Time to fix imperfect electoral mechanism
The United States’ election system needs an overhaul, Ben Jealous writes.
THERE are many lessons to draw from the tumultuous 2020 election, and surely one of the most urgent is our system of elections is broken.
No, not in the way Donald Trump alleges, with his fabulist claims of rampant cheating and voter fraud. Rather, the fault is a combination of structural inequities that were either baked in from the start or have emerged in subsequent years as wealthy special interests have abused the system.
Now is the time to fix them. Let’s start with the winnertakeall Electoral College. This antiquated system was installed to, among other things, empower Southern states that enslaved people. And today, it does an excellent job of diluting and sometimes upending the will of the people.
Consider this: Since 1992, only one Republican has won the popular vote in a presidential election, yet because of the Electoral College system, Republican presidents have governed our country for 12 years since then.
This year, when Joe Biden passed the threshold of more votes cast than had been cast for any candidate in US history — clearly winning the popular vote — the Electoral College system meant it was still far from assured that he would win the election. The shadow that loomed over Biden’s achievement, and the threat that once again the will of the people could be subverted, was all too clear.
It’s also painfully obvious that the Electoral College map forces candidates to focus an inordinate amount of time and money on a handful of competitive swing states, like Florida and Pennsylvania — deprioritising the needs and concerns of millions of Americans, because candidates don’t need their votes to win.
To end the dominance of the Electoral College and bridge this gap in our democracy, we support the statebased
National Popular Vote campaign, which is exactly what it sounds like: a change to electing presidents based on the total number of votes cast.
In addition, we have to put new energy into passing the John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act — and if the US Senate remains in Republican hands, to relentlessly shame it for failing to do so before now.
The VRAA would help put a stop to the voter suppression that has raged out of control, especially for communities of colour and in Native American communities, since the
Supreme Court gutted the original Voting Rights Act in 2013. At the same time, we need to stop the perversion of our political system by big money pouring into our elections.
When wealthy special interests play an outsized role in the electoral process, the result is lower voter turnout — particularly among people of colour, Native American tribes and lowincome communities — and, ultimately, policies that favour wealthy and corporate interests. At the federal level, the For the People Act passed by the House (and sidelined by the GOPcontrolled Senate) contains many provisions to limit the role moneyed interests can play.
Finally, expanding voting rights for disenfranchised communities also means passing the Washington, DC, Admissions Act and granting statehood to Puerto Rico to fully realise our vision of an inclusive voting system. Despite paying federal taxes, DC’s 700,000 residents — half of whom are Black — lack representation in Congress, as do the people of Puerto Rico, who voted in favour of statehood for the sixth time on Election Day. The citizens of both places deserve equal status in the US and a voice in our federal government.
In this election, millions of Americans withstood a public health crisis — and for voters of colour, shameful voter suppression tactics — to vote.
We have shown our sheer will and determination to make our voices heard at the ballot box, but we still have a system that doesn’t fully honour the principle of one person, one vote. — TCA