Whoa! I misunderstood the bill. Now I get it.Or two lib-retards split the lib-retard vote, and the conservative candidate gets those electoral votes by default because his/her popular vote is greater than either of the lib-retard candidates. Shazam! Lib-retard heads will explode.
Here's the problem for the short-sided idiots who are pushing this NPV route. It dis-empowers the voters in those states that approve it. What happens if a Republican loses New York and Cali but wins the national popular vote? Betcha the Dems in those two states would be furious, especially if it cost them what would have been an Electoral College victory under normal (non-NPV) rules.
You're right - this may have to be adjudicated by SCOTUS.
The irony is while the Dems attack the EC because it gives unequal weight to voters in different states, this NPV runaround would dilute the weight of voters in states that adopt it even more! Originally Posted by lustylad
Whoa! I misunderstood the bill. Now I get it.
Here's the problem for the short-sided idiots who are pushing this NPV route. It dis-empowers the voters in those states that approve it. What happens if a Republican loses New York and Cali but wins the national popular vote? Betcha the Dems in those two states would be furious, especially if it cost them what would have been an Electoral College victory under normal (non-NPV) rules.
You're right - this may have to be adjudicated by SCOTUS.
The irony is while the Dems attack the EC because it gives unequal weight to voters in different states, this NPV runaround would dilute the weight of voters in states that adopt it even more! Originally Posted by lustylad
Or two lib-retards split the lib-retard vote, and the conservative candidate gets those electoral votes by default because his/her popular vote is greater than either of the lib-retard candidates. Shazam! Lib-retard heads will explode. Originally Posted by I B Hankering
Based on what I'm reading, the states which have enacted the National Popular Vote bill have 181 electoral votes. For the bill to take effect, they need states with 89 more electoral votes to enact it. This presumably has nothing to do with the Constitution or federal law -- they just wrote the bill so that states with the majority of electoral votes (270) must independently approve it before it goes into effect.Yup! Their bloody heads will explode when that happens.
So far the states that have enacted it are Maryland, New Jersey, Illinois, Hawaii, Washington, Massachusetts, the District of Columbia, Vermont, California, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut, and Colorado.
With the system we've got now, the Democrat will win the electoral votes of each of those particular states, except maybe Colorado. So effectively, these twelve blue states, and one purple state (Colorado), are all agreeing to give their electoral votes to any Republican who gets the majority of the votes at the national level. Any state that doesn't enact the bill would continue as it has in the past -- its electoral votes go to whoever receives the most votes in that particular state.
As long as red states don't sign onto this, and none of them have, this is a Republican's wet dream. Originally Posted by Tiny
The electoral fucked up last time. They could have elected any conservative they wanted. They still put Trump in office. History books will mock them for that.The electoral fucked up the last time??? Since most electoral votes are locked in to results of the election how do you figure that someone fucked up. Who is that someone? So are you saying that the electoral college should have gone off script and elected Ted Cruz? I suggest you read and digest the entire section on elections.
That said, It will likely be liberals filing suit if the election goes to a conservative be a use the won the popular and lost the electoral vote. It's happened twice now for liberals, the pendulum will swing the other way at some point. A republican will lose electoral vote but win the popular vote and then democrats will complain. Originally Posted by grean
Based on what I'm reading, the states which have enacted the National Popular Vote bill have 181 electoral votes. For the bill to take effect, they need states with 89 more electoral votes to enact it. This presumably has nothing to do with the Constitution or federal law -- they just wrote the bill so that states with the majority of electoral votes (270) must independently approve it before it goes into effect.
So far the states that have enacted it are Maryland, New Jersey, Illinois, Hawaii, Washington, Massachusetts, the District of Columbia, Vermont, California, Rhode Island, New York, Connecticut, and Colorado.
With the system we've got now, the Democrat will win the electoral votes of each of those particular states, except maybe Colorado. So effectively, these twelve blue states, and one purple state (Colorado), are all agreeing to give their electoral votes to any Republican who gets the majority of the votes at the national level. Any state that doesn't enact the bill would continue as it has in the past -- its electoral votes go to whoever receives the most votes in that particular state.
As long as red states don't sign onto this, and none of them have, this is a Republican's wet dream. Originally Posted by Tiny
As above - if enough States approve the compact to reach 270 electoral college votes - it is a done deal. Originally Posted by oeb11Thank you for the clarification, oeb.
The electoral fucked up the last time??? Since most electoral votes are locked in to results of the election how do you figure that someone fucked up. Who is that someone? So are you saying that the electoral college should have gone off script and elected Ted Cruz? I suggest you read and digest the entire section on elections. Originally Posted by the_real_BarleycornOnly 26 states have rules binding electors. The electors may still choose to cast a faithless vote. They could be fined but they could have voted for anyone else including Cruz or someone not even on the ballot, like Gen. Powell.
Thank you for the clarification, oeb.NPV would take effect - as I understand it- if enough States enact it to reach 270 electoral college votes. Whether that will happen for 2020 election - I have no idea.
So...is this something that would be in effect for next year's election should the 270 EC votes + be achieved (per enuff states)?
From what you've just told us my guess is a resounding YES....I'm just not sure as to what would prevent that from being the case.... Originally Posted by Chateau Becot
Only 26 states have rules binding electors. The electors may still choose to cast a faithless vote. They could be fined but they could have voted for anyone else including Cruz or someone not even on the ballot, like Gen. Powell. Originally Posted by greanAs I said, most votes are locked in. Since electors are party faithful, they don't want to slit their own throats by straying from the reservation. Unless, they changed parties afterwards, got well and truly paid, or thought that the winner was so reprehensible that they could not vote for them.