Votes of black Americans ‘should count TWICE’ because they are ‘devalued compared to white people’, professor says
VOTES of black Americans “should be counted twice” because they are “devalued compared to white people,” according to a professor. Brandon Hasbrouck – an assistant professor at Washington and Lee University School of Law – proposed his idea in The Nation‘s column The Argument. Hasbrouck’s piece, which was published on Thursday, insists that “black voters […]
VOTES of black Americans “should be counted twice” because they are “devalued compared to white people,” according to a professor.
Brandon Hasbrouck – an assistant professor at Washington and Lee University School of Law – proposed his idea in The Nation‘s column The Argument.
According to Brandon Hasbrouck, black voters in America ‘are worth less than white voters’[/caption] Hasbrouck, pictured, slammed the Electoral College as a ‘core’ problem in the US voting system[/caption]Hasbrouck’s piece, which was published on Thursday, insists that “black voters in this country are worth less than white voters” and slammed the Electoral College as a “core” problem in the United States voting system.
He wrote: “Joe Biden won the Electoral College because black voters in Atlanta, Detroit, Milwaukee, and Philadelphia turned out in significant numbers.
“But even with overwhelming black support – 94 percent of Detroit voted for Biden! – the outcomes in Georgia, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania were worryingly close.”
Joe Biden was named the President-elect on November 7 – along with his running mate Kamala Harris being dubbed the nation’s Vice President-Elect as a result of the Electoral College vote.
Biden’s victory in critical swing states took him past the magical 270 electoral college vote mark after days of suspense.
Now, weeks later, Hasbrouck as revealed his disappointment in the Electoral College.
Voters are pictured in Atlanta, Georgia, to vote in a run off election for two US Senate seats[/caption]Presidential candidates are chosen by gaining more electoral college votes -also known as “electors.”
Each of the 50 US states and the District of Columbia (which is not part of any state) is allocated a proportion of the total of 538 electors, according to their population.
Hasbrouck wrote in his column: “One core problem is the Electoral College.
“Wyoming, which has just 580,000 residents and is 93 percent white, gets three electors because of its two senators and one representative in the House.
“By comparison, Georgia’s Fifth Congressional District – which includes Atlanta, has 710,000 residents, and is 58 percent Black – has no dedicated electors or senators and can only occasionally overcome the mostly white and conservative votes from elsewhere in the state.
“This devaluation of black votes allows our political system to ignore Black lives, and the consequences are devastating.”
The professor also blamed “unequal representation” as the reasoning behind “unequal health care outcomes.”
He also slammed the “design of the system.”
Early voting opened up in Georgia on December 14 for the US Senate runoffs[/caption]Hasbrouck explained: “The Constitution’s framers set up the Electoral College to protect the interests of slave states.
“Along with the Senate, the Electoral College was critical in the endurance of slavery and its continuation by other means.
“Abolishing this system would mean that ballots cast by black voters – or any voters, for that matter – would count the same.”
Hasbrouck believes that one way to amend the wrongs in the US voting system is by “double-counting ballots cast by all black residents.”
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He said double-counting black votes would restore electoral balance.
“The poisonous legacy of slavery applies to Black people regardless of when we or our ancestors arrived in this country,” Hasbrouck added.
“Vote reparations should also extend to Native Americans.”