A College That's Hard to Defend
Zycher’s arguments are seriously flawed. First, there is no basis for the assertion that the current system of creating battleground states encourages candidates to seek a broader form of geographic support. Rather, it tends to create smaller localized regional bases, just as the primary system creates odd patterns of local power. For example, issues of ethanol production are given disproportionate discussion and support in national politics, not because ethanol is such a good idea. It’s not. We’ve been investing in ethanol for years and it still costs more to produce than the energy it yields. Ethanol gets such support because of the unique power of Iowa, a corn-producing state, over the primary system. Candidates are well-advised to devise highly regionalized policy positions that mean very little to most of the country to appease Iowa – and to better their chances of winning the primaries.
Similarly, the Electoral College process requires candidates to focus on the highly regional issues of battleground states. For example, voters in New York and California are concerned about very important issues of special concern to their high-population densities - chief among them is security. And while the concerns of these behemoth states are local in nature, they have enormous impact on national life. Consider the effects on the national economy after the attacks in New York. But these issues are not fully discussed in the current process because New York and California are not battleground states. There is no need to talk about their issues.
So instead of talking about these vastly important issues, candidates are forced to focus on issues of particular concern to smaller battleground states like New Mexico, Ohio, and yes, Iowa. The presidency could be decided based on a candidate’s stance on ethanol - or any number of highly localized issues. The Electoral College process, by creating the concept of battleground states and red/blue states, forces candidates to be more localized in unimportant ways. Broad geographic support is important, but it is important to get right.
Second, as I’ve discussed before, the two-party system is fine, but it does not push candidates toward the center of the ideological spectrum. Rather, it pushes candidates to the center of their particular party’s ideological spectrum. We get Republicans in the mainstream of Republican values and Democrats in the mainstream of Democratic values. We do not get candidates in the mainstream of American values. No candidate on the extreme edge of either party is likely to get elected because our country is so evenly split right now.
Voters, as rational beings, are more likely to vote for the candidate who is closer to them in terms of ideology. They are also more likely to vote within their party if given a choice. But there are breaking points. If a Democratic candidate falls too far to the right, a fair portion of Democrats on the left either won’t vote (seeing no difference between Democrats and Republicans), or will vote for a third-party candidate with no chance of winning (who is closer ideologically to the voter), thus “giving” their vote to the Republicans. If a Democrat is too far to the left, a fair number of Democrats on the right will either not vote (seeing no point) or will vote for a Republican (who is now closer to the voter ideologically). The same, in reverse, is true of Republicans. Either way, it behooves candidates to fall within the middle spectrum of their own party's ideology. If you want MORE extreme elected officials who are further from the national mainstream, the two-party system is great.
Once you understand the flaws in Zycher’s arguments in favor of the Electoral college, his arguments against alternative methods fall apart. To achive the goals Zycher purports to extol – broad geographic support without too much regionalism and more mainstream candidates - the only method that actually achives both goals is the instant run-off election process.
One last thing about Zycher. He is a senior analyst for an organization committed to coming up with free-market solutions to problems. Nothing wrong with that. But in endorsing the Electoral College, Zycher is supporting a system that is the opposite of free market. Direct democracy is a simple and pure example of free market principles. The Electoral College is more akin to a highly regulated and subsidized market where people in certain battleground states are given a competitive leg-up through governmental interference. By endorsing the Electoral College, Zycher has revealed that supporting George Bush (who is only president because of the Electoral College) is more important to him than the basic principles of his organization. This is the same kind of fuzzy logic and lack of principles our conservative states-rights Supreme Court Justices displayed when they used the power of their federal government positions to interfere with Florida's right to conduct its recount according to its own procedures in 2000. I don't mind partisan opinions. I do mind when partisan opinions are disguised as principles.

