For other states, as you have mentioned, the electoral college might be inflating the impact of particular populous locations. It doesn't appear to be a smooth continuum to me.
However...honestly...my biggest issue with the current electoral college system isn't based on pure population density per electoral college vote. It's actually;
- The split between states which proportionally assign their votes as against the states that vote in a single bloc.
- The ability of a votes to be cast in a way which is not representative of the popular vote in a given state.
Those 2 factors have FAR more impact on the value of a given vote in the US, imho.
There are two states that proportionally assign their votes. Two small states. The other 48 plus DC are winner take all. Those two small states account for a total of 9 out of 538 electors... their impact is negligible.
The other point is a lot more interesting.
I like to talk about California only because its numbers are easy enough to talk about, plus as the most populous state in the country, it's kind of a big deal...
Consider that a state with approximately 40 million people has only 18 million registered voters. In 2016, 4.5 million of them voted for Trump. 8.8 million of them voted for Clinton. But because of the electoral college and winner take all, the result is as if 40 million of them voted for Clinton.
So Wyoming residents can more greatly impact on the placement of their states 3 votes than a Texas resident can, for example, taking into account number of votes per capita."
This is the reason why I'm responding to your post slightly out of order... because this is a beautiful segue into the meaning of what I just said about California.
If Wyoming has approximately 500,000 people, and the 3 electors make it seem as if they really have 1.5 million people... in the face of 8.8 Californians being given the power of 40 million people, Wyoming's increase of their impact is like adding a grain of sand to the beach. Insignificant.
Even if we said "well, the small states have an artificial increase, which means the large states have an artificial decrease." That would mean California's 55 electors represented approximately 33 million people.
An elector in Wyoming might represent fewer people than you would expect based on the number of electors, but I promise you this does not raise the value of a Wyoming vote above that of Texas. Or California.
The power of an elector does not lie in the number of people represented by an elector. The power of an elector is based on its percentage of the total vote.
Wyoming's impact on the outcome of the election is 3 out of 538 electors, or 0.55%.
Texas' impact on the outcome is 38 out of 538 electors, or 7.06%
California's impact on the outcome is 55 out of 538 electors, or 10.22%
Switching to a one voter - one vote national election would in some senses 'fix' this. The Wyoming resident is now holding a vote worth the same as a Houston resident. The risk is that political parties can then completely ignore Wyoming (even as they may currently be paying Wyoming too much attention).
The political parties already do completely ignore Wyoming.
Firstly, my example using Australia is almost ridiculously clear and obvious. I'm not sure if any democracy in the world has as much concentration of population in 2 cities as we have. For the most part, 'real' examples are going to be more convoluted, and the US certainly is.
Did the numbers I provide not have an impact on the way you perceive how the cities vote in America? Getting rid of the electoral college would reduce the influence of the three states that contain the three most populous cities in the country by almost half. Surely this indicates that the rest of a country would have a greater influence.
Lets add two more large states...
If we take the 2016 blue votes from California, New York, Texas, Florida and Illinois, they add up to 18.1% of the total national popular vote. Still a smaller percentage than the electoral influence of just 3 states: California, New York and Illinois. (19.3%)
Hopefully you're starting to see how, in this country, a popular vote would not, could not, place the outcome of election in the hands of merely a few cities, or even a few states. You would need the whole country, instead of needing just Ohio, Pennsylvania, Florida, Virginia, North Carolina, and Michigan.
I'm happy to have a crack, but would quickly admit I'm no expert on US procedures. Still, happy to pontificate regardless...what else is the internet for?
You can be proud of yourself. You've done better than some Americans I've had this conversation with.