by Marnie
Pehrson
Read the U.S.
Constitution here.
There has been much debate over the Electoral College. For example, when Bush and Gore were fighting over the Florida
vote and Bush won, he actually had fewer popular votes than Gore, but
had more electoral collage votes. Many felt this was inappropriate – that the majority of the
people should rule.
Why did the Founding Fathers incorporate the Electoral College into the
Constitution? Some say, ''Well, they didn't think about something like this
happening.'' Actually they did think
about something like this happening, and it is the very reason they developed
the Electoral College.
What the Founding Fathers were trying to do was create a system of checks and
balances between the popular vote and the state vote. The Founders continually
debated over ''states rights'' and federal power. If the United States of America
were a democracy, then we would go simply on the popular vote, but the United States of America
is not a democracy. It is a republic
(see the Pledge of Allegiance). Now, I'm not talking about political parties
here, I'm talking about systems of government. A democracy is rule by majority.
A republic is rule by law. In our case, the law is the Constitution.
The Electoral College is in place to prevent the majority vote of densely populated
states from overpowering the rest of the nation. It is in place to give an equal
footing for the states. In the Bush-Gore election year, Bush had 30 states while Gore
had 20 states. So, Bush did have the majority of states, while
Gore had a slightly higher number of individual votes.
This is one of the few times in American history that the
Electoral College influenced an election in a powerful way - a way that the Founding
Fathers intended. It protected us from a pure democracy, which the Founding
Father's feared. As James Madison stated, ''Hence it is that democracies have
ever been spectacles of turbulence and contention; have ever been found
incompatible with personal security or the rights of property; and in general
have been as short in their lives as they have been violent in their deaths… A
republic, by which I mean a government in which a scheme of representation takes
place, opens a different prospect and promises the cure for which we are
seeking.'' (James Madison, Federalist Papers, the McClean Edition, The
Federalist Paper #10, page 81, 1788 )