Worse, the potential is extremely high that the "popular vote" argument is based on a fraud and that Trump did in fact win the popular vote. True the Vote is embarking on a project to review votes nationwide for illegal voting by illegal aliens and other vote irregularities. Its intention is not to dispute or confirm this election, but to reveal possible systemic voter fraud and reveal who perpetrated it in hopes of stimulating debate and legislative action to prevent such a thing from happening again.Hermit wrote:Frankly, I am not impressed by people who say "should have been Hillary's win". They can say is: "If the election was determined directly by popular vote, i.e. without the intermediate step of the electoral college, Hillary would have won." And they can say: "The electoral college makes the election by the people unfair and therefore it should not exist." Contracting those two statements to "It should have been Hillary's win" is a step too far, for as you pointed out, all candidates were aware of the rules before they entered. Not only that, but neither the existence of the electoral college nor how the whole electoral system currently works were secrets kept from the voters. I bet they'd complain about it as much as Trump voters currently do, had the boot been on the other foot.Forty Two wrote:The usefulness of bringing up the point which you find to be so obvious is that people are declaring the election as a "should have been Hillary's win" because the popular vote went her way under the electoral college rules. The point I raises it that the outcome could reasonably have been different had the rules been different going in. We don't know. And, it's really not relevant to say that the popular vote went to Hillary this time, since that wasn't the operative figure.
Still, I don't see any use pointing out that the vote count may or may not have been different under a different system. The whingers will just make a minor adjustment to their complaint. "Clinton would have won with the votes she got, had it not been for the electoral college." Your point would have been safe to ignore as far as they concerned because you have no way of saying if Clinton would have been better off, worse off, or if there would have been any difference at all. That inability would have made your suggestion something not a million miles removed in appearance from a null hypothesis.Actually, I didn't, and I obviously still don't.Forty Two wrote:The usefulness of bringing up the point which you find to be so obvious
So, to the "Hillary won the popular vote" ideologists: We'll see down the road whether that remains true after all the votes have been verified for eligibility of the voter.