blackangst1
Lifer
- Feb 23, 2005
- 22,902
- 2,359
- 126
Originally posted by: Rainsford
Originally posted by: blackangst1
Originally posted by: her209
Votes in states like California and New York don't count as much as votes in other low populous states when talking about presidential elections. With regard to elections at the state and local level where votes are counted 1 for 1, it all depends on the people moving.
Wow you dont even know how we elect a president do you....ever heard of the electoral college? California has 55 electoral votes....Texas 34...Florida 27. Those states count more than unpopulated states...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Electoral_map.png
I think you need to do a little more reading there. her209 said that individual votes cound less, which is correct. The fact that big states have MORE electoral votes makes no difference, because their population is even bigger than that.
I know you don't understand this, so let's spell it out. California has about 34 million people, and 55 electoral votes. Nebraska has about 1.7 million people, and 5 electoral votes.
So on the individual level, 1 million Californians share a little more than 1.6 electoral votes, while 1 million Nebraska residents share almost 3 electoral votes. For those of you who ran out of fingers and toes to count on, that means a Nebraska voter has almost twice the national impact as a California voter.
THAT was the point.
OK got it. I misinterprated the meaning
Oh yeah....public votes dont count anyway, soooo hehehehehehe
