So, I've got a political science question.
The electoral college is fucked. Bush and Trump won without popular votes which I think everyone can agree is shitty, even if they delude themselves into thinking "they didn't really lose the popular vote."
The sort of high school response is to think, "Well just get rid of the electoral college and do a direct vote." Which has problems of its own. The electoral college is supposed to be a Republican organization (not the political party, but the politic) offering representation of otherwise minority groups who would be trampled in a pure democracy.
But that doesn't hold up for the presidential election, right? Why should a Kansas vote be worth more than a California vote, on the individual level?
Am I getting that right? Also, are there any solutions being proposed that don't include just throwing out the whole system and starting from scratch?
The electoral college is perfectly fine and doing its job, which was explicitly to make individual votes worth less in highly populated states than those in less populated states, as a compromise to make the less populated states willing to join the union in the first place. If it weren't for the electoral college we would not have a United States, because the northern states were afraid they would be overwhelmed by the much more populous southern slave states, who would be able to control the Executive and Judicial branches and thus the economic future of the country, attempting to, for example, screw over the northern states' trade, which was something they were
actually doing under the Articles of Confederation. Equally if not more importantly, the northern states also feared that, without the Electoral College, the southern states would prevent their efforts to ban slavery.
The point here is that the Constitution was designed as a government
for the states, not for the people. The governments for the people were still supposed to be the individual states, which are separate countries. The massive arrogation of power to Congress and to the Executive that has taken place over the past century and a half was never meant to be constitutional.
And you had better believe that, if the system is changed, the union
will dissolve. The inner states will absolutely ignore a government elected wholly by the coastal states, and the Executive will not succeed in preventing this overall.
Smush's complaints about tiny Ohio neighbourhoods and such are mostly wrong — there really aren't any such places, it's a purely a posteriori postulate, as by chance there will always be
some place in the US that appears to have predicted all previous elections with significant certainty — but to the extent that battleground states do exist, this is a problem with our two-party system which is, ultimately, a problem of our people and our level of political polarisation, not a problem caused by the EC, which actually serves to mitigate it to some extent.