Wenn andere Länder ein Wahlkollegium nutzen – Pt. 1 – Mexiko

Von thebracketizer

17 Comments

  1. thebracketizer on

    Yes, i know PAN is blue, the original map i used shows them in pink for whatever reason.

  2. BundsdeutscheRepublk on

    It looks very cool. I can’t wait to see more countries 

  3. Why would any country adopt something as anti-democratic as the US electoral system…..

  4. Potential_Band_7121 on

    I absolutely need this format for the recent European elections

  5. Lucaspublico on

    These maps are interesting to see the distortion that the electoral college causes, the candidate won by almost 60%, but if it depended on the college, she would take 95-96% of the delegates.

  6. Can anyone explain the logic behind America’s Electoral College Vote and how anyone can consider it to be a democratic voting system. It appears to have been deliberately designed to only allow wealthy influentials to decide a presidency, not a majority of individual voters where every vote counts.

  7. Is the electoral college necessary, or is first-past-the-post sufficient?

  8. Ok_Storage52 on

    You should add in 3 per senator for each state. And maybe the extra senators to match popular vote as it is in the Mexican senate, and maybe with 1 from each state to match the runner up.

  9. doktorhladnjak on

    Kind of makes you wonder how radically different US political discourse would be if we had a national popular vote. How much does focusing on wedge issues that play in swing states affect what we’re arguing about and the resulting policy?

  10. Folks seem to think that politicians would campaign the same way if the rules were changed.

    Hint: they wouldn’t. Right now they don’t focus on popular vote because that’s not what wins elections.

  11. ricefarmerfromindia on

    Introducing this system based on population today is fine. Using the same values after 150 years is insane.

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