This book describes what the authors identify as an emerging
political crisis in U.S. politics: the possible winning of the
presidency by a candidate with far fewer votes than his or her
opponent. David W. Abbott and James P. Levine stress both the
irrationality and peculiar nature of the current electoral system,
emphasizing recent and current political developments. On the basis
of their computer analysis of past elections and modern political
realities, the authors predict that within twenty years it is very
likely that the United States will produce a wrong winner. In
explaining how this phenomenon could occur, Abbott and Levine
introduce the concept of the wasted vote; winning lopsided
majorities in states is worth no more than winning states by one
vote, due to the antiquated winner-take-all principle.
The book gives a brief historical overview of the electoral
college and the structure of the existing electoral system. In
addition to a detailed discussion of the wrong winner problem, the
authors also explain that if no candidate gets a majority of votes
in the electoral college because of the presence of a third party
candidate, the House of Representatives must choose the president
under an odd set of ground rules. This creates the potential for
all kinds of nefarious political shenanigans. The authors conclude
that the only satisfactory solution to the electoral systeM's
shortcomings is the total abolition of the electoral college and a
shift to direct election of the president by the people. "Wrong
Winner" will be an excellent supplementary text in American
Government, Parties, Voting, and Public Choice courses. It will
also be of interest to political professionals, journalists, and
political scientists.
General
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