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Mathematicians: Elections Flawed

Nader-licious writes "Science News Online reports: 'With recent reports of malfunctioning voter machines and uncounted votes during primaries in Florida, Maryland, and elsewhere, reformers are once again clamoring for extensive changes. But while attention is focused on these familiar irregularities, a much more serious problem is being neglected: the fundamental flaws of the voting procedure itself. Mathematics are shedding light on questions about how well different voting procedures capture the will of the voters.' The verdict: the U.S. system might be the worst of the lot."

5 of 551 comments (clear)

  1. biggest problem by SquierStrat · · Score: 5, Informative

    In my not humble at all opinion, the biggest problem is that our elections are from 7amto 7pm on TUESDAYS! They need to move the elections to Sundays and open the polls for 24 hours. As it is, alot of people are simply unable to vote because of work and commutes.

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    Derek Greene
    1. Re:biggest problem by call+-151 · · Score: 5, Informative

      Absentee voting, for all the publicity it generated in certain recent elections, is appropriate for a wide range of situations. Every state I've voted in (seven, not all in the same year!) has had absentee provisions that would apply to awful commutes, for example. I do believe that there are some regions where in order to qualify for absentee status, you need to swear that you will be out of the district for the entire day, but I believe those are rare. Furthermore, in many districts, you can get "permanent absentee voter" status and just always vote conveniently by mail. It may have been meant for 80-year-olds, but that's no reason why everyone else can't have the convenience of voting easily and at a leisurely pace.

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      It's psychosomatic. You need a lobotomy. I'll get a saw.
  2. Re:Absolutely wrong. by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Informative
    If what you're saying was right, we'd see the President selected the same way. No, the Electoral College exists because of a concern they had in those long-ago days, a concern which is still very valid today: a concern that with pure direct election of the President, metropolitan areas would overwhelm rural interests and we'd wind up with a government "by the cities, of the cities" instead of one which represented the whole nation. If we had direct popular election of the Presidency, do you think the President would ever care about what concerns citizens in Montana had?
    You hear this argument a lot from people arguing in favor of the Electoral College system. I don't think it accurately reflects the Founders' intentions -- they weren't so much worried about urban vs. rural (remember that the population of the US was overwhelmingly rural then) as about large states vs. small states, which isn't exactly the same thing. But it doesn't matter in any case, because the truth of the matter is, it doesn't work. Presidential campaigns overwhelmingly focus on "swing states" that are not only close in electoral terms, but also have large populations. In the current system, Republican Montana matters not a whit; neither does Democratic Delaware or evenly split New Mexico (which you may remember had just as close a vote recount as Florida in 2000.) Florida was where the action was in 2000 for a reason: there are a lot of people there. Big coastal states like Florida, New York, Texas, and California will always get more attention for this reason; if those states aren't seriously in play (e.g., as Texas an NY weren't in 2000) then attention shifts to big Midwestern states like Ohio, Illinois, and to some degree Missouri. Everyone else might as well not exist as far as national political strategists are concerned.
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    The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
  3. Re:Absolutely wrong. by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Informative
    High priority voting weight?

    Count the electoral college votes in Montana compared with Florida, NY, Texas, California... places with much higher populations.

    Then tell me how Montana gets a bigger share, somehow.

    Montana population: 904,000; electors: 3; Voters per elector: 300,000

    California population: 34,000,000; electors: 54; Voters per elector: 629000

    Montana: one man, two votes. And Montana is not the only state with excessive representation per voter. It adds up.

  4. Re:The Us Presidency is a two-turn election by HiThere · · Score: 5, Informative

    Sorry. On re-reading, you were considering the primaries to be the original round. But:
    1) those aren't legally a part of the election
    2) who can vote in them is restricted in most (if not all) states.
    3) who can participate as a candidate is pre-selected by the party apparatus.

    So they don't qualify either.

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    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.