How to Stay in Office: Select Your Voters
We might ask rhetorically, whose taxes does President Obama want to increase? The standard journalistic response is the rich. My preferred response is republicans. The republican voters are disproportionately wealthy and he wants to tax republicans to reward democrats. They want to cut spending in order to reduce the deficit and where would they like to reduce spending? Entitlements? Who disproportionately benefits from entitlements? The relatively poor who disproportionately vote democrat. The republicans want to punish the democrats to reward their constituents. The democrats want to punish the republicans to reward theirs.
How might we fix this? Well, it would be nice, for example, if we the people elected the congress instead of the members of congress choosing who their voters will be. Gerrymandering ensures that the congress gets to pick its voters rather than the other way around. So the probability of being reelected as an incumbent in the congress is 95%, almost as high as it was in the old Soviet Union of being reelected to their parliament. We have a rigged system. We could fix that.
There are lots of excellent political science studies on how to design redistricting so that it’s completely nonpartisan. It’s entirely one person, one vote, subject to geographic constraints and topology. We could write computer programs that do redistricting. Now, no member of congress is going to agree to that in the short term because that would put her or his hold on power at risk, but if we were to pass a law that says starting in 20 years or 25 years this program will be used to do redistricting, we would have solved the problem of the voters not choosing their members of congress.
That would go a long way to altering the risk of being thrown out of office if you don’t do what the people want, and we would get much better policy, but that is very far down the road. Shorter term, also hard to do. We could get rid of the Electoral College. It’s useful to remember that when people speak about standing by the original constitution and so forth, being strict constitutionalists, the Electoral College was designed as a slavery institution. We got rid of slavery. We haven’t gotten rid of this slavery institution. We ought to.
That too would ensure that presidents would be more responsive to a still larger coalition and that would mean doing more of what we the people want.