On Tue, Nov 14, 2000 at 01:00:02PM -0800, petro wrote:
The impression that I get is that in Merry Old England, voting is done by county, whereas in this country voting is done by district.
You are quite wrong.
For the benefit of those not familiar with the American system:
States (obviously) and counties have fixed boundaries, while voting districts are redrawn every 10 or so years to attempt to keep the population of each district relatively equivalent in population. At least that's the theory. What really happens is that since those in Power draw the lines, they attempt to draw the boundaries such that they maintain or gain power.
What you describe is the same as the system used in the UK. The system is now changing as the countries which make up the UK now have their own parliaments (of currently limited power). The stupidity of the current UK system is that Scottish MPs can vote on issues that influence the English, but English MPs can't vote on Scottish affairs. And if the left get their way the English will end up being ruled by the socialist super state that is the European Union. -- 1024/D9C69DF9 steve mynott steve@tightrope.demon.co.uk i'm gonna climb on the mountains of the moon and find the distant man waving his spoon