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antidemocratic. Sometimes someone can get elected despite losing the popular vote. And maybe I'm wrong but I believe it's possible for a corrupt Congress to refuse to accept the electoral votes from certain states and thus seat someone who won neither the electoral majority nor the popular majority. And the tendency is for the non-battleground states to be left off the campaign trail. And the vital importance of the battleground states encourages local election officials to cheat.
I don't know why the founding fathers instituted the electoral college system, but the Ohio shenanigans showed one good reason for keeping it: When the election has been run in a shameful and illegal fashion in one or more states, it's worthwhile for people to investigate the wrongdoing, and they can challenge the election in court, and challenge the electors' votes in Congress. If all the national office votes were thrown in one bucket, nobody would ever investigate wrongdoing at the state level because unless you were talking about California or New York, it wouldn't affect the results anyway.
So if you want to abolish the electoral college, can you please propose an alternative mechanism for isolating and punishing corrupt elections for national office?
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