ldrews, on 2018-October-17, 20:43, said:
In all of the examples cited the local voters voted in the Republicans which allowed for the gerrymandering and other assorted ills. So obviously, in some sense, the outcome reflects the will of the voting public in that state. How would you arrange that differently?
At the highest possible level, create a federal guarantee of the right to vote and strip responsibility for managing voting from the individual states.
If we're looking at the House of Representatives.
1. Implement the so-called Wyoming rule.
Choose the state with the smallest population.
Grant this state a single representative.
Other states get a round number of representatives based on this ratio.
With our current scheme, Montana with ~ one million inhabitants gets one representative while Rhode Islands 1,052,931 residents gets two)
There is still going to be rounding. Nothing in life is perfect. However, on average this will make things enormously better.
(FWIW, implementing this scheme would increase the number of House representatives to roughly 540)
2. Eliminate the combination of single member districts with first past the pole voting in favor of proportional representation.
Different political groups post a ranked slate of delegates
The more votes they get, the deeper into their slate they get to go
I am fairly indifferent whether or not this should be done on a state wide basis or, alternatively, individual states would create a small number of super districts.
Either way, this type of scheme would make todays gerrymandering schemes enormously more difficult and generated a much more balanced selection of candidates. (You'd see conservatives able to get elected in urban centers and liberals elected out in more rural areas, in each case, much more proportionate to their membership in the population)
When it comes to the Senate
1. Statehood for Washing DC and Puerto Rico
2. Slice California into between 5-7 new states. Happy to see the same done to Texas, New York, Florida, etc.