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Can someone tell me please why we allow each State to set up its own set of rules/procedures for how federally elected positions are voted on and counted?
Edit: thank you all for the education. I had actually meant my comment more rhetorically than literally (I'm aware of how the Constitution works, etc.), to spur discussion about changing it, but glad that there was some good educational information in the the replies.
Getting the Constitution passed was a monumental challenge. The US under the Articles of Confederation wasn't really a country as we'd see it today. It was more like the European Union than a unified nation.
Adopting the Constitution required 13 independent nations to give up their sovereignty to a federal government. Part of the negotiations was letting states keep certain powers - among them how they would select the President. That's the biggest there's an electoral college - each state is given votes according to their population, but the states themselves select the voters.
The Constitution doesn't even require that there be a popular election for the President. All 50 states currently choose their electors through a popular vote, but that's absolutely not a federal requirement.
One of the scariest things the GOP is trying to do is getting the state legislatures in GOP-controlled states to pass emergency laws if Trump loses in their state to change how their electors are assigned after the election - and in Bush v Gore the Court hinted that that might be perfectly legal.
Because the founding fathers had to make a lot of concessions to the already existing states that were not thrilled to give up their power and rights?
States literally don't even have to have elections. If they pass a law that the their electoral votes will be given to a winner of a raffle or a quiz show, they can do that according to the US constitution.
Now, it could be easy to read that one way, but the Independent State Legislature theory was rejected by the SCOTUS as recently as 2023.
Did not know SCOTUS ruled on it. Thanks.
The 'guarantee clause' was both a promise that the federal government would help suppress state-level insurrections and protect member states from foreign attack, and a requirement that in order to be a member state, you had to have a government in the form of a republic (i.e., no monarchy-states, no dictatorships). This can be read to mean that democracy of some sort is required, as republics implicitly derive their public authority from the people living in them.
That's interesting to me. Does the requirement for a republic prevent the possibility of a true direct democracy?
It could, depending on how the court is feeling about it that day, and on whether or not congress writes legislation to provide specifics to just what Article IV, sec4 means. (This seems to have been one of those clauses the framers left as a to-do for future legislators to fill out)