If you don't like the electoral college then simply change the constitution. There is a process for that and it has been done. If I were a small state, I would not agree (and states need to agree - 3/4 IIRC) since it would limit their influence. I also don't see it as of any benefit as then campaigns would only happen in 2-3 of the largest states, and the national leadership (executive branch) would not pay any attention to the house reps from small states and would only do the political, economic, and social bidding of NY, CA, and possibly TX (as it goes blue). Maybe this would force smaller states to join together and reduce the number of states? Maybe...
As we have seen in the larger states, they eventually evolve into supermajority political powers. California is a permanent super majority government and it is hard to see that ever changing since the power of a super majority lets it set the agenda, rules, etc... And, as states adopt the initiative process, people are less involved in "who" represents them at the state level since they can simply have an "initiative" to fix the problems - that is why the vote on initiatives in those supermajority states often reflect a much different political bent that is not reflected at the ballot box.
States could make a good faith effort to split their electoral votes (and a couple do that already - the state legislature decides election rules for that state). But the larger states won't do that as they prefer the existing method as well as it consolidates power into a single party for the most "influence." Or they do a "we will split our vote if everyone does as well" which we all know goes nowhere. The larger states don't want to lead on this either otherwise they would split their vote as an example to the other states - even if it hurts them in the short term.
K
As we have seen in the larger states, they eventually evolve into supermajority political powers. California is a permanent super majority government and it is hard to see that ever changing since the power of a super majority lets it set the agenda, rules, etc... And, as states adopt the initiative process, people are less involved in "who" represents them at the state level since they can simply have an "initiative" to fix the problems - that is why the vote on initiatives in those supermajority states often reflect a much different political bent that is not reflected at the ballot box.
States could make a good faith effort to split their electoral votes (and a couple do that already - the state legislature decides election rules for that state). But the larger states won't do that as they prefer the existing method as well as it consolidates power into a single party for the most "influence." Or they do a "we will split our vote if everyone does as well" which we all know goes nowhere. The larger states don't want to lead on this either otherwise they would split their vote as an example to the other states - even if it hurts them in the short term.
K