votes by congressional district Applied nationally, district system makes it more likely for the popular vote winner to lose In 2000 George Bush wins by 10% of electors even while losing national vote Jimmy Carter ties or maybe loses in 1976 John Kennedy loses in 1960 80% to 90% of districts are not competitive
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The Path to Victory: The National Popular Vote Compact Constitutional basis for the proposal How the plan works Historical basis for states taking leadership Campaign successes after just 20 months Endorsements growing
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Constitutional Basis for the Plan US Supreme Court “The appointment, and mode of appointment, of electors belong exclusively to the states.” US Constitution: Article II, Section 1, Clause 2 “Each State shall appoint, in such Manner as the Legislature thereof may direct, a Number of Electors….
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How the Plan Works States act on their responsibility to structure system They join interstate compact to award their electors to the candidate winning most votes in all 50 states & DC Compacts are legally binding contracts with the full force of the Constitution behind them Goes into effect if and only if participating states represent a majority (270 or more) electoral votes A blackout period for withdrawal secures plan from July of election year to inauguration of president
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Bottom Line for State Lawmakers The National Popular Vote plan presents a simple policy choice: Keep the current system exactly as it is or Guarantee election of the national popular vote winner in 50 states
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Historical Basis for State Action Founders’ generation had no fixed system governing state rules on electors Example of 1796 election: Adams vs. Jefferson 8 States: Electors elected entirely by state legislature 5 States: Electors elected from districts 2 States: Elected elected statewide 1 State: Electors elected indirectly with state legislature Only by 1830s is unit rule dominant It maximized boost to majority party in a state It increased states’ clout by “swinging” more electors
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Campaign Successes for National Popular Vote in Only 20 months Maryland: Enacted the NPV law in April 2007 Illinois: Both houses passed in 2007. May go to governor for signature in January 2008 New Jersey: Passed assembly in 2007 and going to senate in January 2008 NC, AR, CO, HI, CA: Has passed one or two chambers. Viable for passage in all these states in 2008-09. Nationally: More than 360 state legislative sponsors in 47 states; expect bills in all 50 states in 2008-9.
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Endorsements for NPV Proposal Organizations Common Cause FairVote National Black Caucus of State Legislators National Latino Congreso and Asian American Action Fund Supportive reactions by many others Editorial Endorsements New York Times Los Angeles Times and Sacramento Bee Minneapolis Star-Tribune Chicago Sun Times
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Public Support Consistently Strong Gallup: as high as 80% in recent decades The more the question is debated, the stronger the public tends to support a popular vote. Washington Post Poll (2007) Support 72% Oppose 23% Don’t Know 4% Four Polls by NPV (2005) Michigan - 70%; Missouri - 66%; Maine - 71%; Arkansas - 74%; NPV vs District Plan (2007) 69% of California voters favor a national popular vote Favored NPV to District plan 58%-22%
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A Roadmap for Winning Reform Legislative victories in numerous states State ballot measures as potential final vote Educational efforts nationwide
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For More Information National Popular Vote www.NationalPopularVote.com FairVote www.FairVote.org
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