General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: America will never solve its gun problem until it gets over its fetish for the Founding Fathers. [View all]krispos42
(49,445 posts)For example.
It's about solutions needing a level of customization on one level or another, I guess. I suspect there are intricacies and history that goes along with this. Remember, states are not just people, they are the resources of the land and water that goes with it.
Because we go state-by-state, the ratio of people to elected representative is going to vary to some extent. Since it's not practical to recreate the Senate so it's also a representative body, I'm trying to just minimize the variation.
Minnesota for its state legislature uses a system where there are 67 number of senate districts, and each senate district is divided into halves. Each district has a senator that serves for 4 years, and each district half has a representative that serves for 2 years. Each senator represents about 60k people, which I think is entirely reasonable.
That might work for us, but we'd have to entirely do away with the concept of the states getting representation as equals and simply lump two adjoining congressional districts together to form a senate district. This would mean that, for example, North and South Dakota would only have 1 senator, Wyoming and Montana would have one, etc.
Texas would get 18.
California would get 26, Oregon 2, and one senator would have a district in each state.\
That's a hell of a change, but it might work out.