Colorado Weighs Proportional Electoral Votes
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, Aug. 16, 2004
DENVER A plan to scrap the winner-take-all system of
allocating electoral votes in Colorado is heading to the ballot in
November.
If passed, Amendment 36 would make Colorado the first state to
allocate electoral votes proportionately according to the popular
vote, rather than giving a winner all of the state's electoral
votes.
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Secretary of State Donetta Davidson said Friday that supporters
have gathered enough signatures to put the measure on the November
ballot.
If the proposal had been in place four years ago, Democrat Al
Gore would have earned enough electoral votes to go to the White
House.
Only two other states do not have winner-take-all systems of
casting electoral college votes. Nebraska and Maine give two votes
to the winner of each state, and remaining votes are cast to show
who won each congressional district.
Republican Gov. Bill Owens and Republican State Party Chairman
Ted Halaby have criticized the Colorado proposal, saying it would
lessen the state's clout in presidential elections. They warn that
candidates will ignore the state and its nine electoral votes if
the measure passes.
Julie Brown, campaign director for the Make Your Vote Count
effort that supports the measure, dismissed their concerns.
"It begs the question on which is more important: a two-hour
presidential stop at a tarmac at Denver International Airport or
true representation by the voters."
Katy Atkinson, a spokeswoman for the opposing Coloradans Against
a Really Stupid Idea, promised to challenge the measure if it
passes and it is applied in this year's presidential race.
The proposal's backers want it to take effect immediately,
before Colorado's electoral votes are cast in December.
"They are ripe for a court challenge on this," Atkinson said.
"If this is a close race like the one four years ago, we could be
thrown into a situation where we are the Florida of 2004. We'd be
the laughing stock of the country. All those Florida jokes would be
applied to Colorado."
State Sen. Ron Tupa, D-Boulder, tried unsuccessfully in 2001 to
change Colorado's electoral system. He said the new ballot
initiative was a good idea.
"It will give voters the unique opportunity to reform an
outdated electoral system that disenfranchises hundreds of
thousands of Colorado voters," he said.
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