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May 17, 2024, 04:16:51 PM
News: Election Simulator 2.0 Released. Senate/Gubernatorial maps, proportional electoral votes, and more - Read more

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 1 
 on: Today at 04:16:39 PM 
Started by I spent the winter writing songs about getting better - Last post by President Punxsutawney Phil
FF, but chances are high I'd object to some of the stuff he did on other topics.

 2 
 on: Today at 04:15:45 PM 
Started by Born to Slay. Forced to Work. - Last post by President Punxsutawney Phil
NY added a seat in its state Senate in 2010.

NY has a really bizarre process for determining the number of State Senate seats.
How so?

 3 
 on: Today at 04:15:28 PM 
Started by Born to Slay. Forced to Work. - Last post by ○∙◄☻¥tπ[╪AV┼cVê└
NY added a seat in its state Senate in 2010.

NY has a really bizarre process for determining the number of State Senate seats.

 4 
 on: Today at 04:14:48 PM 
Started by Obama24 - Last post by Dr. Cynic
No Democrat is going to be nominated by advocating for the abolishment of the Dept of Education and a tax policy created by Art Laffer.

 5 
 on: Today at 04:14:32 PM 
Started by Born to Slay. Forced to Work. - Last post by President Punxsutawney Phil
NY added a seat in its state Senate in 2010.

 6 
 on: Today at 04:13:25 PM 
Started by Frodo - Last post by
I'm amazed people actually get paid to write crap like this. It's honestly incredible.

The whole article is predicated on the ludicrous idea that a tie is a remotely plausible outcome. It isn't. The author cites 2 reasons to believe this: One is the idea that Nebraska will switch to WTA, and the other is that Kennedy picking off Biden supporters will make him lose states like NV, MI, and NH to get the 269-269 result.

Nebraska isn't switching to a winner take all system, which renders the whole article moot. Even if they did (which they aren't), Maine would respond by doing the same thing. There would be no overall change.

According to most polls, Kennedy is taking evenly from the two candidates, or is taking more from Trump. This could reverse by the election, but the main problem is that you don't need Kennedy at all to lose Biden the election. He's losing in the 2-way polls right now, if only narrowly. Also, in what universe does a NH loss translate to a tied EC? If Biden loses NH he's looking at like 230 EV tops.

Then he actually starts talking about 1824. He claims that in the 1816 election, "the vast majority of states" chose electors in the legislature. As far as I can tell this is just incorrect. 10-9 the states chose electors through some form of popular vote. The states doing so had a 124-97 EV majority. As for the rest of the 1824/1828 talk, it seems accurate enough, but I'm not an expert. One thing I will say is that he seems to be building up about how Jacksonian democracy was the first time that candidates really campaigned to win over the common man, but then seemingly undercuts his own point by saying the purpose of campaigning in the era was just to juice turnout among each side's partisans.

But the thing that really gets me is the conclusion. The whole point of talking about 1824 is to draw comparisons to 2024. "What if Trump, like Adams before him, manages to win in a tied House?" is the main question of the article, and the author never even discusses it! The entire discussion of that topic is at the end of the article, which I can quote in full without breaking the rules owing to it's shortness:
Quote
As in 1824, if the election is thrown to the House, 2024 could be a watershed year for American democracy. Long-stalled political reforms — from introducing Supreme Court term-limits to abolishing the Electoral College — could finally sail through atop a wave of populist democratic outrage.

In 1824, Adams won the battle but lost the war. In 2024, Trump could find himself in a similar situation.

We read about this scenario which won't happen because the author wants us to consider the possibilities: A tied 2024 election could be like the transformative tied 1824 election. But then he never actually bothers to explain what this supposed transformation would be! The only things he bothers to mention are Abolishing the Electoral College and Supreme Court term limits. Both of those things would require constitutional amendments to enact, and have absolutely 0 chance of happening as a result of a tied election.

 7 
 on: Today at 04:12:19 PM 
Started by Born to Slay. Forced to Work. - Last post by Mad Deadly Worldwide Communist Gangster Computer God
What's a Wyoming?

 8 
 on: Today at 04:10:10 PM 
Started by DrScholl - Last post by Obama24
Not a Trump supporter, a registered Democrat, but also a realist.

Yeah, and I am Brad Pitt's more handsome brother.



You can be a Democrat and a Trump supporter. West Virginia is full of them.

But I'm neither a Trump supporter, nor in West Virginia. I'm in New York, where my political affiliation really does not typically matter yet I've chosen to be a Democrat since I was 18

Most Trump supporters would not want Obama to be able to run this year.

Most Trump supporters would not wish Trump was not running or view Trump as guilty of all, or most, of the crimes he has been charged with.

Most Trump supporters would not see Trump as the singularly most destructive figure in modern American history, or see him as the singular most destructive element in our society since the Civil War.

Most Trump supporters want Trump to have a second term. I don't. I wish he'd go away.

But I also realize he and the divided Republic he helped create are facts of life whether I like them or not. I also recognize that even if imprisoned his ideology isn't going away any time soon. I also recognize that per the polls and per the nation's mood with regard to the economy, he is the favorite to win at the present time.

You can be cognizant of unpleasant realities, yet not support them or their cause.

 9 
 on: Today at 04:08:37 PM 
Started by Born to Slay. Forced to Work. - Last post by Born to Slay. Forced to Work.
https://ballotpedia.org/Wyoming_State_Senate

Quote
The legislature approved Wyoming HB100 on March 11. The bill added one Senate seat and two House of Representatives seats to the state legislature.

I noticed that in the 2022 state senate elction it said that there was a new seat in the senate, but this is all I could find about that news. I have no idea when the last time a state grew/shrunk it's legislature so I'm surprised this flew so far under the radar

 10 
 on: Today at 04:05:48 PM 
Started by DrScholl - Last post by DrScholl
Not a Trump supporter, a registered Democrat, but also a realist.

Yeah, and I am Brad Pitt's more handsome brother.



You can be a Democrat and a Trump supporter. West Virginia is full of them.

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