A House Poorly Divided


Following the 13th census, in 1910, Congress enlarged the House to 435 members from 386 members and there it has remained, even as the number of Americans has more than tripled, from 92 million to 308 million. Ever since, the apportionment process has been able to allot new House seats to the fastest-growing states only by taking them away from states growing more slowly. Voters in some states have considerably more electoral clout than voters in others.

According to the Census Bureau, there are now 710,767 Americans in the average congressional district. But with every state constitutionally entitled to at least one House seat, and with the membership of the House frozen at 435, districts can deviate widely from the average.

An egregious violation of the “one man, one vote” principle is the inequality between Rhode Island’s two congressional districts, with 528,000 voters each, and Montana’s lone district, with 994,000. So great is that disparity, observes Scott Scharpen, the founder of an organization called Apportionment.US, that it takes 188 voters in Montana to equal 100 voters in Rhode Island.

The lawsuit, Clemons v. Department of Commerce, challenges the constitutionality of the law that permanently freezes the number of representatives in the U.S. House at 435 members. The case was filed in the US Supreme Court in September 2009.
The plaintiffs:

John Tyler Clemons, Jessica Wagner, Krystal Brunner, Lisa Schea and Frank Mylar

Mr. Clemons is a registered voter in the state of Mississippi; Ms. Wagner is a registered voter in the state of Montana; Ms. Brunner is a registered voter in the state of South Dakota; Ms. Schea is a registered voter in the state of Delaware; Mr. Mylar is a registered voter in the state of Utah.

The Supreme Court on December 13, 2010 refused to take up a lawsuit, initiated by Scharpen and others, that sought an order forcing Congress to dramatically enlarge the House of Representatives in order to equalize congressional districts. Unsurprisingly, the court ruled that the size of Congress is for members of Congress, not judges, to decide.

Scott Scharpen concludes the matter,

From the filing of the lawsuit in September 2009 up to last week’s ruling, the picture is now complete. Congress has ignored this issue for a half century. Both the Justice Department and the Solicitor General repeatedly stated that equality and proportionality of representation are not required. And the U.S. Supreme Court sidestepped the topic altogether. The result? American voters’ right to equality will continue to be deferred.

Now some of you might be thinking it is good news for conservatives who want small government that the Supreme Court refused to take up this case. Here is the problem I have with that kind of thinking. I want a government where the laws of the land are made by a legislative branch of the government that is most representative of We the People instead of a government where the laws of the land are made by commissars serving only to do what a President gives executive orders for them to do. If I wanted a small government like that I should live in Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, or North Korea.

Gamecock has wrote an excellent piece about a major issue our nation has got to deal with.

It seems a disconnect has developed between We the People and those we elect to represent us. Regulation without representation cannot stand.

I think the disconnect began a century ago when they stopped adding every 10 years approximately 50 seats to the US House so there would be no dilution of their power. We will never know the path not taken, but the size of the federal government executive branch grew a lot more in the last 100 years than it did in the previous 100 years when numbers of seats in the House grew with every 10 year census.

The larger districts grow, the less representative lawmakers become. Since 1910, the average number of constituents per House member has climbed from 210,000 to more than 710,000. Over the same span, members of Congress have grown more remote, more undefeatable, more beholden to special interests, and less capable of reflecting the diversity of their districts’ values and views. Congress worked better when the size of the House was elastic. The Framers reckoned congressional districts should contain about 30,000 constituents; districts comprising nearly three-quarters of a million would have struck them as ludicrous. The House has not increased its membership in 100 years even though the population of our country has more than tripled.

Scott Scharpen has listed here a list of 9 advantages of a larger U.S. House of Representatives:

  1. INCREASED accountability – as district sizes become smaller, each voter’s influence on their representative increases.
  2. DECREASED government spending – this seems counter-intuitive, but the data strongly support significant reductions in aggregate spending as the House grows in membership.
  3. INCREASED competition – the principles of free markets tell us that when competition is present, we get increased quality at a lower cost. With more House seats, races will be more competitive. The best illustrative example is comparing small New Hampshire (400 state house members with a high turnover rate of over 30%), to California, with its embarrassing lack of competition (state house of only 80 members with NO turnover – a 100% incumbent success rate for the past 4 election cycles).
  4. INCREASED voter turnout – data support that the smaller the district sizes, the greater percentage of voters turn out for the election
  5. DECREASED cost of running for office – the average winning campaign for a U.S. House seat in 2008 was approximately $1.5 million. This enormous financial barrier to entry prevents ‘average’ citizens from entering national politics, and gives incumbents a great advantage. If the average district size were reduced, more everyday Americans could run for public office.
  6. DECREASED scope of individual representatives – the problem with the current model is that power is too concentrated, making individual representatives much too influential in the legislative process. Diminishing their individual scope and influence should reduce the need for continual media appearances and campaigning, and re-focus their efforts on serving constituents as citizen-legislators.
  7. INCREASED freedom – a strong relationship exists between district size and freedom. At the state level, the smaller the average district size, the higher that state scores on various freedom indices.
  8. DECREASED propensity for gerrymandering – With a lot more districts, the concept of creating an oddball-shaped gerrymandered district makes much less sense and yields less value as compared to today’s model.
  9. INCREASED cost of lobbying – it’s much cheaper and easier to lobby 435 people than a significantly larger number. More representatives may equate to less influence of lobbyists and more protection for the American people.

On reason number nine I remind you of an important number in US politics. The number 270 is known by many political junkies to represent the number of votes of the Electoral College needed to become POTUS. That number also has represented for the last 100 years the minimum number of people needed to create a new federal agency or program.

218 House votes + 50 Senate votes + 1 VP Senate tie-breaker vote + 1 POTUS bill signing

Below I have listed what a US House of Representatives would look like with 935 members. It would take 468 votes to pass a bill. It would take 520 Electoral votes to elect a US President. Each House district would represent an average population of 330,209 instead of the current average population of 710,767.

  1. California 113
  2. Texas 76
  3. New York 59
  4. Florida 57
  5. Illinois 39
  6. Pennsylvania 38
  7. Ohio 35
  8. Michigan 30
  9. Georgia 29
  10. North Carolina 29
  11. New Jersey 27
  12. Virginia 24
  13. Washington 20
  14. Indiana 20
  15. Massachessetts 20
  16. Arizona 19
  17. Tennessee 19
  18. Missouri 18
  19. Wisconsin 17
  20. Maryland 17
  21. Minnesota 16
  22. Colorado 15
  23. Alabama 14
  24. South Carolina 14
  25. Louisiana 14
  26. Kentucky 13
  27. Oregon 12
  28. Oklahoma 11
  29. Connecticut 11
  30. Mississippi 9
  31. Arkansas 9
  32. Kansas 9
  33. Iowa 9
  34. Nevada 8
  35. Utah 8
  36. Nebraska 6
  37. New Mexico 6
  38. West Virginia 6
  39. Idaho 5
  40. New Hampshire 4
  41. Maine 4
  42. Hawaii 4
  43. Delaware 3
  44. Rhode Island 3
  45. Montana 3
  46. North Dakota 2
  47. South Dakota 2
  48. Vermont 2
  49. Alaska 2
  50. Wyoming 2

Cross-posted at The Minority Report


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40 Comments Leave a comment

935?!

BigGator5 (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 7:51PM EDT (link)

Jumpin Jehosaphat! You’ve got to be kidding! 935?!

You know I can see adding an extra 100 members (for a total of 535), but 935 is a completely unreasonable jump from 435.

Educated (About The Issues Facing Us Today), Dedicated (To Making A Difference), And Highly Motivated (To Getting Things Done)
@biggator5

It would have been better to add 50 at a time

pilgrim (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 8:14PM EDT (link)

The powers that be for the last 100 years decided to change the routine of the previous 120 years.


Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

I Can Understand Their Reasoning

BigGator5 (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 8:47PM EDT (link)

Honestly, I can understand the reasoning behind limiting the size of House. We are a Representative Republic, but let’s not get crazy.

However I agree with you up until your 935 number. To more than double the size of the House over-night is, well, crazy. I think a more reasonable number would be a hundred new seats every hundred yesrs.

Educated (About The Issues Facing Us Today), Dedicated (To Making A Difference), And Highly Motivated (To Getting Things Done)
@biggator5

a reasonable number?

pilgrim (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:52PM EDT (link)

Your “more reasonable” number approach would have had only 65 members of the US House until 1890 when you bumped it to 165, and stay 165 until it is 265 in 1990. The early citizens of our nation would never have allowed that to happen. The House grew from 65 to 435 between 1790 and 1910. It should have kept growing.


Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

 

Depends on how they're added, Gator.

acat (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:53PM EDT (link)

And .. actually… 2012 is a good time to do so. We’re re-drawing districts in a number of states, the redistricting is in Repub hands in most states, and given the current technology – teleconferencing, e-mail, twitter, etc. – would make doubling Congress in 2012 a much easier thing than it would have been in 1970…

Mew

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

 

I have to agree with Pilgrim

Right Reason (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 3:32PM EDT (link)

“Gosh, 935 is a lot” isn’t really an argument. As a matter of fact, just prior to the ratification of the Constitution, there was great concern that the House of Representatives was too small at 65 men, or 1 for every 30,000 constituents. This was considered too few members to provide effective representation. How 1 for 700,000+ is supposed to do it is beyond me.

To me it is just incumbents wanting to keep their club exclusive. Dividing the perks from lobbyists by 435 is one thing, dividing them by 935 cuts each piece of the pie by more than half. We can’t have that now, can we?

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.

- Winston Churchill

 
 

yes, you made the case. The incumbents have kept it at an arbitrary 435

Mike gamecock DeVine (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:46PM EDT (link)

and it is a major factor in the disconnect…more later

Mike DeVine’s Examiner.com and Charlotte Observer columns
“One man with courage makes a majority.” – Andrew Jackson

 
 
 

Smaller Districts = Smaller Government

scharpen (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 8:34PM EDT (link)

Great article, Pilgrim. It’s important that an issue of such national importance gets discussed/debated more often.

I’ve spent a significant amount of time over the past 2 1/2 years thinking about and researching this topic of House representation, and I’m now convinced that creating smaller districts (through an increase in House membership) will indeed produce smaller government. So much of what plagues our federal government can be traced back to a lack of true representation, and allowing citizen-legislators (rather than the dreaded politicians) to be our voice in Washington will make an enormously positive difference.

Please read my article, The Root Cause of Ills in the U.S. House, at http://www.apportionment.us/Root_Cause_of_House_Ills.pdf for more on this topic.

Scott Scharpen
President – Apportionment.US

Scott Scharpen

Good for you, Scott Scharpen

heartlander (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:12PM EDT (link)

Probably just showing my ignorance here, but this was the first I’d heard of your organization. I visited your excellent website and have bookmarked it.,

Hope you will continue posting here and making people aware of this issue!

“The still, small voice of God in every human soul is the greatest ally of the pro-life cause, and why it will ultimately prevail.”
–Donald R. McClarey

Thanks, heartlander

scharpen (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 11:09PM EDT (link)

Feel free to spread the word about this important issue!

While the initial reaction by many of adding more politicians to Washington seems like a bad idea, it’s important to understand why these reps are “politicians” and not the citizen-legislators we elected them to be and the Constitution intended them to be. The confluence of power, money and unaccountability create a structure and environment that favors special interests and the elite, while at the same time disadvantages the average citizen.

Scott Scharpen

 
 
 

Couldn't agree more pilgrim

Scope (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:32PM EDT (link)

but this discussion must include the gerrymandering that has taken place. Here is an article about redistricting in Virginia, it includes the distract map.

http://www.virginiaplaces.org/government/congdist.html

Look at those districts, the article is also very good on how some of the districts were drawn. A very good point made was that a rep. in a very small district needs only to advertise on one radio station, and in only one newspaper, where in the larger districts, the candidate must buy into many media sources in order to reach all of the districts voters.

Interesting in another article, it points out that each rep. gets roughly the same amount of money to run their office and pay staff. It is their discretion on how the money is spent.

http://www2.timesdispatch.com/news/2010/dec/23/TDME01-cantors-payroll-up-81-since-2001-ar-732649/

If each rep gets roughly the same amount of money, compare VA district 8 with VA districts 5, 7 and 9.

If there were more districts, as I agree there needs to be, split by population, rather than by the demographics, that pot of money would get split much more evenly, and, the more unknown candidates would have a much better chance of being elected. It would make the incumbents work that much harder, with a smaller base, to win re-election. They would have far less in their war chests to insure their incumbency.

 

Wasn't the Solicitor General in 2009

Scope (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:39PM EDT (link)

Elana Kagan, when the lawsuit was filed?

yep she was solicitor general in 2009. nt

pilgrim (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:46PM EDT (link)

Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

GC HIGHLY RECOS - nt

Mike gamecock DeVine (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 9:46PM EDT (link)

Mike DeVine’s Examiner.com and Charlotte Observer columns
“One man with courage makes a majority.” – Andrew Jackson

 
 
 

Great argument, pilgrim

heartlander (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:09PM EDT (link)

I cannot find a single argument against any of your nine points.

Very well done. Thanks for raising awareness about this very important issue!

“The still, small voice of God in every human soul is the greatest ally of the pro-life cause, and why it will ultimately prevail.”
–Donald R. McClarey

I can. I believe #6 is flat out wrong.

The_Gadfly (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 12:54PM EDT (link)

Part of the reason we wind up with so many earmarks is because despite having 435 members in the House of Representatives, it’s power is concentrated with too few members: The Speaker, the Majority Whip, the Rules Committee, and the Appropriations Committee. That’s a pretty small percentage of the current 435. If you want to get something done, you need their approval, and they may give it in the form of an earmark. If they want to get something done they offer you an earmark. If you block them, they pull your earmarks. It might not meet the legal definition of bribery, but it is one of the corrupting factors in our current system.

The power is concentrated because of the fundamental law of making decisions: Only about 20 people can intelligently discuss a given topic with one another and make a plan. Once you exceed that number, things break down into monotony, repetition, and stone walling. I’ve been uniquely positioned to watch this in organizations as they have grown from small to large. At first, because they are small, everyone contributes and knows that they are contributing to running the organization. When the group moves past 35 people, it is broken into committees of about 5-20 people, then those committees report back to the whole, and the whole ratifies the decision. When the group passes 300 members, the process becomes stifling, and there are only two paths to power in the group: knowing the guy at the top who can move your agenda forward, or knowing the paperwork process better than the other guy. Both of which conservative and libertarians agree are not positives for the political process. Increasing the number of Reps in the House to 935 will only further exacerbate these issues, leading to further disconnects.

 
 

Could the House chamber be 'remodeled' to accomidate

eastbaylarry (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:42PM EDT (link)

a vast increase in the number of reps? I’m not familiar with the Capital Building floorplan. Are there adjacent areas that could be added to the floor space by removing wall(s)?

2+2=4 dammit!

Why do they need to be in DC permanently?

Common_Cents (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:51PM EDT (link)

Why not work more from their district and limited amount of time in DC?

“Fathom the hypocrisy of a Government
that requires every citizen to prove
they are insured…. but not everyone
must prove they are a citizen.”
-Ben Stein

“In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.”[especially in DC] – Friedrich Nietzsche

 

Just convert it to cubicles. Much more efficient.

acat (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:53PM EDT (link)

Why should congress get nice wood desks? Most american workers are in cubicles… Last company that employed me had the CEO in a jumbo cubicle.

We could use some top-of-the-line made-in-USA Steelcase systems.. triple the number of work spaces in the capitol dome easily.

Mew

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

 

Where to put them all?!

scharpen (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 11:19PM EDT (link)

I have a FAQ on the Apportionment.US website which addresses a number of the common ‘objections’ to enlarging the House – http://www.apportionment.us/FAQ.pdf and one of the questions is:
Where would we fit/put everybody?
Answer: There are a number of reasonable options – a couple of examples: a) There are several federal office buildings in the immediate area of the House. Federal personnel from these agencies can be relocated to other areas. b) There are parking areas for House employees in the immediate area which could be the site for new House offices (with plenty of parking in basement garages). It is also important to note that current technology (e.g., email, electronic voting, web conferencing) greatly eases the logistical burden associated with a larger body of members.

On a related note, House reps could also share existing office space if many of the thousands of staffers’ positions were converted from unelected and unaccountable employees to elected and accountable citizen-legislators. So I’m not even convinced that we would need more space.

Scott Scharpen

There's plenty of office space in D.C. Don't build more, lease what's needed. [nt]

acat (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 12:46PM EDT (link)

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

 
 

Kill two birds with one stone:

The_Gadfly (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 12:57PM EDT (link)

Move DC to somewhere in Kansas. Let’s the whiners in the district get “their voting rights” back and we can build a more defensible capital city. Maybe we can construct it to remove some of the lobbyist influence as well.

Nah, too complex. Just require that all congresscritters live in military housing, and earn military scale.

acat (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 1:00PM EDT (link)

If civil service is the equivalent of military service, then … the congress should all live in officers’ housing, and earn what a second lieutenant earns.

Makes auditing very easy, keeps them all very safe, and makes tracking who comes to visit them at home a simple FOIA away.

Mew

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

Okay, so that makes it less expensive.

The_Gadfly (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 1:23PM EDT (link)

We use a military base in Kansas that was slated for BRAC closing and move congress there. But I am all behind the pay idea.

They want to earn more, they pay the armed services more. Simple, no? [nt]

acat (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 1:31PM EDT (link)

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

I'd have to cogitate on that one for a long while.

The_Gadfly (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 5:04PM EDT (link)

I wouldn’t want the armed forces getting corrupted by congressional pay raises.

:)

 
 
 
 
 
 

May be a coincidence

redneck_hippie (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:54PM EDT (link)

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2010/12/26/a_house_poorly_divided/

Are you Jeff Jacoby?


Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

No. I am not Jeff

pilgrim (Diary) Sunday, December 26th at 10:58PM EDT (link)

I did read his article though.


Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

 
 

Just a thought, Pil

Vassar Bushmills (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 7:30AM EDT (link)

But it would be nice to double the size of Congress, but freeze the total pay of the Congress at 2011 levels, so that new members had to be paid of the 2011 pool. Maybe move in some trailers out on the back lawn.

Great piece, something that should be on
the new wave’s shopping list the next few years.

That would be a good use for all the katrina trailers. nt

Common_Cents (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 3:34PM EDT (link)

“Fathom the hypocrisy of a Government
that requires every citizen to prove
they are insured…. but not everyone
must prove they are a citizen.”
-Ben Stein

“In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations and epochs, it is the rule.”[especially in DC] – Friedrich Nietzsche

 

Perfect Vassar!! A salary cap for congress.

nessa (Diary) Tuesday, December 28th at 3:01PM EDT (link)

I’m sure Fort Myers, Belvoir etc have some GP Mediums lying around, I know 20 people can live and work in a GP Medium.

“If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen.”—Samuel Adams

Contributor to Unified Patriots

teh twitter

 
 

Sorry to go all grinchy on ya

mikerazar (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 10:10AM EDT (link)

but I don’t follow the logic. More representatives means more corruption, more earmarks, more staff, more, well, morons. There is no magic optimal number. There is no constitutional mandate for one person one vote, no matter what the Court says.

As I never tire of pointing out, the one UNAMENDABLE provision of the Constitution provides for the States to have “equal suffrage in the Senate”. Clearly the Authors were not worried about numerical equality of each vote. Rather, they saw the danger in non-taxpayers having a vote.

Why 935? With modern technology we can move to government by referendum. Now there’s a great idea!

I’m sorry, but this is no time to create artificial issues with undetermined consequences. Let’s see if we can undo the harm done in the past few years before tilting at windmills.

We have a nation to save, people.

If you don't follow logic then look to history

pilgrim (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 12:29PM EDT (link)

Read your US History and compare the the growth of the executive branch of the Federal government between 1810-1910 to the growth of the executive branch between 1910 and 2010. Perhaps you will discover that the earlier House that grew in modest numbers were growing a lot less of a federal bureaucracy than the oligarch fixed number of the last 100 years.


Activists Taking Action: Unified Patriots

 

An interesting thought ...

acat (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 12:53PM EDT (link)

Governing by referendum. Didn’t California try that? (grin)

No, this isn’t an “artificial” issue – increasing the number of congresscritters increases the competition for resources… and the number of bribes, kickbacks, and scams don’t scale that way.

I’m sure it would be chaos, but .. it would also increase the number of potential champions of democracy, and would lower the bar of entry for people to get into office.

Mew

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

Pil, If you want to cut back the size of the executive branch,

mikerazar (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 3:16PM EDT (link)

I’m with you. In Chicago, everyone knows their alderman. How well does that protect against corruption or lead to more democracy?

I just don’t see it creating more champions of democracy.It isn’t that I’m sure you’re wrong, only that I am not convinced you are right. Like how do you know how bribes scale?

We have a nation to save, people.

Chicago is actually a good example ...

acat (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 6:14PM EDT (link)

Beyond a certain point, the amount paid in bribes is no longer a “painless” skim… and the more palms that need greasing, the less profitable the end venture becomes.

Let’s say I want to open a pancake restaurant in Chicago. If I have to pay off my alderman and a cop or two and the water department, and of course the streets and sanitation (garbage haulers) guys… not to mention a mafioso or two … my flapjacks had better sell like … hotcakes.

Increasing the number of congresscritters increases the number of hands in the till – and there’s a tipping point beyond which businesses start looking for alternatives…. like moving the corporate HQ out to the suburbs, or moving manufacturing over to Indiana or .. well, you get the idea.

Chicago’s McCormick Place convention center – built with city bonds – is another good example. They have a very hard time attracting smaller trade shows because each booth that goes up has to be assembled by union labor. The sales guys and booth babes can’t so much as plug in a cord, or the union will protest. Want to give your guests orange juice? Better be prepared to pay a union cook to prepare it. They still get large shows that *can’t* go to Naperville or Skokie or Rosemont, but they lose out on a lot of smaller shows because there’s not enough profit to be made after the cost of the booth.

Consider, also, that it’s doubling the number of congressional districts – even if we just cut each existing district in half, in some of the urban districts there’s very little in the way of “good” neighborhoods to live in… it’s going to force urban renewal of some sort just to provide “appropriate” housing to the new representatives…. not to mention changing the dynamics for every business seeking to lobby “their” congressman.

No, I think doubling congress has some advantages. Not perfect, maybe, but .. some advantages.

Mew

——
self-portrait

Caveat Suffragator

 
 
 
 

India comes close.

Menlo (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 1:18PM EDT (link)

Their Parliament has, I believe, about 800 members. I’m not sure how orderly or well-run things are there, but it might provide some insight. Even so, that’s less representation than Americans have.

With regard to the US, I say the same thing I said about a change in filibuster rules. It is not even a remote possibility in any of our lifetimes.

“The ultimate touchstone of constitutionality is the Constitution itself and not what we have said about it.” -Felix Frankfurter

 

another reform to consider

kyle8 (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 3:24PM EDT (link)

have all of the registered voters in a congressional district drafted into a lottery. The winner HAS to serve as congressman for that term.

Yes, I am not serious, but it would probably beat the system we have now.

“Nothing works like freedom, Nothing succeeds like liberty”
Kyle

I like that :). Here is another idea...

mikerazar (Diary) Monday, December 27th at 4:23PM EDT (link)

Elect the speaker of the House in a separate national election.

Yeah, yeah…I know that would require other changes…

We have a nation to save, people.

 
 

you sold me on this awhile back pilgrim

RoguePolitics (Diary) Tuesday, December 28th at 10:34AM EDT (link)

Rather have 10,000 than 435. That way I KNOW whose a$$ to kick.

“So much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don’t even know that fire is hot.” George Orwell

“Ancient Rome declined because it had a Senate, now what’s going to happen to us with both a House and a Senate?” Will Rogers

When the American spirit was in its youth, the language of America was different: Liberty, sir, was the primary object. Patrick Henry

http://theprecinctproject.wordpress.com
Because the Republican Party is NOT going to fix the Republican Party.

http://americanamendment.com/
Because Washington is NOT going to fix Washington.