Cleon said:
Electoral votes are population-based. The higher-populated states have more electoral votes. (The technical mechanism is that a state has the number of electoral votes equal to its number of Senators [2] plus its number of Representatives, which are largely based on population size/density.)
Indeed. And the ratio between the state with the most electoral votes and the state with the least is, if I recall correctly, about five times as big as it was when the Constitution was drafted. Certainly the effect of the electoral college has been diluted over time, due to the increasing population and the corresponding growth of the House.
But really, that's irrelevant to the question at hand -- the shrinking influence of the electoral college could be corrected by changing the vote distribution just as easily as the college itself could be abolished. The real issue is, should the presidency be determined by popular vote? I can't think of a good reason, really. The people already have their say, in the form of their Representatives and (these days) Senators. Just as the legislature was originally designed to give state governments representation as well as the people, I think some power ought to be vested with the states when determining the executive. I don't see any particular advantage in giving that power to the people alone.
And the ultimate question that underlies
that is, should a state's influence in the union be decided strictly by population? Again, I don't see any particular reason to arrange things that way -- surely there are better metrics than sheer number of people. The framers of the Constitution went to great lengths to prevent that, and they seemed to know what they were doing.
Perhaps the fact that presidential candidates don't campaign in smaller states points to the fact that the electoral college should be emphasized even more, not less. Then again, I'm told that I have an extraordinarily small amount of faith in the intelligence and good will of the voting public, so maybe I'm too harsh -- though I think the overwhelming popular support of things like the Ten Commandments at the courthouse and the Constitutional ban on gay marriage vindicates my cynicism somewhat.
Jeremy