There are people saying the Electoral College should be eliminated however that would require a constitutional amendment and that is a non-starter. The idea of making the Electoral College more proportional to the population is an OLD idea that I will analyze here.
The Electoral College gives more power to small states when it comes to representation in congress because there are 2 senators from each state regardless of population. Hence, states like Wyoming have an Electoral College vote for every ~200k people, where California has one for every ~718K people.
This is unfair to voters in larger states (usually thought of as "Blue") but it seen as necessary to protect the interests of smaller states (usually seen as "Red").
But all of this is wrong when it comes to the presidential election
When you add up all the population and EC for red and blue states, the "electoral power" of the red and blue states are as follows
Current system
Notice that the Blue states actually have more electoral power (lower Pop/EC) when it comes to voting in a President than the red states. This is because there are several small Blue states and several large Red states which more than balances out the small state effect.
Lets imagine a more fair system where each state would have the same electoral power. The average electoral power is 511,407 (population/EC). If each state had exactly the same electoral power (one electoral college vote per 511,407 people) then the "electoral power" of the red and blue states are as follows
Equal System
Notice that the power of the Blue states is now actually lower (higher pop/EC) than the Red states.
What this means is that changing the Electoral college to make it equal by population (rather than eliminating it) wouldn't make it better match popular vote which favors Democrats.
Here is an excel spreadsheet with my data: http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=07038117244682710962
The Electoral College gives more power to small states when it comes to representation in congress because there are 2 senators from each state regardless of population. Hence, states like Wyoming have an Electoral College vote for every ~200k people, where California has one for every ~718K people.
This is unfair to voters in larger states (usually thought of as "Blue") but it seen as necessary to protect the interests of smaller states (usually seen as "Red").
But all of this is wrong when it comes to the presidential election
When you add up all the population and EC for red and blue states, the "electoral power" of the red and blue states are as follows
Current system
Code:
Dem Rep Total
Population 170,117,705 158,182,839 328,300,544
EC 279 259 538
Pop/EC 609,741 610,745 610,224
Notice that the Blue states actually have more electoral power (lower Pop/EC) when it comes to voting in a President than the red states. This is because there are several small Blue states and several large Red states which more than balances out the small state effect.
Lets imagine a more fair system where each state would have the same electoral power. The average electoral power is 511,407 (population/EC). If each state had exactly the same electoral power (one electoral college vote per 511,407 people) then the "electoral power" of the red and blue states are as follows
Equal System
Code:
Dem Rep Total
Population 170,117,705 158,182,839 328,300,544
EC 316 322 637
Pop/EC 538,741 491,781 515,044
Notice that the power of the Blue states is now actually lower (higher pop/EC) than the Red states.
What this means is that changing the Electoral college to make it equal by population (rather than eliminating it) wouldn't make it better match popular vote which favors Democrats.
Here is an excel spreadsheet with my data: http://s000.tinyupload.com/?file_id=07038117244682710962