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Hands Off the Electoral College
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
The
intense media focus on the divide between red and blue
states in the wake of the presidential election has raised new questions
regarding our federal voting system. One U.S. Senator has promised
to introduce legislation to abolish the Electoral College, claiming
it is an anachronism that serves no good purpose in modern politics.
Her stated goal is simply to allow the popular will of the
American people to be expressed every four years when we elect our
president. Many Americans agree, arguing that the man receiving
the most votes should win; anything else would be unfair. In other
words, they believe the American political system should operate
as a direct democracy.
The
problem, of course, is that our country is not a democracy. Our
nation was founded as a constitutionally limited republic, as any
grammar school child knew just a few decades ago. Remember the Pledge
of Allegiance: and to the Republic for which it stands?
The Founding Fathers were concerned with liberty, not democracy.
In fact, the word democracy does not appear in the Declaration of
Independence or the Constitution. On the contrary, Article IV, section
4 of the Constitution is quite clear: The United States shall
guarantee to every state in this Union a Republican Form
of Government (emphasis added).
The
emphasis on democracy in our modern political discourse has no historical
or constitutional basis. Yet we have become obsessed with democracy,
as though any government action would be permissible if a majority
of voters simply approved of it. Democracy has become a sacred cow,
a deity which no one dares question. Democracy, we are told, is
always good. But the founders created a constitutionally limited
republic precisely to protect fundamental liberties from the whims
of the masses, to guard against the excesses of democracy. The Electoral
College likewise was created in the Constitution to guard against
majority tyranny in federal elections. The President was to be elected
by the states rather than the citizenry as a whole, with votes apportioned
to states according to their representation in Congress. The will
of the people was to be tempered by the wisdom of the Electoral
College.
By
contrast, election of the President by pure popular vote totals
would damage statehood. Populated areas on both coasts would have
increasing influence on national elections, to the detriment of
less populated southern and western states. A candidate receiving
a large percentage of the popular vote in California and New York
could win a national election with very little support in dozens
of other states! A popular vote system simply would intensify the
populist pandering which already dominates national campaigns.
Not
surprisingly, calls to abolish the Electoral College system are
heard most loudly among left elites concentrated largely on the
two coasts. Liberals favor a very strong centralized federal government,
and have contempt for the concept of states' rights (a contempt
now shared, unfortunately, by the Republican Party). They believe
in federalizing virtually every area of law, leaving states powerless
to challenge directives sent down from Washington. The Electoral
College system threatens liberals because it allows states to elect
the president, and in many states the majority of voters still believe
in limited government and the Constitution. Citizens in southern
and western states in particular tend to value individual liberty,
property rights, gun rights, and religious freedom, values which
are abhorrent to the collectivist elites. The collectivists care
about centralized power, not democracy. Their efforts to discredit
the Electoral College system are an attempt to limit the voting
power of pro-liberty states.
December
28, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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