1. Ban Gerrymanders
Gerrymanders are the odd-shaped legislative districts that result when a state's majority party draws the map, aiming to crack minority party voters into many districts where they will be a weak minority, and pack the rest of them into just a few districts. The practice of gerrymandering in the U.S.A. goes back to at least 1812, but the tide may be turning. This year, federal courts have struck down two gerrymandered maps: North Carolina's for weakening the black voter's vote, and Wisconsin's for weakening the Democratic voter's vote. Both rulings cited violation of the 14th Amendment's Equal Protection Clause.
Former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens has proposed a good Constitutional amendment to ban gerrymanders:
Districts represented by members of Congress, or by members of any state legislative body, shall be compact and composed of contiguous territory. The state shall have the burden of justifying any departures from this requirement by reference to neutral criteria such as natural, political, or historic boundaries or demographic changes. The interest in enhancing or preserving the political power of the party in control of the state government is not such a neutral criterion.
But with the court rulings this year, an amendment might not be needed to require all states to draw fair redistricting maps. Many states have already acted against gerrymanders, some by appointing an independent mapping commission, and others by spelling out mapping criteria.
One of those states, Arizona, passed a ballot initiative to create an independent mapping commission, which drew the maps for the 2000 and 2010 censuses. Republicans challenged Arizona's redistricting commission law, claiming that the legislature must draw the maps. But last year the U.S. Supreme Court, following precedent, upheld Arizona's commission, because under Arizona law, the people by ballot initiative can make any law that the legislature can. That ruling gave a green light for states to establish an independent redistricting commission by ballot initiative.
2. Automatic Voter Registration
Over-zealous purging of voter rolls is one trick in the Republicans' bag for tamping down the Democratic vote. Automatic voter registration negates that trick by keeping rolls up to date and citizens ready to vote throughout their lives. Whenever a citizen interacts with a government agency, such as the Department of Motor Vehicles (DMV), the agency electronically sends voter registration information to the Board of Elections.
Nationally, automatic voter registration has not yet gotten very far. In 2015, Bernie Sanders introduced a bill to require it in all states, but the bill has since been sitting in committee. Also, the current Democratic Party platform has a plank for universal automatic voter registration, and same-day registration and voting.
In the states, several have enacted automatic voter registration. Oregon passed a strong version, automatically registering all (except those that opted-out) that have a record at the DMV. That has resulted in 250,000 added registrations, of which 43% voted this year.
3. Instant Runoff Voting
In a race with more than two candidates, a minor party candidate might well draw votes from one's ideologically closer major party candidate, enabling the other major party candidate to win with less than a majority of votes. A voter that favors a minor party candidate, and aware of this "spoiler effect", may then shy away from voting for one's favorite. Instant runoff voting (or "ranked choice voting") is the antidote for this problem.
With instant runoff voting, the voter ranks the candidates as first choice, second choice, third choice, and so on. Then the ballots are counted for the first choices. If no candidate has the majority, another round of counting occurs, where the last place candidate drops out and that candidate's ballots are counted for the next choice still in the running. Rounds of voting continue in this manner until a candidate has the majority of counted ballots.
Instant runoff voting is used in several U.S. cities, and now in one state. In the recent election, Maine became the first to enact instant runoff voting statewide, passing a ballot measure that brought it to the governor's race, and to all state and congressional legislative races.
It seems likely that instant runoff voting would have prevented election of Maine's sitting governor, Paul LePage -- a man with teabag views and a loose cannon style. LePage won both election and re-election with apparent help of the spoiler effect, getting less than a majority both times (38% and 48%).
4. Election Audits
In the name of election integrity, and especially with the rise of computer hacking, a recount of the recent presidential election is now in progress in three states -- Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania. But if we had a national policy of strong election audits designed to catch error and fraud, such a recount would not be needed.
Many states have election audit laws, but few are up to snuff. New Mexico sets the standard, randomly picking a number of precincts for audit to ensure a minimum 90% probability of finding any error or fraud that could change the outcome of a particular race. Statewide, New Mexico uses one type of voting system -- paper ballots counted by optical scanners. The audit procedure is to hand count the paper ballots and compare that to the official count from the scanners. The procedure allows for expanding the audit all the way up to a full recount, when significant error is found.
5. Meaningful Debates
The presidential debates, on the whole, seemed to dwell more on character issues than important policy issues. Among policy issues, we can call global warming the most important, because it threatens civilization, and is today hammering people all around the globe with harsh weather events and conditions. Yet, in the three debates, plus one vice-presidential debate, not one question was asked about that issue. And, in the second debate, after 87 minutes that seemed largely devoted to each candidate (justifiably or not) tearing down the character of the other, the winner was declared to be Ken Bone -- a citizen that innocently asked a good question about energy policy.
We can solve this problem by taking the debates out of the hands of the two major parties, and returning control to the League of Women Voters. Then we would most likely have moderators more concerned with informing the electorate than are the current moderators, who are news hosts from the major TV networks, which are more concerned with ratings.
Also, we could open up the debates to a wider range of policy ideas by scrapping the 15% polling requirement, and letting in any candidate that is qualified for the ballot in enough states to win the majority of the electoral vote.
6. Teach American Testament
George Washington warned of "internal and external enemies" that would weaken the citizen's bond with one's national government. In the 1970's a new radical conservative movement arose and built a mighty propaganda machine. Since then, it seems that a parade of those internal enemies has been hammering at us -- Ronald Reagan, Grover Norquist, Rush Limbaugh, Dick Cheney, Glenn Beck -- and many more. With little regard for facts, pushing unfounded conspiracy theory and character assassination, the radical conservatives have sold the people cynicism for their national government. And they have led us to now, when a man who seems the picture of a blithering crackpot waits to take the highest administrative office in the land.
Thomas Jefferson wrote:
I think by far the most important bill in our whole code is that for the diffusion of knowlege among the people. No other sure foundation can be devised for the preservation of freedom, and happiness.
The most important knowledge for Americans to guard against cynicism for their national government would, I think, be the nation's creed, which is found in the "American Testament." The popular American philosopher, Mortimer Adler (1902-2001), championed teaching of the American Testament, which is composed of three documents:
- The Declaration of Independence, which established the Americans of the 13 colonies as a people,
- The Preamble to the Constitution, which established that the government of the United States took its authority, not from the several state governments, but from the people, and
- The Gettysburg Address, which reaffirmed the nation's commitment to constitutional democracy.
To diffuse that knowledge, the Department of Education and the Common Core State Standards group should, I think, declare, as the most central and most important to the national interest, one standard: learn the American Testament. The standard should aim for every student in the nation, upon entering adulthood, to know the words of the American Testament (less the Declaration's bill of particulars) by heart, and to be able to state the meaning in one's own words. Older adults should be able to get certified in the American Testament by doing the same.
This one simple standard would, I think, give Americans a better feeling of unity, a better understanding of their government, and make them more resistant to political hucksters.
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Image credit: The Paragraph / Tysto / Disclaser (CC BY-SA 4.0)