Your right same happened in Oz
The coalition got 40 odd percent of the vote, and the opposition got 43 odd percent and the coalition still won.
Which lead our PM to state "I have a mandate from the People for my Tax reforms". This is the sort of idiot running our country, they cannot even work out what a friggin mandate is.
What do you expect from Politicians?
For well over a hundred years, it has been known that at least 1/2% and maybe as many as 5% of the votes cast are screwed up in some fashion due to various causes: Confusing ballots, inaccurate counting methods, fraud, stupidity by counters, lost ballots, et cetera.
This time the snafu'd votes probably (not surely) made a difference. Now every single vote is sacred!!! Why hasn't every vote been sacred for the past 100 or more years?
Let's face facts: The absentee votes were sacred to Bush; The messed up votes in heavily democratic counties were sacred to Gore.
Politicians only worry about what they think will affect their chances of winning the next election. It would cost money, thoughtful analysis, time, et cetera to design and put really good voting mechanisms in place. Such time, money, et cetera never seemed to further any politician's primary (only) goal: Winning the next election.
Until this year, the messed up votes did not matter. At least nobody realized that voting fubars had an effect on their chances of getting elected. If the democrats had foreseen this mess, you could bet your net worth that they would have proposed legislation to spend money and fix the system.
I expect a lot of talk and proposed legislation relating to fixing the system, especially by congressmen & senators facing the next election. If polls indicate that the voters forgot or no longer care, it is likely that nothing will be done, but there will at least be talk. As long as it looks like votes can be gained by he who makes the most noise on this issue, the noise will be made.
Isaac Asimov had an incident in one of his novels that really tells you how politicians think. In the novel, a brilliant young physicist gets an appointment with a very influential politician. Before he presents his arguments, he is told something like the following (not an accurate quote)
Quote:
My staff told me the purpose of your appointment. You are wasting your time and mine. If I propose the legislation you want I will lose the next election in a few months. If I lose the next election, I do not care if the sun goes nova in ten years and destroys all life on earth.
DerFarm your missing the English lads point
Basically in a Commonwealth system you go in and vote, (in oz you vote for some of the senate and the House of Reps), and there are only ever two parties with the hope of winning. Now each of these parties can guarantee a core vote, which leads to only about 20% of the mandate being swinging. Now the Politicians offer every thing they can to these 20% in the hope of winning the election.
Currently the Coalition government is spending millions of dollars upgrading the roads in the Bush in an effort to shore up there support in the outback. As one Outback Independent put it, "It's a sham, they are building better roads between townships that no longer exist".
What the bush wants is jobs and education, but the Pollies are so out of touch that they just give them roads.
Now in my seat there is a appprox 12% majority to our local non-descript mp. Will go and vote, but it will not make a difference to the outcome here. It will still be a liberal party seat, has never been anything else.
Last election the Federal Government had there total votes slashed and were well and truely beaten on the ballot box, but they still managed to win Government again.
Next year there will be blood in the water, they have two many marginal seats, and they have completely lost touch with the average australain. Expect to see some cabinet members looking for jobs, (though l expect they wont be seen in the dole queues).
Note for Yanks Our Cabinet is made up by elected Government Parlimentarians. We do not have a President, and do not appoint cabinet members.
Electoral college is not that bad.
Parksie: Briefly, the Electoral College is a mechanism to avoid a nationwide popular vote. It is not as bad as some people claim it to be. More details below after I let off some steam.
If getting rid of the electoral college were likely to result in better politicians or make it illegal for lawyers to run for office, I would be in favor of getting rid of it. It does not seem to do any harm, so why worry about it? Amending the constitution would be a big job for little, if any, gain.
The last candidates I considered worth voting for were Goldwater and Stevenson. As far as I am concerned, Truman was the last president I gave a hoot in hell for. I have given up on any system giving us a decent president or more than a few decent congressmen & senators.briefly
Gore did not get a majority of the popular vote. The majority of the voters voted for somebody else. So what if he lost due to a messed up system? So what if we got the worse of the two bad candidates? How does anybody know who is worse? It is much easier to choose between two good men than to pick which of two politicians is better. The electoral college has never gone against a candidate who got a majority of the popular vote. It is possible, but highly unlikely. It would be almost impossible for it to overturn a 60-40 or even a 55-45 popular vote.
While many (I think most) of the electors are not required to vote as directed by the state vote, any candidate who lost due to outright defections would probably have deserved to lose. After all, each party picks its own slate of electors. If the ones you picked later voted against you, you must have been stupid to pick them. I could only imagine it happening if something terrible were discovered just after the election. If some borderline psychotic won and the elation over the victory caused him to lose it all and reveal his mental state for the first time, perhaps the electoral college might be very useful. For that matter, suppose somebody killed the winning candidate just after the election? If it happened before the electors voted, they could make some reasonable decision short of trying to run a new election or giving the loser the presidency by default.
I think some of the "Founding Fathers" did not have confidence in a popular vote, and liked the system for that reason. The idea was that if the popular vote did something really stupid, electors could over-rule it.
I think the main reason was as a compromise to allow states with smaller populations to have more effect on national elections. At that time, the two extra votes per state which had nothing to do with population were more important than now. Remember that the Articles of Confederation, which preceded the constitution granted hardly any power to the federal government, and many were afraid of a strong central government. Perhaps they were smarter than we thought.
The electoral system makes it much more worthwhile for a party to have programs providing something for the smaller states. Getting 95% of New York does no more than getting 52%, so promising NY a lot more than necessary in order to get more than 52% is not such a good strategy. It might be a better strategy with a nationwide popular vote, resulting in really screwing the small states.
There is reason to believe that a popular vote is more likely to result in 3 or more parties, none of whom get more than 40% of the vote. I do not think this was considered in the seventeen hundreds, but it seems like a valid belief now. When you start having 3 or more parties, some strange results can occur. I have seen descriptions of plausible scenarios in which the winning candidate (after runoff elections) is disliked by 70% of the voters.