Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Henry Milner's avatar

I have been writing about this for many years. Steven has done a really good job of explaining what is wrong with how Americans elect their representatives. If I were still teaching, I would make it compulsory reading in an American or comparative politics course.

What I have found extraordinary is that, from what I can tell, the standard political science prof in the US simply describes how the institutions work, leaving his/her students to assume that American electoral democracy is fine as it is. Of course there are exceptions, specialists in electoral systems and comparative political institutions.

I hope I am wrong, but it would seem that most American students finish college, despite having taken introductory level political science courses, effectively unaware of what you so well describe.

Expand full comment
Robert Kantner's avatar

While I for a long while have agreed with pretty much everything written here, some questions still remain. The devil is in the details, as they say. In particular, multi-representative districts are still geographic, despite being larger than the current single-representative districts. How are they to be set up, their boundaries determined? Aren’t we still going to be bedeviled by the same gerrymandering issues we face now?

I assume that the Fair Representation Act addresses this. I have not read it yet, but that is my next stop.

Expand full comment
6 more comments...

No posts