This has been a while since the election is over. What I said still holds and we base our system on it because of our wise founding fathers who had the foresight to do so and not based on tv and internet. You have to be a wacko or liberal to support the latter. We would like to have elections "where" people live has some power to sway the election and not just the majority. We are a republic of divided states that live as one as the united states.
I was referring to our ability to know things about people. Donald Trump is a celebrity and has been for some time. Television and internet gives people everywhere in the country the ability to listen to his speeches, watch his debates, and generally learn what he his about.
Bernie Sanders, not a celebrity, can also be thoroughly learned about by looking him up.
Because we don't live in a world where news travels by horseback, the idea that "someone from your backyard is more likely to win the nomination since a majority would be familiar with this person. " is ridiculous.
The EC gives 4.48 million Californians the power of 32 million Californians. I'll explain how:
The total number of electors is supposed to represent the whole of the united states. So if you allocate electors based on population, California's 39 million are represented by 65 electors. However, to give small states the illusion of having a louder voice than they really have, the electors are redistributed so that no state has less than 3 electors. The effect of this leaves California with 55 electors, which are worth 32 million Californians. Regardless of how many people vote, the candidate that gets one more vote than the other gets all 55 electors. They get the full power of 32 million people. 4,483,810 Californians voted for Trump. Which means that 4,483,811 Clinton voters spoke with the voice of 32 million people.
Despite the fact that only 18 million Californians were even eligible to vote, and that only 14 million of those actually voted, just under 4.5 million people got to wield the power of 32 million people.
Given this information, please explain to me how small states and minority voices are protected by this system.