(Although there are three extra and I can't remember where they come from? I'm sure someone does...)
District of Columbia. They have no Congressional representation, but are treated as a single-electorate state for EC purposes.
Xander ,'Beneath You'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
(Although there are three extra and I can't remember where they come from? I'm sure someone does...)
District of Columbia. They have no Congressional representation, but are treated as a single-electorate state for EC purposes.
Which is one place where California is ahead of the curve. We approved the appointment of a non-partisan Redistricting committee, and their work was IIRC reviewed by the State Supreme Court, and yesterday the electorate approved the redistricting. No more gerrymandering!
I heard on NPR today that the Democrats now have a supermajority in both houses of the state Congress. That seems unbelievable to me. I do wonder what will happen with that.
ETA: Does the state have two houses of Congress? Now that seems wrong to me. Egad, look at me and my ignorance of CA Congress.
So...
Romney's election night soirée included a private area for wealthy donors and he charged members of he press $1000 per to attend.
I heard on NPR today that the Democrats now have a supermajority in both houses of the state Congress. That seems unbelievable to me. I do wonder what will happen with that.
They'll finally be able to pass a budget?
I'm pretty sure you all still need to reach eighteen to vote
Surely you don't think one needs to vote in order to take over a country? How cute!
As for preferential voting reference, TB--I think it's safe to assume that anyone who was here for the...discussion has reached a place with regards to it that's not likely to be shifted here and now.
And if anyone here missed that lovely time--we have archives. It's very educational. You should totes catch up.
Surely you don't think one needs to vote in order to take over a country? How cute!
My brother described his stint as a teacher at a private school as "Turning the children of the privileged classes into my socialist army of the undead." I acknowledge my error. (And cuteness.)
woohoo, I've made my $20 off ebay for this month. I am kinda loving the pressure having that in my budget put on me.
Offer to bet. In my last job I made money from a conservative co-worker.After the third time he stopped discussing politics. Because I refused to discuss factual disagreements unless he was willing to bet on them.
He might be willing to take me up on it.
The particular co-worker in question is one I normally get along with pretty well.
Oddly enough, prior to this election he had zero interest in politics, declaring the whole thing to be meaningless. Somewhere recently he came to the conclusion that Obama was destroying the economy and registered to vote so he could vote for Romney. It's kind of mind-boggling.
They'll finally be able to pass a budget?
We can only hope.
Of course many forms of preferential voting, especially PR, would make partisan redistricting less effective.
Proportional representation should indeed have an effect, if only due to there being fewer districts. I don't think straight preferential voting would necessarily have much effect. We've certainly had majority governments that lost the popular vote (even with districting under control of a non-partisan body).
I think PR is worth pushing for at the state level, but I don't know if it could make much headway federally. The problem is the state sysstem. It makes all the Presidential and Senate races winner-take-all. (We have a kind of PR for our Senate, but we have six states each of which elects 12 Senators in two tranches. You'd have 600 Senators under that arrangement.) Even for the House of Reps, it'd be impractical for small states and I don't know if it could be 'sold' on what becomes a limited scope.
I'd find it interesting if the US did go there though. Then you'd have a PR House and single-member Senate seats, while Australia would have the reverse - single-member House seats and PR Senate representation. (And given the differences between a presidential and parliamentary system, I could almost make sense of it.)