ISBN:
9783642238192
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (XVIII, 426p, digital)
Series Statement:
SpringerLink
Series Statement:
Bücher
Parallel Title:
Buchausg. u.d.T. Belenky, Alexander S. Understanding the Foundations of the U.S. Presidential Election System
Keywords:
Distribution (Probability theory)
;
Public law
;
Constitutional law
;
Statistics
;
Law
;
Law
;
Distribution (Probability theory)
;
Public law
;
Constitutional law
;
Statistics
;
USA Präsident
;
Präsidentenwahl
;
Wahlrecht
;
Präsidentenwahl
;
Wahlrecht
Abstract:
Alexander S. Belenky
Abstract:
This is the first book on the U.S. presidential election system to analyze the basic principles underlying the design of the existing system and those at the heart of competing proposals for improving the system. The book discusses how the use of some election rules embedded in the U.S. Constitution and in the Presidential Succession Act may cause skewed or weird election outcomes and election stalemates. The book argues that the act may not cover some rare though possible situations which the Twentieth Amendment authorizes Congress to address. Also, the book questions the constitutionality of the National Popular Vote Plan to introduce a direct popular presidential election de facto, without amending the Constitution, and addresses the plan's 'Achilles' Heel.' In particular, the book shows that the plan may violate the Equal Protection Clause from the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. Numerical examples are provided to show that the counterintuitive claims of the NPV originators and proponents that the plan will encourage presidential candidates to 'chase' every vote in every state do not have any grounds. Finally, the book proposes a plan for improving the election system by combining at the national level the 'one state, one vote' principle - embedded in the Constitution - and the 'one person, one vote' principle. Under this plan no state loses its current Electoral College benefits while all the states gain more attention of presidential candidates. Alexander S. Belenky is the author of books and scientific articles in the fields of optimization and game theory and their applications in transportation, industry, agriculture, environmental protection, advertising, brokerage, auctioning, and U.S. presidential elections. He is the author of Operations Research in Transportation Systems: Ideas and Schemes of Optimization Methods for Strategic Planning and Operations Management published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 1998 and republished by Springer in 2010 which has been adopted by many leading American Universities. Also, he is the author of the books Extreme Outcomes of US Presidential Elections (2003), Winning the US Presidency: Rules of the Game and Playing by the Rules (2004), and How America Chooses Its Presidents (2007, 2009). He was an invited guest on radio and TV talk shows throughout the country in the course of the 2004 election campaign, and he was the invited Guest Editor of Mathematical Modeling of Voting Systems and Elections: Theory and Applications, a special edition of Mathematical and Computer Modelling (2008), Currently, Alexander S. Belenky is a tenured professor at the Department of Mathematics for Economics and a leading scientist at the Decision Choice and Analysis Laboratory at the National Research University Higher School of Economics in Moscow, Russia, and a visiting scholar at the MIT Center for Engineering Systems Fundamentals. He holds a Ph.D. degree in systems analysis and mathematics and a D.Sc. degree in applications of mathematical methods. His opinion pieces about voting systems have appeared in The Baltimore Sun, The Boston Globe, The Boston Herald, The Christian Science Monitor, The New York Times, The Plain Dealer, Providence Journal and in other newspapers.
Description / Table of Contents:
Understanding the Fundamentals of the U.S. Presidential; Contents; Preface; Introduction; Chapter 1 The constitutional originsof the election system; Chapter 2 Should the underlying concepts of the 1787 Great Compromise be honored?; Chapter 3 Stubborn numbers: how much of a say does the nation have in presidential elections?; 1. Unclear (fuzzy) election rules.; Chapter 4 What if? Constitutional puzzles, weird outcomes, and possible stalematesin presidential elections; 2. Weird (extreme) election outcomes
Description / Table of Contents:
The principle of unequally dividing the election power among thestates by allocating quotas of electors.Delegating the first attempt to elect a President and a Vice Presidentto a group of people appointed by the states of their residence (andby D.C. since the ratification of Amendment 23 of the Constitution).; Delegating to Congress both the authority to make the final decisionon electing a President in the Electoral College and the secondattempt to elect a President and a Vice President if the ElectoralCollege fails to elect either executive or both.
Description / Table of Contents:
The "winner-take-all" method of appointing electors in 48 states andin D.C.The principle of separately voting for President and for Vice Presidentin Congress.; 3. Election stalemates.; Chapter 5 "Winner-take-all:" is it as badas they paint it to be?; Chapter 6 Can the National Popular Vote plan succeed?; "Myths" about the U.S. Constitution.; Organizational challenges.; Chapter 7 When every voter gains and no state loses: can the "one person, one vote" and the "one state, one vote"principles coexist?; Chapter 8 How existing election rules may affect the structure of election campaigns
Description / Table of Contents:
ConclusionReferences; About Appendices; Appendix 1; I. Introduction; II. Some auxiliary remarks; III. The problem of finding the minimum fraction of the popular vote that can elect a President in the Electoral College when only two candidates are on the ballot in all the states and in D.C.; IV. The problem of finding the minimum fraction of the popular vote that can elect a President in the Electoral College when three candidates are on the ballots in at least one state and in D.C.; V. Concluding remarks; REFERENCES; Appendix 2; I. Introduction
Description / Table of Contents:
II. Four approaches to modelling the problem of allocating voting machinesIII. A mathematical model for calculating the size of the calling population in a precinct at a particular segment of time on Election Day [19].; IV. Basic result; V. A methodology of estimating the parameters of the queueing systemthat provides service to voters at a precinct in a county of astate.; 1. The neighborhood analysis.; 2. Estimating parameters of the queueing system.; VI. Concluding remarks.; REFERENCES; Appendix 3; I. Introduction; II. Basic Assertion [3].; III. Concluding remarks; REFERENCES; Appendix 4
Description / Table of Contents:
I. Introduction
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
DOI:
10.1007/978-3-642-23819-2
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