US inches closer to change in how presidential elections are counted

it is unlikely

Being one of 3,000 is not the same value as 1 of 435

axiomatic
It is a state by state thing. If some state with say, under that 3,000 has 40 House representatives and the split is 23 to 17, pumping money into four races to flip that is where big money in that state would go. "Safe" seats would not be heavily funded. They're likely be more 'flippable' ones so those would get the big bucks. In fact, because there would likely be more volatility in each state, I'd say far more money would get pushed into races for just that reason.
 
IMHO the better route would be to portion the vote. No state is truly red or blue, that are all some shade of purple. If the state goes 60/40 then portion out the delegates 60/40
Yes, but proportional voting has been out of favor.
 
It is a state by state thing. If some state with say, under that 3,000 has 40 House representatives and the split is 23 to 17, pumping money into four races to flip that is where big money in that state would go. "Safe" seats would not be heavily funded. They're likely be more 'flippable' ones so those would get the big bucks. In fact, because there would likely be more volatility in each state, I'd say far more money would get pushed into races for just that reason.
That is not an argument against expansion. That is just an argument that money follows competition.

It already does.

The real question is whether you want money concentrated into a few giant must-win districts, or diluted across many smaller and more local ones.

In an 11-district state, four races can change everything.

In a 138-district state, four races are just four races.


That is a very different kind of political power.
 
The state is also a government in being. While it is elected by the people, Senators before the 17th amendment were appointed by the state's government in one way or another. That is, the senators from a state were beholden to that state's government first and foremost. That meant that the Senate answered to state governments and weren't elected at all. The states were represented at the federal level.

The 17th Amendment turned the Senate into a second House, and that's why nothing ever gets done there. It fucked everything up with relation to the Senate.
Senate is a bunch of wealthy oligarchs.
 
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