mindstalk: (Default)
It's old news that you can control a single-member district legislature with a quarter of the voting population[1], ideally distributed: half the voters[1] in half the districts, to give you half the legislature. I just realized you can amend the US constitution with 1/3 of the voters.

You need 2/3 of the House and Senate, and 3/4 of the states. House: 1/2 of 2/3 of the districts, for 1/3 of the voters. That's the most stringent consideration. States differ wildly in population, so you need a lot less for 2/3 of the Senate, though I don't feel like doing the math. (IIRC you need 8% of the voters to control a 41% filibuster bloc, given how low population many states are, and our treating Wyoming as importantly as Texas.) 3/4 of the states would means 3/8 of the voters if populations were even, but they're not, and as 3/8 is .375 vs. the .333 of 1/3, I feel confident in risking an assertion that 3/4 of the states won't need as many voters as the 2/3 House requirement.

Note I've been precise in saying "of the voters"; given typical turnouts, the fraction of the population can be slashed in half.

Yes, this is unlikely to happen precisely, but I think a system would be stronger if it couldn't happen at all, e.g. by requiring a direct vote of the people. And given a political bias to most low-pop states, it's certainly possible that an amendment could pass without as much popular support as the Founders intended.

[1] With plurality voting in theory you could need arbitrarily small amounts, what with multiple candidates splitting the vote and only needing a bit more than anyone else.

Date: 2013-08-27 17:33 (UTC)From: [personal profile] mishalak
mishalak: A fantasy version of myself drawn by Sue Mason (Nice)
Ah yes, the wonderful Swiss referendum system. It prevents dangerous 'foreigners' from acquiring Swiss citizenship with such weak qualifications such as having been born in Switzerland to parents born in Switzerland of grandparents born in Switzerland.

And in the United States of America it would be combined with our absolutist stand on the first Amendment and money as speech to give us the same sort of nationalist laws and maybe finally eliminate the welfare state as well.

I am not a fan of direct democracy precisely because I live in a state with a referendum system, namely Colorado. Of the dozens of referendums that have passed in my lifetime I cannot name more than five that was a good idea.
Edited Date: 2013-08-27 17:35 (UTC)

Date: 2013-08-27 19:42 (UTC)From: [personal profile] mishalak
mishalak: A fantasy version of myself drawn by Sue Mason (Nice)
If the results are no different why is it better?

Date: 2013-08-27 20:20 (UTC)From: [personal profile] mishalak
mishalak: A fantasy version of myself drawn by Sue Mason (Nice)
I posit that you are, like a libertarian or communist, working from theory rather than from actual evidence. You are pointing to problems that do not exist to prove that a system that actually fails would be better. Name a US Constitutional Amendment passed by minority support. One. Even one.

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