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100 Geo. L.J. 173 (2011-2012)
Reforming the Electoral College: Federalism, Majoritarianism, and the Perils of Subconstitutional Change

handle is hein.journals/glj100 and id is 175 raw text is: 


Reforming the Electoral College: Federalism,
Majoritarianism, and the Perils of
Subconstitutional Change


NORMAN R. WLLLIAMS*

   Frustrated by their inability to secure passage of a federal constitutional
 amendment abolishing the Electoral College, some of its opponents have sought
 to establish the direct, popular election of the President by having individual
 states agree to appoint their presidential electors in accordance with the
 nationwide popular vote. Ostensibly designed to prevent elections, such as the
 one in 2000, in which the Electoral College misfired and chose the candidate
 who received fewer popular votes, the National Popular Vote Compact (NPVC)
 has been adopted by several states. In this Article, I argue that the National
 Popular Vote Compact is an unnecessary and dangerous reform. It is unneces-
 sary because the Electoral College is only modestly malapportioned and less so
 than many other accepted features of the U.S. political process, which distort
 popular political preferences to a greater extent. Moreover, this malapportion-
 ment is simply the consequence of having a presidential election system that
 combines elements of majoritarianism and federalism, as other industrialized
 democracies have adopted. It is dangerous because the NPVC contains a host
 of defects that would make electoral misfires more likely and trigger a series of
 political and constitutional crises. The abolition or wholesale reform of the
 presidential election system requires a federal constitutional amendment; attempt-
 ing to achieve some reform via a subconstitutional agreement among several
 states risks creating a presidential election system that is neither workable nor
fair

                             TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION   ........   ..........................................      174

  I.  ELECTING THE PRESIDENT  ...............................          180
      A.  THE CURRENT PROCESS   .............................             180

      B. THE CRITICISM OF THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE ..................    183



* * Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Law and Government, Willamette University. ©
2011, Norman R. Williams. A.B., Harvard University; J.D., New York University. The individuals who
have read prior drafts and contributed comments are too numerous to identify by name; they know who
they are, and I owe profound thanks to all of them. These days, any article that involves the presidential
election process tends to be scrutinized through a partisan lens. The arguments that follow are framed in
nonpartisan terms and should therefore have bipartisan appeal, but in the interest of full disclosure, I
note that I am a registered Democrat.

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