There’s a great debate to have about the Electoral College, whether it should still exist or whether we should amend the Constitution and determine our president through a national popular vote.
Advocates of a national popular vote, though, doubt that they could pass such an amendment, and so they have come up with a shortcut that they find very clever. Here’s the explanation in an syndicated column this week by liberal commentator and Democratic operative Robert Reich:
To date, a handful of Democratic states have signed, amounting to a total of 196 electoral votes. Democrats took over Michigan and Minnesota last election, and those states are moving toward passing this. Alaska is debating it.
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