• PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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    3 hours ago

    I think the Senate would be fine if it was in charge of a Veto instead of having to also pass the legislation, also if it had a lot more senators to some multiple of 3 at a minimum.

    IE doing nothing is just letting everything pass automatically and that cooling pan shit is something senate leaders have to pursue actively with (qualified) majority support.

    My ideal procedure. House passes a law, Senate vetoes it with a majority meeting or beating the passing margin of the law in the house, but also representing a majority of all americans, house can override the veto by meeting or beating the population margin the senate’s Veto represented.

    You may note that there is no president involved in this process. That is because I believe the independent executive is an inherent threat to democracy and that it should be subject to complete erasure and power division to save the republic.

    • oyo@lemm.ee
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      59 minutes ago

      To achieve its originally intended purpose the Senate should only be able to legislate on interstate matters, not be an equal to the house.

      • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        60 seconds ago

        I’d say my idea is less about equality and more about difference in purpose.

        The Senate in my model only vets legislation, and even then, if they don’t do it within a reasonable time frame the law passes anyways, and even if they do take the issue up, it can only act by matching or beating the house’s vote to pass the law, and do so with a coalition representing a majority of all americans, so if there’s 3 senators per state, one californian senator would count for a third of California’s population towards this count, aaaaand just to make certain that we’re certain it isn’t becoming a cornfield court, while the senate can override by matching the house’s voting margin, the house can override by matching the population margin the Senate vetoed with.

        It’s a veto that a wise senate leader would only try to invoke if they knew it could make it stick, or if they felt what had arrived on desk was so egregious it was worth picking the fight over regardless of certainty. As opposed to right now where the Senate just never does anything because of filibusters. Now just sitting on their hands actively reduces their ability to intercept policy or nominations and the theoretical state of debate only lasts as long as until the bill automatically becomes to law for lack of a veto passing under the described conditions.

    • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      3 hours ago

      More senators gives more power to the smaller states.

      The whole idea is ass-backwards anyway. Assigning representation based on lines that were cooked up centuries ago over reasons that are mostly lost to time. It was a compromise to appease the southern Democratic Republicans who feared proportional representation meant they would get trampled on.

      And maybe they would. But maybe that also just means that they should. They were worried about tyranny of the majority (i.e. democracy), and now we have tyranny of the minority.

      • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        1 hour ago

        Just gonna skip right on past that reduced threshold to overturn the Senate veto, the having to act on everything they want to halt, and the qualified majority bits huh? Also how in the hell does more senators automatically make small states more powerful? Giving more voice to minorities within small states would technically undermine state level bigwigs trying to have a partisan lock on their senate delegations.

        Hawaii is a small state, DC would be a small state, Delaware and most of New England are small states. You really want a one off Republican Majority to be able to just smash Hawaiian autonomy and indigenous rights to pieces without any checks or balances?

        This model of the Senate is basically a parliamentary takeover of the role of head of state, only more powerful than the king of england in the sense that it’d be able to invoke the right of veto without instantly causing a constitutional crisis and sparking a revolution.

  • takeda@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    The senator limit would be ok, if not for the hard limit on representatives, which fucks over once again states with high population.

    • Cort@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Number of people per representative should be set based on the state with the lowest population. CA should have 68 reps as they have 68.5 times the population of Wyoming.

      • SmoothLiquidation@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        Honestly we should set it so Wyoming has like 5 reps and then use that as a baseline. Increase the total number of reps 10 times and make each district manageable for one person to campaign in.

        This would negate the problems with the electoral college and make gerrymandering much harder to pull off.

        • Fedizen@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          if we’re going to do that why even have districts and just do party list proportional voting to elect a state’s reps instead?

          • Revan343@lemmy.ca
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            3 hours ago

            Districts are nice in that you have a local representative beholden to you(ish) that you can bring issues to.

        • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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          7 hours ago

          Yeah, that would mean getting rid of the Reappointment Act of 1929 and implementing the proposed Wyoming Rule

    • collapse_already@lemmy.ml
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      7 hours ago

      I don’t think the Senator limit is okay. For instance, the city of Houston has more population than North and South Dakota combined (4 senators) and gets zero senators (Houston is consistently Democrat and is “represented” by two Republicans that do nothing for them).

      • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 hours ago

        That’s the point of the Senate: land gets equal votes

        The house is for population, but we fucked it by capping the total number of reps you can have there

        • collapse_already@lemmy.ml
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          6 hours ago

          Land doesn’t have rights. It’s just gerrymandering by another name. The problem works both ways. The rural fuckheads in California are also unrepresented. Harris County (where Houston is located) is larger than Rhode Island. Where is their representation? Why do the Dakotas (4 senators for virtually no population) get more political power than California or Texas? Houston, Dallas, Austin, and San Antonio get no representation despite a huge amount of population. Rural Californians get no representation despite outnumbering the Dakotas and Wyoming.

          • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            6 hours ago

            Land doesn’t have rights

            I agree, but the point is to have a section of the government where the 50 disparate governments that make up our union have equal say. This tends to get simplified to “land gets 2 votes” because the other part of Congress is population based

            Where is their representation

            In the house, as I said already. Also, their 2 senators are part of their representation, they’re still part of the state

            Why do the Dakotas (4 senators for virtually no population) get more political power than California or Texas?

            Because the house has a limit on members. The senate is literally equal by design

            Your issue seems to be a lack of understanding of how our legislative branch works because your complaints are all root issues of the House of Representatives and not the senate

            • collapse_already@lemmy.ml
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              6 hours ago

              I agree with your House argument, but I strongly believe that the design of the Senate was a major fuck-up. Senators are far more powerful than representatives, and I get none. A single house member cannot torpedo legislation the way a Senator can. North Dakota (population 780k) gets two. The 4.7M people in Harris County get none. That is a poor design.

              • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                6 hours ago

                and I get none

                Only if you’re not an American or live in DC

                (population 780k) gets two. The 4.7M people in Harris County get none. That is a poor design

                Again the people in Harris county get 2 senators as their state senators represent them. And, again, senators do not represent based on population as that is the job of the house

                Senators are far more powerful than representatives

                Entirely irrelevant as they represent different things. Your representatives represent a portion of your population while your senators represent your state as a whole. The entire point of separating the state and population representation is to allow more perspectives when legislating: the house gives a perspective from closer to the people, the senate from a broader view

                Again, it seems you fundamentally don’t understand the split between house and Senate, why it exists and what it does to our governing system

                • Pennomi@lemmy.world
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                  5 hours ago

                  It’s obvious why the Senate exists historically, and it’s also obvious that it’s inherently undemocratic.

    • BaldManGoomba@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      100% agree with this we limited congress to the size of a building for some stupid reason

      Second conversation. Why are some states large and others big shouldn’t we chop them up more?

      • greenskye@lemm.ee
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        3 hours ago

        Massively agree on the states issue. The original idea was a bunch of little countries that only shared a handful of federal powers. That concept has completely fallen apart and now we’re just an extremely poorly organized country with wildly different sized regions.

        We either need to break every state into roughly the same size or we need to start merging too small states together until we have a collection of California sized states to manage.

        For many people ‘their state’ has little meaning to them beyond sports teams and food trends. They have extremely low interest or engagement in state politics which is a major problem.

        But this is an impossible dream, so we’re pretty much stuck with this horrible arrangement.

  • Monstrosity@lemm.ee
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    5 hours ago

    Californians are welcome to try to split into multiple states if they would like more Senators.

      • Monstrosity@lemm.ee
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        4 hours ago

        Really? Please explain. Like, I get the DEI joke, but the fact all these little states are red isn’t some law of the Universe. They have been blue and can be again.

        Unless I’m missing some deeper joke? Apparently I am unless the down votes are just circlejerking.

        EDIT: Maybe you all think the Senate should be determined by population? If so, that’s what the House is for. Uncap it.

        • Zannsolo@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          The house and electoral college need to be tied directly to population. It’s already a clown fest give California 65 reps to Wyoming’s one

        • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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          3 hours ago

          It’s not that it should be by population. It’s that the idea of the senate itself is outdated.

          Now the cities are the source of almost all of America’s wealth, power, education, and population, but they are forced to bend the knee to a tiny portion of the country. The whole system is way out of wack.

          Carving up California into more states wouldn’t fix that, as it would still put more power into fewer hands.

  • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    This is a pithy retort, but it does raise a disturbing question.

    Why do Republicans dominate in smaller and more rural states?

    • chuckleslord@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Urban areas tend towards D, rural tends toward R. Smaller population states have smaller, less populous urban areas, thus the discrepancy.

      Why? My theory is that smaller communities can force out opposition, so they tend to have more uniform ideas (trends towards tradition) whereas larger communities have to compromise to make a healthy community, meaning more diversity of ideas and more empathy towards traditionally counter-culture groups.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        The brightest red state in the Union is Wyoming, a state with virtually no history of slavery.

        The second reddest is West Virginia, a state that exists entirely because of its abolitionist popular revolt against the slave owning rich men from Richmond.

        • SquirtleHermit@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          You’re not wrong (cherry picking a little though), and I get that there is more nuance and some exceptions to the generalization. But there certainly is a lot of overlap between Slave Owning and Republican States. Enough that one would be justified in at least wondering if there was a correlation.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            8 hours ago

            But there certainly is a lot of overlap between Slave Owning and Republican States.

            Only in the last forty years. These used to be staunchly Dixiecrat territories prior to the Southern Strategy.

            But I might point you to a different map.

            A huge part of the D/R switch under Nixon/Reagan came through Gulf Coast O&G tyremoveds. That’s what gets us Wyoming and W. Virginia as bright red. It’s why Pennsylvania - home of the Gettysburg address along with some of the fiercest abolitionist activists and civil rights organizations - into the purple category.

            The degree to which the country has become a Petro-State has revolutionized politics domestically.

            So long as that industry endures, the GOP-aligned land barons are going to have all the money they need for revanchist political projects.

    • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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      8 hours ago

      because rural areas correlate with less educated populations, and people who have less education tend to vote Republican.

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        rural areas correlate with less educated populations

        Huntsville, Alabama is one of the reddest corners of the reddest states in the country. It has the highest per capita populations of rocket scientists in the world.

        • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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          5 hours ago

          Huntsville, Alabama is not rural. It’s the most highly populated city in Alabama. I’m not claiming that there are not intelligent people who are full of hate that support Republican policies, nor am I claiming there are no cities which support Republicans. The question was why do rural areas typically vote Republican.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            5 hours ago

            It’s the most highly populated city in Alabama.

            Then why does it have a Republican mayor? Urban + Educated should equal Democrat, right?

            The question was why do rural areas typically vote Republican.

            I would argue that it isn’t simply rural areas that trend Republican but mineral rich areas with exceptionally large wealth gaps that tend to have powerful GOP fundraising operations.

            • djsoren19@yiffit.net
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              5 hours ago

              Your example describes about one percent of rural America. How does your theory hold up when applied to areas that are predominantly a service or agricultural economy? Where are these powerful GOP fundraising operations, because the party has been pretty notoriously hemorhaging campaign funds for awhile now.

              While those conditions do allow for authoritarian regimes to maintain strength in third-world countries, they do not apply one to one to the U.S. In fact, they don’t apply at all, because our economy is structured very differently to those countries.

              • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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                4 hours ago

                How does your theory hold up when applied to areas that are predominantly a service or agricultural economy?

                The Nevada service sector is the heart of the Democratic vote in that state, just as one data point. Similarly, if you go out to California or New York, you’ll find far more service sector democrats than white collar professionals. And where do you think all those Mississippi Democrats are coming from if not the agricultural industry? Millions of African American and Latino ag workers turn out for the Ds every year.

                While those conditions do allow for authoritarian regimes to maintain strength in third-world countries, they do not apply one to one to the U.S.

                Wyoming, Idaho, Montana, the Dakotas, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Utah, Kansas, Colorado, Texas - show me a mineral rich state and I’ll show you a right-wing mega-millionaire (maybe even a billionaire or four) bankrolling the bulk of the conservative political scene.

                The US is a hodgepodge of municipal and state authoritarian regimes and has been practically since its founding. With the exception of the Lincoln-era Abolitionist movement, it took us until the Great Depression to get a popular brand of politics meaningfully decoupled from some sponsored industry. Even then, its flaky and hesitant and prone to being co-opted.

                But you’re fooling yourself if you think we haven’t brought our imperialist practices home to the core. Every dirty trick and bloody fist you’ve seen employed abroad has a parallel back home - often with an individual or organization that tried it first in one place before importing or exporting it to another.

          • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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            6 hours ago

            Look up the definition of the word “outlier”

            Is it an outlier or a counterfactual?

            I could also point at the Federalist Society or the Heritage Foundation. No shortage of conservative intellectuals in these circle. Plenty of conservatives in business schools, law schools, and medical colleges. And as red states try to purge their academic institutions of “marxist” liberals, we’re seeing a rising tide of conservatives as university faculty, staff, and senior administrators - virtually all with graduate level degrees.

            On the flip side, the SEIU is full of liberal democrats despite their members rarely having more than a high school diploma. The service sector is flush with low-education liberal voters. The vocational trades are flush with liberal voters. As are agricultural workers, particularly in states like California, Arizona, Georgia, and Florida.

            This isn’t a good litmus test for determining ideological bias.

        • czech@lemm.ee
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          7 hours ago

          Huntsville imported 1000+ Nazi scientists to work on rockets in the 50’s. That may explain the outlier.

    • Baguette@lemm.ee
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      7 hours ago

      There’s a lot of knowledge drain in republican states. People who go to university and lean left usually move out of the state, for 1. Being closer to like minded people 2. Lots of jobs and opportunities exist purely in cities

      Basically people dont usually stay in red states if they lean blue

      • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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        3 hours ago

        And then nobody wants to move back. At best you’ve got some purple cities like Austin starting to shift blue, but even then. I was in Austin for a few days this spring. I was infatuated. Started looking at home listings. Then I realized I’d be living in Texas. Who the hell wants that?

      • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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        5 hours ago

        People who go to university and lean left usually move out of the state

        That’s as much a part of the employment prospects as anything. States with large industrial and commercial centers tend to end up with the old “Blueberries in the Tomato Soup” effect. Austin, Houston, and increasingly Dallas in Texas, for instance. Atlanta in Georgia. Tampa and Tallahassee in Florida.

        Basically people dont usually stay in red states if they lean blue

        Some of the most populous states in the country still tilt red. Florida and Texas most notably, but Pennsylvania and Ohio and Georgia and North Carolina as well.

        If the state has a lucrative industry, people move there regardless of the prevailing state ideology. That’s one thing Republicans do tend to get right. Attracting big corporate HQs to your state can make up for a lot of your shitty revanchist social policies.

        • Ashelyn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 hours ago

          Texas is gerrymandered to shit, and employs pretty nasty voter suppression tactics in populous (see: blue) counties by having very few polling stations per capita in those areas and making it a crime to give water/food to people waiting in line to vote. Big Texas cities are blue for the most part (maybe a few exceptions in the DFW area)

          If you look at pretty much any of the cities within Texas on the latest map, you can see that they consolidate the core of the city into one or two solid blobs, then split the rest out to be diluted by rural areas. See Dallas/Tarrant County, Travis County, Bexar County, and Harris County for the most obvious cases of these.

          https://redistricting.capitol.texas.gov/docs/88th_Senate_Tabloid_2024_05_20.pdf

          On a population level, Texas is basically a blue state held hostage by a red state administration.

          • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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            2 hours ago

            Yeah. And the problem is that that won’t change unless blue people move outside the cities and into the rural areas. And most have absolutely no desire to do so. Those that do, have no desire to be politically isolated.

            • Ashelyn@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              2 hours ago

              You’re telling me that the solution to systemic voter suppression is a massive urban exodus to spread out the voting population until it’s homogenous?

              That’s the solution, instead of I dunno, forcing the Texas government to stop suppressing voters?

              • JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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                2 hours ago

                Well yeah, do that too. But as long as we’re weighing votes based on land, Texas will remain a red state.

                Fixing voter suppression tactics might help federal elections. Probably just Senate, actually. But state office elections…there are far more red counties and towns than there are blue cities and towns. And somehow that matters.