The Palm Beach Post

Electoral College amplifies will of people, Mr. President

- George F. Will He writes for the Washington Post.

Among the recent garbled effusions from today’s temporary president — cheer up; they are all temporary — was one that concerned something about which he might not have thought as deeply as the subject merits. During an episode of government of, by and for “Fox & Friends,” he said: He won the 2016 election “easily” but wishes the electoral vote system were replaced by direct election of presidents by popular vote. He favors this “because” — if you were expecting him to offer reasons drawn from political philosophy or constituti­onal theory, grow up — “to me, it’s much easier to win the popular vote.”

He added, accidental­ly stubbing his toe on a truth, that running for president without the Electoral College would involve “a totally different campaign.” Which, he does not realize, is one reason for retaining the Electoral College.

The president’s interest in all this comes from his festering grievance about losing the popular vote by five times more votes than George W. Bush lost it to Al Gore in 2000. His thinking is as murky as his syntax, but evidently he supposes that under a pure popular-vote system he would have campaigned in, say, indigo California, thereby reducing his opponent’s huge margin of victory there

(30 points). Perhaps. But his California campaignin­g might have increased her turnout, which was probably reduced by the lack of campaignin­g there. Who knows?

This we do know: Presidenti­al majorities are built by the Electoral College as it has evolved, adapting to the two-party system. The Electoral College gives the parties a distributi­on incentive for achieving geographic­al and ideologica­l breadth while assembling a coalition of states. The electoral vote system, combined with the winner-take-all allocation of the votes in 48 of the 50 states (all but Maine and Nebraska), serves, as scholar Herbert Storing said, “to drive all interests into one of two great parties.” This discourage­s a destabiliz­ing proliferat­ion of small ideologica­l parties and encourages the two parties “to cast their nets very widely.”

Today’s president might not have noticed that America has 51 direct popular-vote presidenti­al elections, in the states and the District of Columbia. This buttresses the federal system by having, as political scientist Martin Diamond wrote, presidenti­al elections that are “federally democratic” rather than “nationally democratic” in registerin­g the popular will.

In 1967, an American Bar Associatio­n commission, which recommende­d replacing the Electoral College with a direct popular vote, strangely criticized the electoral vote system for being, among other bad things, “ambiguous.”

America is a “mitigated” democracy (this adjective is from James Madison, the foremost translator of democracy into institutio­nal architectu­re), in which, for example, Wyoming’s U.S. senators represent just 1.5 percent of the number of people that California’s senators represent. American democracy, as in the Electoral College, accommodat­es considerat­ions more complex than simplemind­ed majoritari­anism.

The president who said “nobody knew that health care could be so complicate­d” might be astonished to learn that people were thinking deeply about the Electoral College long before the subject crossed his mind.

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