From e05f11c589615d076a26208b2bb153f24143ed7c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrew Yu Date: Tue, 2 Aug 2022 22:02:49 +0800 Subject: us --- article/democracy-us.html | 9 ++++++++- 1 file changed, 8 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/article/democracy-us.html b/article/democracy-us.html index 6cb0051..bd51887 100644 --- a/article/democracy-us.html +++ b/article/democracy-us.html @@ -38,10 +38,17 @@

Some people believe that the Senate helps against populism as opposed to the House. Although the number of Senators for each state do indeed not correspond to the population, this has no correlation whatsoever with preventing populism and doesn't serve an obvious purpose. It only ``helps'' by giving completely unproportional voting powers to people based on their location, period.

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+ The Senate also suffers from the fillibuster. Passing a bill in the Senate has a few steps: Firstly the Senators must agree to vote, passed at a supermajority. Then the Senators actually vote on the bill. Those who are against the bill will just disagree to vote altogether, effectively requiring all bills to have a supermajority support to pass which is nearly impossible as the two dominent political parties almost always oppose each others' bills and neither have a supermajority in the Senate. +

The Electoral College

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+ The electoral college makes it possible to win an federal election without winning the national popular vote. It also, similarly but not as badly as the Senate, represent the people of each state disproportionally as each state has two extra electoral votes regardless of their population. +

- The electoral college makes it possible to + A subtle but serious problem with the electoral college is that electors' listening to the votes of the people is only a tradition. Legally, electors can vote however they want, meaning that the US is not theoretically a democracy. This hasn't happened before, but this is one more to the list of problems in the constitution.