Title of article
Apportionment Matters: Fair Representation in the US House and Electoral College
Author/Authors
Brian J. Gaines، نويسنده , , Jeffery A. Jenkins، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
9
From page
849
To page
857
Abstract
The 2000 presidential election made various electoral institutions—from ballot format to voting mechanisms—suddenly prominent in public debate. One institution that garnered little attention, but nonetheless affected the outcome, was apportionment. A few commentators, looking ahead to 2004, noticed that Bush would have won more comfortably had the apportionment based on the 2000 census already been in place for the 2000 election. Little attention, however, was paid to the method by which 1990 census data were used to generate the 1992–2000 apportionment, even though there are many ways to perform that allocation, theUnited States has used different methods over its history, and the precise algorithm turned out, in this instance, to matter.More generally, previous discussions of apportionment methods have neglected the point that allocation to states of USHouse seats simultaneously determines Electoral Collegeweights. Since the Electoral College has built-in biases favoring small states, an apportionment method that partially offsets this bias might be justifiable. We revisit some criteria by which one might prefer one apportionment rule to another, in light of this double duty.
Journal title
Perspectives on Politics
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Perspectives on Politics
Record number
665238
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