Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) will sign a measure to award his state’s electoral votes to the winner of the national popular vote, moving a countrywide coalition one step closer to circumventing the Electoral College.
In an interview Sunday, Polis called the Electoral College an “undemocratic relic” of the nation’s past, one he wants to see relegated to the dustbin of history.
“I’ve long supported electing the president by who gets the most votes,” Polis told The Hill. “It’s a way to move towards direct election of the president.”
Colorado will become the 12th state to join the national popular vote interstate compact. Those 12 states and the District of Columbia, which has also passed a popular-vote bill, account for 181 electoral votes, just under 90 shy of the 270 votes a presidential candidate needs to win the White House.
The compact will not go into effect until the coalition includes states that add up to 270 electoral votes or more. Once it does go into effect, states that are part of the coalition […]
Doing away with the electoral college is the smartest way to create a REAL democracy.
The next problem is the Senate and the 2 Senator-per-State rule. As more people move to urban centers, the rural States, which are heavily conservative, will become even more conservative thus ensuring that the Senate will always be a GOP-majority.
Eric —
Yes, I agree with you. We need three things to restore democracy: 1) Get private money out of the system; 2) disempower the Electoral College; and, 3) restructure the Senate.