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The Electoral College Primer 2000 [Paperback]

Professor Lawrence D. Longley (Author), Mr. Neal R. Peirce (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

September 10, 1999
The president of the United States is not actually elected by a direct vote of the people but indirectly by means of an electoral college. Yet the operations of our archaic electoral college and the extent of its influence in presidential elections are little understood by most Americans. In this complete and authoritative guide to the electoral college, Lawrence D. Longley and Neal R. Peirce provide essential Information on how the electoral system works -- and sometimes misfires. At its best, the authors reveal, the electoral college distorts campaign strategy and poorly represents the popular will. And at its worst, it can create political and constitutional crises.

The book includes detailed accounts of recent elections, including that of 1992 when election of the president by the House of Representatives appeared for a while to be the likely outcome. The authors also offer an imaginative version of election year 2000, during which the astonishing results of an electoral deadlock demonstrate the disastrous failings of the electoral college as a means of electing the people's president.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

"One man, one vote" may be a familiar democratic motto, but it hardly applies to American presidential elections. That's because of the United States' bizarre electoral college system, which makes it possible for candidates who finish second in the popular vote to triumph in the electoral count. In fact, this has happened at least twice (1876 and 1888). On two other occasions (1800 and 1824), the House of Representatives picked the president when nobody won an electoral-college majority. Thomas Jefferson once described this circumstance as "the most dangerous blot on our Constitution." In the brief but comprehensive Electoral College Primer 2000, Lawrence D. Longley and Neal R. Peirce show why Jefferson's assessment was right on target. They have a keen understanding of the electoral college's vulnerabilities. Through a few simple calculations, for example, they show that Californians have more than two-and-a-half times the voting power of Montana residents. More alarming, however, they describe how a small shift in the popular vote can enact a huge change in the electoral college outcome. They count 22 "hairbreadth elections" in American history, including the 1960 race between John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon--if 8,971 votes in Illinois and Missouri had switched from Kennedy to Nixon that year, the result would have been an electoral college deadlock. It's amazing the system has held up as well as it has over the years; Longley and Peirce persuasively argue that it's only a matter of time before it breaks down completely. --John J. Miller

From Library Journal

Part of the Yale "Fastback" series, which is dedicated to publishing topics of current interest as soon as possible, this primer in this election year fits right in with that theme. Longley (government, Lawrence Univ.) and Peirce, a poltical journalist, offer a detailed analysis of the electoral college system. The first chapter begins with a hypothetical account of this year's presidential election. Bob Dole has won the popular election but is short on the necessary 270 electoral votes. Ross Perot is the spoiler, and Bill Clinton is left scrambling for electoral votes. If he's successful, he becomes the fourth man to win the presidency without the popular vote. The authors then discuss how the electoral college has changed with the passage of time and how little it resembles the Founding Fathers' original intent. Including tabular data on all previous presidential elections, this thorough examination of past and potential electoral college pitfalls is recommended for academic collections.?Alan Schroeder, Southern California Univ. for Professional Studies, Santa Ana
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Yale University Press; 2000 edition (September 10, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0300080360
  • ISBN-13: 978-0300080360
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,987,225 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Very interesting, and ironic in light of recent events, March 18, 2001
By 
This review is from: The Electoral College Primer 2000 (Paperback)
I am writing based on the 1996 edition.

This is a book that focuses on the workings and potential problems of the Electoral College. There is much historical discussion, but the book is primarily concerned with today's Electoral College. Much of this book is adapted from Pierce's The People's President (1968 & 1981, which I also recommend). In light of recent events, this book is very relevant.

The authors strongly feel that the Electoral College should be abolished in favor of a direct popular vote. The authors stress the well-known criticisms regarding the "wrong winner", popular vote percentage distortion, faithless electors, and third-party shutouts.

The book especially stresses the potential for chaos in a three- way race, opening with fictitious but ironic 1996 race...

Election night: Bob Dole wins a narrow popular plurality. Bill Clinton wins an narrow electoral plurality. Ross Perot carries several states including Texas. With no electoral majority, the drama is just beginning...

Mid-December: Both parties have persuaded some Perot electors to defect - but not enough. The Electoral College deadlocks, so the vote goes to the House.

Early January: The Republicans have a slim majority in the new House - but not by states (it's one-state-one-vote). The House deadlocks. Meanwhile, the VP vote goes to the Senate, which must choose between Al Gore and Dole's running mate Lamar Alexander. Since the new Senate is 50-50, it deadlocks too.

(Note: the authors maintain that the outgoing VP cannot break the tie in such a case - an open question which would surely go to the Supreme Court.)

Inauguration Day: Still no decision. With the presidency and vice-presidency vacant, House Speaker Newt Gingrich becomes Acting President, as per the 1947 Presidential Succession Act. But...

The House can keep voting until Dole, Clinton, or Perot wins 26 states. The Senate can keep voting until Gore or Alexander gets 51 votes. If the Senate decides first, the new VP would also be Acting President. Acting President Gingrich must govern knowing that either House can replace him at any time...

January 1999: The newly elected Congress chooses a president. America's longest election is finally over.

The balance of the book is divided between historical narratives and mathematical analysis of how the electoral and popular votes diverge. I found the narratives very interesting, the analysis less so.

A chapter entitled "Recent Crisis Elections" discusses 1948, 1960, 1968, 1976, 1980, and 1992. I disagree with the title; the only crises were 1800, 1876, 2000 and possibly 1824. However, the chapter is quite interesting - 1948, 1960, and 1968 almost went to the House. Particularly notable are the Alabama 1960 vote (a hybrid slate of 6 unpledged and 5 Kennedy Democrats won - so what was Kennedy's real popular vote?), the Hawaii 1960 rival electors, and the 1976 election night (which dragged on until 3:30 AM and had a retraction - sound familiar?).

Other chapters discuss a variety of points:

* Why was the Electoral College created and how has it evolved?
* When did the "wrong winner" win? Almost win?
* How are electors chosen?
* Can a state legislature appoint electors itself?
* How often have electors been faithless?
* What if the electoral votes are disputed?
* What if a candidate dies before Election Day? (It happened in 1912.) Before the electoral votes are cast? (It happened in 1872.) Before they're formally counted? (It has never happened.) Before Inauguration Day? (It almost happened in 1933 to FDR.)
* What if the election goes to the House?

This book contains a lot of information that should be more widely known, especially in light of the 2000 election. I would have appreciated more historical narratives. If there is a 2004 edition, obviously the authors will have a lot to say about 1876 and 2000.

Some interesting elections which could have been discussed are:

1836: The Whigs try to send the election to the House by running three regional candidates, but fail. Virginia's 23 electors refuse to vote for Richard Johnson, Martin Van Buren's running mate, sending the VP race to the Senate. Why? Johnson reportedly married one of his slaves!

1844: Moderate Henry Clay barely loses decisive New York thanks to an abolitionist candidate. Proslavery expansionist James Polk wins and proceeds with the Texas annexation and the Mexican War.

1860: Abraham Lincoln isn't even on the ballot in the South, but he wins a popular plurality and an electoral majority. This would have still happened even if his three opponents united.

1864: No electors are appointed from the Confederate states, although Lincoln asserts that these states never left the Union. I believe Congress formally excluded the seceded states from the Electoral College. This would have been interesting precedent if Florida in 2000 ended with no electors. Does Gore win 267-246 with 25 abstentions, or does it go to the House because 267 of 538 is not a majority?

1880, 1884, 1888: New York tips the election each time. 1880's popular vote nationally was 10,000 out of 9 million, 1884 is remembered for the fateful "rum, Romanism, and rebellion" slur, and 1888 is remembered for the "wrong winner."

1896: William Jennings Bryan, heading both the Democratic and Populist tickets, has two running mates. If he won things would have been interesting, because his electors did not vote for VP as a bloc.

1916: World War I looms. This largely forgotten race has the closest electoral vote (277-254) between 1876 and 2000. California's 13 votes decides - by 4,000 votes out of a million. At first it appears that Charles Evans Hughes has unseated Woodrow Wilson. Imagine if he asked for a recount...

The book is fairly concise while still covering a lot of interesting ground. Recommended.
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9 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Very Informative Book, November 18, 2000
By 
Tracy (Austin, Texas USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Electoral College Primer 2000 (Paperback)
This is the perfect book for anyone who has never quite understood how the electoral college works (or, even, why we still use it) in national elections for the President. It highlights the historical foundations for its formation, as well as specific, historical examples--where its existence has proven to be questionable (at best), in terms of electing the President of the U.S. This book's timeliness can be seen in the current presidential-election situation--which has called into question the electoral college's capability, in being able to elect "the people's choice" to the presidency.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Plentiful ammunition fired at the wrong target, October 19, 2007
This review is from: The Electoral College Primer 2000 (Paperback)
Don't be fooled by the neutral sounding title, this is an acidic critique and de facto case for the abolishment of the Electoral College.

The case begins, fittingly, with the creation of the Electoral College itself, which as the authors convincingly argue(if even an argument is needed at all, as most of this is simple facts) that the Electoral College as conceived was little more than a jerry-rigged compromise system that was not conceived with any explicit distinct advantages, and then goes on to chronicle the rapidly changing political climate and subsequent collapse of the system conceived circa 1787.

Unfortunately, after the history lesson the book begins to fall flat, as it never squarely faces its opponents and often overstates some of the "dangers" of the Electoral College. A long chapter is devoted to "crisis" Presidential elections, but of the seven elections covered, only two could really be called a "crisis" and in the first case the Constitution was subsequently amended to prevent such a crisis from again occurring, and in the second voter fraud and mischief were really at fault for the problems, not the Electoral College. The other five elections were merely very close to being potential crises, i.e "A shift of only x votes could have resulted in the popular vote winner losing the Electoral vote". The authors themselves concede in a Figure footnote that isolated vote shifts in specific states are unlikely to occur(and obviously didn't *actually* happen, anyway) but would instead be indicative of shifting voting trends nationwide. More importantly though is that, as we all know, the "wrong winner" scenario did bear itself out just months after this book was published, and the result could hardly be called a "crisis", as the public at large seemed to accept the legitimacy of the result after the dust of the Supreme Court bomb had cleared.

The meat of the book is devoted to exploring why votes in certain states are worth more than votes in other states. This chapter somewhat misses the point as it carries with it the implicit assumption that any distortion of voting power across the states ought to be condemned. By that I mean the authors do not really tackle the important Federalist arguments for the Electoral College. I call them important not because of any great conviction regarding their merit, but because they are generally the most prominent arguments put forth in defense of the system and are therefore an essential part of any discourse to be had regarding it. Page after page after page of graphs and tables documenting the voting power distortions comes off as a bit hollow when engaging the arguments that preserving federalism is more important than voting equality has been foregone.

The conclusion of the book explores some of the more prominent ancillary problems with the Electoral College, in particular the House of Representatives Contingent Election and the ominous "faithless Elector". Paradoxically, the election of 2000 fiasco actually undermines this criticism more than it vindicates it. If ever there was an election where the author's ultimate nightmare scenario of a faithless Elector sending the election into the House of Representatives would come to fruition, it was 2000. Only two Electors would have had to switch their votes to bring about this horror, and yet endowed with this power to change the course of American history, not a single one of them did. It seems unlikely that this scenario will come into play again anytime soon.

The book ultimately is not convincing because the foundation of its case is built upon the idea that "one man, one vote" is the be-all, end-all for the merit of an election system, and doesn't really consider any arguments to the contrary. It doesn't engage any of the principled arguments for the Electoral College(Federalism) or the practical(deterring voter fraud, upholding the two party system). Whatever real substance those arguments may or may not have, you won't find out from this book.

Principle author Lawrence Longley tragically passed away in 2002, and so the planned quadrennial updating of this volume was scrapped. A spiritual successor does exist in the form of "Why the Electoral College is bad for America", of which I am in the process of reading and will have a review forthcoming.


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