Beyond
the Electoral College
by Kevin R. C. Gutzman
by Kevin R. C. Gutzman
DIGG THIS
In the wake
of the 2000 presidential election, numerous commentators discovered
what they took to be flaws in the presidential election system.
For Hillary Clinton, for example, the election of George W. Bush
demonstrated that the Electoral College should be abolished in favor
of a French-style national election on a one-man, one-vote basis.
Displaying her characteristic combination of ideological commitment
and historical ignorance, Clinton opined that it simply was not
right that the victory should go not to the recipient of the most
popular votes, but to the winner in the Electoral College.
Writing in
the Claremont Review of Books for Fall 2007, the University of Texas
School of Law’s Prof. Sanford Levinson takes up the same issue.
Levinson, a prominent liberal legal academic who was once my Professional
Responsibility professor, concedes that "I myself would endorse
deviations from pure majoritarianism." He then offers as an
example of a non-majoritarian provision of the federal Constitution
so contrary to majoritarian theory that no one supports it the provision
for deciding presidential elections in which no one receives a majority
of the Electoral College vote.
According to
the Twelfth Amendment, "if no person have such majority, then
from the persons having the highest numbers not exceeding three
on the list of those voted for as President, the House of Representatives
shall choose immediately, by ballot, the President, the votes shall
be taken by states, the representation from each state having one
vote." After describing this provision, Levinson says, "I
have yet to find any defenders of the electoral college [sic] who
are willing to defend this peculiar feature of the system."
Ah, Sandy,
but you never asked me. I can defend the House’s role in resolving
presidential elections in which no one receives an Electoral College
majority as easily as the veto power or bicameralism, and certainly
far more easily than universal suffrage or judicial review. And
what, exactly, is wrong with it? Levinson’s objection is that in
case the House had to decide the issue with each state casting one
vote, "Vermont’s single representative [would have] the same
power as California’s 53 representatives."
This objection
echoes Thomas Jefferson’s objection to the apportionment provision
of the 1776 Virginia Constitution. George Mason’s handiwork retained
the traditional English, thus colonial Virginian, practice of apportioning
the legislature geographically. Thus, Jefferson complained, an individual’s
vote in Virginia’s least populous county was worth seventeen times
as much as an individual’s vote in the most populous.
Yet, Levinson’s
objection and Jefferson’s are not the same at all. Jefferson’s complaint
was that fellow citizens of a common republic (Virginia) should
have equal votes in elections for their chief executive, while Levinson’s
is that the constituent republics in a federal republic, the states,
should not have equal voices in choosing their common chief executive.
Levinson, like
Senator Clinton, makes the mistake of thinking of the United States
of America as a nation, not a federal republic. In Senator Clinton’s
defense, she likely has been influenced to reach that conclusion
by "experts" such as Professor Levinson. On the other
hand, Clinton’s conclusion is affected by the fact that she desires
the power of a national chief executive, not a mere federal president.
What is the
difference between "national" and "federal,"
and why should you care? In short, a national government is, theoretically,
a completely centralized one. If it has local subdivisions, those
subdivisions (provinces) exist solely for the convenience of the
center. This is the kind of regime that France has had since the
French Revolution.
On the other
hand, a federal regime is one in which the central government’s
power is limited, with most power remaining in the local units (in
America, the states). The United States Constitution was sold to
the states during the ratification process as a federal one. It
could not have been ratified on any other basis, since the Revolution
had been fought in the name of the federal model outlined by Thomas
Jefferson in A
Summary View of the Rights of British America (1774). The
national model, in which a central government was sovereign (that
is, possessed of unlimited power), was the one the British Parliament
adopted in the hated Declaratory Act (1766).
In that act
of 1766, the British Parliament claimed to be the kind of national
government adored by such as Mrs. Clinton and Professor Levinson.
In such a system, it makes sense that a national poll should be
taken and the candidate with the most votes should be elected. Where
the electorate is understood as made up of distinct communities,
of different states that preexisted the federal constitution, however,
it makes sense that those communities should have equal voices in
making the ultimate decision. In other words, the Twelfth Amendment
followed naturally from the assumptions behind the American Revolution.
Some scholars
posit that the Electoral College was expected to serve only as a
filter of popular opinion, and that Congress would usually decide
among the three top candidates who had been essentially nominated
by the College. The advantage of such a system would be that people
more knowledgeable of the candidates’ personalities, of their characters,
would choose among them. A Bill Clinton, a Gary Hart, or a Richard
Nixon would be unlikely to be elected in such an arena – or at least,
so the argument goes. It would have pleased the father of the Electoral
College, Luther Martin of Maryland, to have small states play an
equal role in the ultimate selection of presidents.
Levinson wants
to make the United States Government more national – less federal
– by depriving the small states of their equal voices in the presidential
election system. This reform would be typical of the history of
the American Constitution: the small states and minority section
were promised a federal system, and over time the majority section
and the judges (egged on by such as Sanford Levinson) have made
it more national. And they have done so while telling the minority
that it had no choice but to succumb. All of which has made the
system both theoretically and practically a worse system than it
was originally.
If it is problematic
that individual Californians’ votes count less in the Senate, in
the Electoral College, and in the occasional House of Representatives
voting for president than those of Wyoming citizens, the solution
is easy to identify: California should be divided into numerous
less populous states. If it were, its citizens’ and former citizens’
votes would count more than they do now. The subdivision of megastates
such as California should occur anyway, for numerous reasons – but
that is a different column.
October
29, 2007
Kevin
R. C. Gutzman, J.D., Ph.D. [send
him mail], Associate Professor of History at Western Connecticut
State University, is the author of The
Politically Incorrect Guide to the Constitution.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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