http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2007/08/06/070806taco_talk_hertzberg
The New Yorker Comment
by Hendrik Hertzberg
August 6, 2007
At first glance, next year’s Presidential election looks
like a blowout. But it might not be. Luckily for the incumbent party, neither
George W. Bush nor Dick Cheney will be running; indeed, the election of 2008
will be the first since 1952 without a sitting President or Vice-President on
the ballot. At the moment, survey research reflects a generic public preference
for a Democratic victory next year. Still, despite everything, there are nearly
as many polls showing particular Republicans beating particular Democrats as
vice versa. So this election could be another close one. If it is, the winner
may turn out to have been chosen not on November 4, 2008, but five months
earlier, on June 3rd.
Two weeks ago, one of the most important Republican lawyers
in Sacramento quietly filed a ballot initiative that would end the practice of
granting all fifty-five of California’s electoral votes to the statewide
winner. Instead, it would award two of them to the statewide winner and the
rest, one by one, to the winner in each congressional district. Nineteen of the
fifty-three districts are represented by Republicans, but Bush carried
twenty-two districts in 2004. The bottom line is that the initiative, if
passed, would spot the Republican ticket something in the neighborhood of
twenty electoral votes—votes that it wouldn’t get under the rules prevailing in
every other sizable state in the Union.
The Tuesday after the first Monday in June is California’s
traditional Primary Day. But it’s not the one that everybody will be paying
attention to. Five months ago, the legislature hastily moved the Presidential
part up to February 5th, joining a stampede of states hoping to claim a piece
of the early-state action previously reserved for Iowa and New Hampshire. June
3rd will be an altogether sleepier, low-turnout affair. There may be a few
scattered contests for legislative nominations, but the only statewide items on
the ballot will be initiatives. More than two dozen have been filed so far,
ranging from a proposal to start a state-run Internet poker site to pay for
filling potholes to a redundant slew of anti-gay-marriage measures. Few will
make it to the ballot. Many are not even intended to; they’re a feint in some
byzantine negotiation, or just a cheap attempt to get a little attention—for a
two-hundred-dollar fee, anyone can file one. (Actually getting one on the
ballot requires more than four hundred thousand signatures, and the outfits
that collect them usually charge a dollar or two per signature.) Initiative No.
07-0032—the Presidential Election Reform Act—is different. It’s serious. Its
backers have access to serious money. And it could pass.
Nominally, the sponsor of No. 07-0032 is Californians for
Equal Representation. But that’s just a letterhead—there’s no such organization.
Its address is the office suite of Bell, McAndrews & Hiltachk, the law firm
for the California Republican Party, and its covering letter is signed by
Thomas W. Hiltachk, the firm’s managing partner and Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger’s personal lawyer for election matters. Hiltachk and his firm
have been involved in many well-financed ballot initiatives before, including
the recall that put Arnold in Sacramento. They specialize in initiatives that
are the opposite of what they sound like—the Fair Pay Workplace Flexibility Act
of 2006, for example. It would have raised the state minimum wage slightly—by a
lesser amount than it has since been raised—and, in the fine print, would have
made it impossible ever to raise it again except by a two-thirds vote in both
houses of the legislature, while, for good measure, eliminating overtime for
millions of workers.
“Equal Representation” sounds good, too. And the
winner-take-all rule, which is in force in all but two states, does seem unfair
on the face of it. (The two are Maine and Nebraska, which use
congressional-district allocation. But they are so small—only five districts
between them—and so homogeneous that neither has ever split its electoral
votes.) It would be obviously unjust for a state to give all its legislative
seats to the party that gets the most votes statewide. So why should Party A
get a hundred per cent of that state’s electoral votes if forty per cent of its
voters support Party B? No wonder Democrats and Republicans alike initially
react to this proposal in a strongly positive way. To most people, the
electoral-college status quo feels intuitively wrong. So does war. But that
doesn’t make unilateral disarmament a no-brainer.
If California does what No. 07-0032 calls for while
everybody else is still going with winner take all by state, the real-world
result will be to give Party B (in this case the Republicans) an unearned,
Ohio-size gift of electoral votes. In a narrow sense, that’s good if you like
Party B, but not so good if you like Party A (in this case the Democrats). Or
if you think that in a democracy everybody ought to play by roughly the same
rules. Nor, by the way, is Party B the only offender. Last week, the
Democratic-controlled legislature of North Carolina, a state that has gone
Republican in every Presidential election since 1976, enthusiastically took up
a bill to do the same mischief as the California initiative. The grab would be
smaller—it would appropriate perhaps three or four of North Carolina’s fifteen
electoral votes for the Democrats—but the hands would be just as dirty.
The California initiative flunks even the
categorical-imperative test. Imagine, as a thought experiment, that all the
states were to adopt this “reform” at once. Electoral votes would still be
winner take all, only by congressional district rather than by state. Instead
of ten battleground states and forty spectator states, we’d have thirty-five
battleground districts and four hundred spectator districts. The red-blue map
would be more mottled, and in some states more people might get to see campaign
commercials, because media markets usually take in more than one district. But
congressional districts are as gerrymandered as human ingenuity and computer
power can make them. The electoral-vote result in ninety per cent of the
country would still be a foregone conclusion, no matter how close the race.
California Initiative No. 07-0032 is an audacious power play
packaged as a step forward for democratic fairness. It’s the lotusland
equivalent of Tom DeLay’s 2003 midterm redistricting in Texas, except with a
sweeter smell, a better disguise, and larger stakes. And the only way
Californians will reject it is if they have a chance to think about it first. ?
ILLUSTRATION: TOM BACHTELL
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