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Bob Jacobs's avatar

Regarding the constitutionality of the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (NaPoVoInterCo), it's currently under debate. The most important question is whether the NaPoVoInterCo, would need congressional approval as an interstate compact. This requirement depends on whether the NaPoVoInterCo affects the federal-vs-state power balance or the power dynamics among states (there is concern that the compact could impact non-participating states’ influence in presidential elections).

Proponents of the NaPoVoInterCo argue that states have plenary power under the Elections Clause to appoint electors based on the national popular vote. However, critics contend that this approach may infringe on smaller states' influence in presidential selection. The Supreme Court's ruling in Chiafalo v. Washington (2020) affirmed that states can bind electors to follow the state’s popular vote. This could be interpreted as support for binding electors to the national popular vote, but since there's little precedent the question remains unresolved at the moment. The Congressional Research Service expects that the NaPoVoInterCo will face significant litigation, possibly reaching the Supreme Court. Let's hope Harris wins the election and gets to replace Alito and Thomas, because I don't think the NaPoVoInterCo would survive this blatantly partisan supreme court.

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Sol Hando's avatar

Maine and Nebraska instituted split presidential voting. Nebraska did it when they were firmly a red state, with 16 years passing before one of their electors voted democrat. Nebraska did it in 1972, when they had just swung from democrat to Republican.

I see the argument against states like California or New York not instituting split electoral voting, as it would effectively hand the White House to Republicans considering their size (unless Texas did so at the same time), but I don't see a strong argument why small states like Vermont, or swing states like Pennsylvania don't do so. They either have an absolute majority, like Nebraska, or are approximately equally likely to go Democrat or Republic, like Maine was at the time.

If this is an important issue for Democrats, then it seems that's the workable solution without having to institute something legally dubious and low-legitimacy like the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact, or passing a constitutional amendment requiring 2/3 ratification by congress (which is practically impossible considering more than 1/3 of states benefit from the electoral college in absolute terms, and a few that don't like Pennsylvania benefit from being swing states).

Otherwise we can hope for a revolution or a temporary dictatorship that just ignores the constitution, neither of which seem particularly useful for increasing democracy. Throwing your baby out the window will probably stop it from crying, but sort of defeats the purpose of the exercise.

Maybe there's another solution I'm not thinking of, but I haven't seen it said yet.

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