A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
(Full Story)
Search This Blog
Back to 500BC.
==========================
Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, November 26, 2016
Hillary Clinton. (Nikki Kahn/The Washington Post)Lawrence Lessig is a professor at Harvard Law School and the author of “Republic, Lost: Version 2.0.” In 2015, he was a candidate in the Democratic presidential primary.
By Lawrence Lessig November 24 at 7:25 PM
Conventional wisdom tells us that the electoral college requires that
the person who lost the popular vote this year must nonetheless become
our president. That view is an insult to our framers. It is compelled by
nothing in our Constitution. It should be rejected by anyone with any
understanding of our democratic traditions — most important, the
electors themselves.
The framers believed, as Alexander Hamilton put it,
that “the sense of the people should operate in the choice of the
[president].” But no nation had ever tried that idea before. So the
framers created a safety valve on the people’s choice. Like a judge
reviewing a jury verdict, where the people voted, the electoral college
was intended to confirm — or not — the people’s choice. Electors were to
apply, in Hamilton’s words, “a judicious combination of all the reasons
and inducements which were proper to govern their choice” — and then
decide. The Constitution says nothing about “winner take all.” It says
nothing to suggest that electors’ freedom should be constrained in any
way. Instead, their wisdom — about whether to overrule “the people” or
not — was to be free of political control yet guided by democratic
values. They were to be citizens exercising judgment, not cogs turning a
wheel.
Hillary Clinton spoke to supporters, Nov. 9, offering a message of thanks, apology and hope. Here are the key moments from that fervent address. (Sarah Parnass/The Washington Post)
So, do the electors in 2016 have such a reason?
Only twice in our past has the electoral college selected a president against the will of the people — once in the 19th century and once on the cusp of the 21st. (In 1824, it was Congress that decided the election for John Quincy Adams; likewise in 1876, it was Congress that gave disputed electoral college votes to Rutherford B. Hayes.)
In 1888, Benjamin Harrison lost the popular vote to Grover Cleveland but
won in the electoral college, only because Boss Tweed’s Tammany Hall
turned New York away from the reformer Cleveland (by fewer than 15,000
votes). In 2000, George W. Bush lost the popular vote by a tiny fraction
— half a percent — and beat Al Gore in the electoral college by an
equally small margin — less than 1 percent.
In both cases, the result violated what has become one of the most
important principles governing our democracy — one person, one vote. In
both cases, the votes of some weighed much more heavily than the votes
of others. Today, the vote of a citizen in
Wyoming is four times as powerful as the vote of a citizen in Michigan.
The vote of a citizen in Vermont is three times as powerful as a vote
in Missouri. This denies Americans the fundamental value of a
representative democracy — equal citizenship. Yet nothing in our
Constitution compels this result.
Yet that is not the question the electors must weigh as they decide how to cast their ballots. Instead, the question they must ask themselves is whether there is any good reason to veto the people’s choice.
They didn’t in 1888 — when Tammany Hall ruled New York and segregation was the law of the land. And they didn’t in 2000 — when in the minds of most, the election was essentially a tie. Those are plainly precedents against Hillary Clinton.
But the question today is which precedent should govern today — Tammany Hall and Bush v. Gore, or one person, one vote?
The framers left the electors free to choose. They should exercise that choice by leaving the election as the people decided it: in Clinton’s favor.

