• Spanberger Signs Bill To Tie Virginia's Electoral Votes To California

    From Dem Election Fraud@election@fraud.com to alt.fraud, alt.politics.republicans, sac.politics,talk.politics.guns, talk.politics.misc on Fri Apr 17 11:52:59 2026
    From Newsgroup: talk.politics.misc

    Democrat Gov. Abigail Spanberger committed Virginia to the National
    Popular Vote Interstate Compact on Monday, which would tie Virginia’s Electoral College votes to those of California or another densely
    populated state even if Virginians vote the opposite way.

    The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact would “guarantee the
    Presidency to the candidate who receives the most popular votes in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.” There are now 18 states (and
    Washington, D.C.) signed on to the compact, which is not yet in effect
    since it has yet to meet the 270 electoral vote threshold. But if a few
    more states join the compact, Virginia (like every other state in the
    compact) would no longer award its Electoral College votes based on how Virginians vote. Instead, states would award their electoral votes to whichever candidate wins the national popular vote, regardless of how the individual state votes.

    Currently, 48 states (not including Maine and Nebraska) allocate all of
    their electoral votes to the candidate who wins the popular vote within
    the state, which, of course, is not always the same candidate who wins the popular vote nationally. The system was designed to ensure that candidates could not win on regional density alone, but rather would need a
    geographic balance. This mechanism forces candidates to take into consideration the varying interests, economies, and industries of all
    states, not just a few larger states.

    But the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact would effectively allow a handful of densely populated states, like California and New York, to
    dictate the outcome of the election despite both states having vastly different interests from states like Idaho, Nebraska, or Oklahoma.

    The founders understood that smaller states would need robust protections
    of their access to political representation, which is why the founders
    came up with the system in the first place. Such a system was designed to prevent the “tyranny of the majority,” as Madison warned. Alexander
    Hamilton defended the Electoral College in Federalist 68, arguing such a process was a safeguard against “cabal, intrigue, and corruption.”

    James Madison warned in Federalist No. 10 that under a “popular
    government,” a majority faction could “sacrifice to its ruling passion or interest both the public good and the rights of other citizens.”

    In fact, as The Federalist’s Shawn Fleetwood pointed out in these pages,
    the founders would likely have declined to ratify the Constitution itself
    in the absence of “such protections for smaller states.” But the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact undermines such protections and would
    leave so-called “flyover states” politically irrelevant and at the mercy
    of fellow citizens who may not have the same interests or needs.

    As Fleetwood noted, though, the reason Democrats are willing to commit
    their constituents to such a pact is that the Electoral College “deprives [Democrats] of the unbridled power to silence all opposition. There’s no
    need to waste time campaigning to the rubes in ‘flyover country’ if they
    can juice turnout in Democrat-heavy cities and states instead.”

    https://thefederalist.com/2026/04/15/spanberger-signs-bill-to-tie- virginias-electoral-votes-to-california/

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