False. There isn't a single good reason for electing the President by the electoral system.
False, there certainly is. It is obvious by the fact that in practically every US state and the District of Columbia (all but 4 states), the majority (in most cases the vast majority) live in urban areas. Actually, as a whole, 80.7% of the US population live in Urban areas.
http://www.icip.iastate.edu/tables/population/urban-pct-states
As is made obvious in the following US population map, most of the US population is concentrated in our major cities. There are, of course, multiple major cities in some states. So, your example of Los Angeles is irrelevant, as there are several major cities in California just as there is in Florida, Texas, Maryland, etc.
Point is that because 80.7% of the US population live in urban areas, and most live in major urban areas on the East Coast, small sections of the West Coast, and Florida, it is easy to see large parts of the country that would be ignored during campaigns and in national politics. Nevada, Colorado, Montana, North/South Dakota, Idaho, Nebraska, Utah, Arizona, New Mexico, and Wyoming would be almost completely forgotten, as the elections would be decided by cities like NYC, DC, Boston, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Tampa, Miami, Los Angeles, San Fransisco, Detroit, etc. States in the Mid-West and Mountain Region would be all but ignored.
Under a national popular vote, every vote would be equal throughout the United States. A vote cast in a big city would be no more (or less) valuable or controlling than a vote cast anywhere else.
This is a straw man, as I never claimed otherwise. Every vote would count the same, but that is not at issue. My claim had to do with the concentration of votes and the possibility of convincing voters in urban areas with policies specifically aimed at them.
Los Angeles does not control the outcome of statewide elections in California and therefore is hardly in a position to dominate a nationwide election. The fact that Los Angeles does not control the outcome of statewide elections in its own state is evidenced by the fact that Republicans such as Ronald Reagan, George Deukmejian, Pete Wilson, and Arnold Schwarzenegger were elected Governor in recent years without ever winning Los Angeles.
This is a silly comparison, as there are several major cities in California. You are forgetting about Scranton (the capital), San Diego, San Fransisco, Oakland, etc.
The origins of the myth about big cities may stem from the misconceptions that big cities are bigger than they actually are, and that big cities account for a greater fraction of the nation’s population than they actually do. In fact, 85% of the population of the United States lives in places with a population of fewer than 365,000 (the population of Arlington, Texas--the nation’s 50th biggest city).
Not a misconception at all. Cleveland is certainly a major city, of the like to which I spoke, and only has 390k people. In fact, most major cities in the US have a population of less than 500k. That is not a surprising fact, nor did I claim anything to the contrary. But, that is not important. My point was to the concentration of population in certain parts of the country.
As is made obvious by the map I provided, the US population is overwhelmingly concentrated in the Eastern Seaboard, Florida, relatively small sections of the West Coast, and several areas in the South East. This would make a popular vote election unfair to many states in the Union.