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In reply to the discussion: Does a nonproportional Senate and non-proportional, non-democratic Electoral College harm democracy? [View all]ManiacJoe
(10,138 posts)32. Excellent civics reminder.
The function of the Senate is anti-democratic by design.
While Senators are democratically elected, it's not meant to be a body that is representative of the people. The Senate was intended, from the get-go, to prevent population-heavy states from politically dominating less populous states. It was designed by the founders of this country to act as a counterweight to popular democracy.
While we now get to vote for our Senators (the fact that we originally weren't allowed to is another testament to the fact that it wasn't intended to be a democratic body), the role the Senate plays in government is essentially unchanged since the founding of this nation.
The House of Representatives was designed to represent the will of the people. The Senate was designed to represent the will of the States, preventing the will of the people from running unchecked. Preventing democracy from running unchecked.
Most people also forget that the President does not represent the people, he represents the collection of the states.
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Does a nonproportional Senate and non-proportional, non-democratic Electoral College harm democracy? [View all]
CreekDog
Feb 2014
OP
Rhetorical question in your headline, yes? At the moment, it's destroying us...
villager
Feb 2014
#1
Combine that with a non-proportional House through Gerrymandering and a non-proportional Judiciary
BlueStreak
Feb 2014
#2
The Repubs would control the Senate today if it was proportional due to the 2010 debacle.
LonePirate
Feb 2014
#3
if California had 12 Senators or 12% of the Senate it would be majority Republican?
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#7
Your original hypothetical implied a non-proportional Senate was not desirable.
LonePirate
Feb 2014
#12
yes: statewide elections for 12 different senators, 6 year terms which are staggered...
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#19
You seem to think that CA would elect all D Senators while the red states would not elect more Rs
LonePirate
Feb 2014
#24
Repubs have a better chance of electing one of these new CA senators than Dems do in TX
LonePirate
Feb 2014
#38
so i'm supposed to oppose a proportional or representative structure for the Senate because of...
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#40
i'm sure you would have said the same about the pointlessness of debating slavery
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#43
In what way is your fringe, very minority opinion on settled governance any way similar to the ...
LonePirate
Feb 2014
#50
Yes it does, if I were Holder I'd error on the side of preserving democracy vs letting GOP hamstring
uponit7771
Feb 2014
#4
and also by design: slavery, 3/5ths compromise, not letting women and blacks vote
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#6
The notion that the U.S. was designed to be "free and democratic" isn't supported by history.
Xithras
Feb 2014
#10
most parliamentary systems in democratic nations aren't based on states running elections
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#22
You basically had two different camps during the writing of the constitution
davidn3600
Feb 2014
#23
It was intended to be a slightly more democratic equivalent to the British House of Lords.
Xithras
Feb 2014
#15
yeah it makes sense, having checks and balances is overall a good thing even if not always
loli phabay
Feb 2014
#16
yet you seem to believe that some americans ie rural folks dont count. see how that works
loli phabay
Feb 2014
#35
so you're saying that rural roads are less funded that public transit in this country?
CreekDog
Feb 2014
#60
Hell, Senators weren't even elected when the omnicient "founding fathers" put this mess together
BlueStreak
Feb 2014
#18
Ask India, their Parliament is a modified version of the Westminster system (n/t)
Spider Jerusalem
Feb 2014
#47
Their problems are a result of a history of poverty and colonial exploitation...
Spider Jerusalem
Feb 2014
#51
I think it skews the Federal government disproportionately in favor of rural conservatives, yes.
Warren DeMontague
Feb 2014
#33
Hmm. Puerto Rico has the 29th largest population no voting member in the house
HereSince1628
Feb 2014
#44
Yes, I understand. If you look at it the nat. avg. iss rougly 720K citizens per elector
HereSince1628
Feb 2014
#54
Yeah, I hear that, too. Only thing is IMHO the E. College has less real-world impact
Warren DeMontague
Feb 2014
#57
I definitely think it leads to certain states, i.e. "swing"- having disproportionate influence
Warren DeMontague
Feb 2014
#65