The Electoral College has and will remain a vital tool that many just dont understand, its original intent was to deny a couple large areas of population to control the entire election. In the old days perhaps just 2 or 3 newspapers could be all thats needed to campaign and the entire mid-section of America would be ignored. This still is an issue as a small percentage of states with heavy population can still sway results, Liberals hate this because these areas in general are infested with very liberal folks with very liberal views, like it or not its about balance and its needed, without the College many states in our heartland would be completely ignored.
Chad- the fact that many don't understand it is one of the biggest
detriments to using it! For a democratic election to be effective it should be as simple as possible. The ultimate in simplicty is: 1) One person = One Vote, 2) Most Votes Wins.
I understand your point about less populous states being ignored, but does that mean we should swing totally the other side and have most of the most populous states ignored? Why should it be that the Democrats don't have to campaign in California or New York any more? Is it fair that the GOP almost automatically win Texas and many other Southern states?
During the final 6 weeks of the 2004 election the candidates spent 60% of their time and money in 4 states- Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Michigan. During this time they visited New York once, California twice, and spent no time in almost 25 states (and no money in a different subset of 25-30 states) including Texas, Illinois, Virginia, NJ, Georgia, and most of the mid-section of "flyover" states including Nebraska, Utah, and Oklahoma.
Forget about having to run 50 state campaigns, candidates today only have to seriously run 10 state campaigns. While the simplicity proposal I laid out above may not be the best solution, I don't believe we can make the claim that the current electoral college is the best way to run an election.