
Dead President-Elect What if Al Gore or George W. Bush got hit by a truck?
Posted Saturday, Oct. 21, 2000, at 1:00 AM ETA plane crashes or a ship sinks or a tire blows. We immediately ask how this happened and how future disasters might be prevented. Yet we do not ask similar questions when our election system suffers a near miss. In the wake of Monday's death of Missouri Gov. and U. S. Senate candidate Mel Carnahan only three weeks before Election Day, we should re-examine our presidential election system. On close inspection, it is a series of accidents waiting to happen.
Imagine, God forbid, that on the eve of the election, a presidential candidate dies or becomes incapacitated. Federal law mandates that all states choose their electors on the first Tuesday after Nov. 1. But if tragedy strikes in late October or early November, there will be insufficient time for the American people to process the tragedy and ponder their remaining electoral options.
National law fixes Election Day, but a patchwork of state laws regulates ballot access and counting. Most states would allow the national parties to designate new candidates; but in some election-eve scenarios, there might not be time for parties to deliberate properly before America votes. New ballots would need to be printed and absentee ballots revised. All this takes time.
Without some postponement, voters might not even be sure who they are voting for or how their votes will be counted by party leaders, state officials, and Congress (which officially counts electoral college votes). Suppose that Smith is running for president with Jones as his vice-presidential running mate. If Smith dies in early November, will a vote for the Smith-Jones ticket be counted as, in effect, a vote for Jones as president? Under current statutes, precedents, and party policies, the issue is far from clear—but voters are entitled to know the answers before they cast their votes. Moreover, under current law in many states, if 46 percent vote for Smith/Jones and 5 percent write in Jones, election officials would not add these votes together. Jones might lose the state even though 51 percent of the voters clearly picked him. This oddity arises because many states count votes by presidential/vice presidential ticket rather than directly by presidential candidate.
The importance of tickets creates further complications. Even if a party quickly converges on a new presidential nominee by elevating its vice-presidential candidate to the top spot, it will then need to fill the bottom spot. This will require vetting possible nominees. It, too, will take time to be done right. Things become even trickier if party leaders decide that the former vice-presidential nominee—perhaps a ticket-balancing sop to the party's losing wing—should not top the new ticket.
Unlike some European regimes, Americans vote for persons, not parties. Our votes for the presidency are among our most personal votes: For this office—unlike, perhaps, all others in our system—voters should never be asked to sign some blank check or endorse some blank slate with the bland promise that after the election, some party committee will sort everything out and tell them who they ended up voting for. We the voters need time to focus on the new presidential candidates—their names, their lives, their personal visions—and gain a comfort level with them before we cast our votes. With so much riding on the presidency domestically and internationally—and with no real chance for the people to correct a mistake until four long years have elapsed—we deserve an electoral endgame that reflects popular deliberation and choice, not grief and confusion.
To avert democratic train wrecks in future elections, we must change current laws. A sensible federal statute should provide that, in the event of autumn death or incapacity of a major presidential or vice-presidential candidate—as certified by the chief justice—the federal election date should be postponed by up to a month, allowing the necessary democratic deliberations to unfold properly. Each state should decide in advance whether it will postpone its statewide elections to coordinate with the delayed federal election or whether it prefers to hold two elections—the first in November for state races and the second a few weeks later for federal officials.
Election-eve deaths are not the only democratic accidents waiting to happen. If a winning candidate dies after the election but before the Electoral College meets, some state laws would apparently require electoral collegians to vote for him (with his running mate presumably taking office in January); but Congress, following a musty precedent, might well refuse to count these votes. After losing to Ulysses Grant in November 1872, presidential candidate Horace Greeley promptly died, but some electors from states that he carried in November nevertheless voted for him; Congress refused to treat these votes as valid. In Greeley's case, little turned on the issue—Grant had won the election—but the matter would be quite different if the Greeley precedent were extended so as to ignore a dead winner's votes and thus snatch the crown from his running mate. Once again, the people's will on Election Day might be thwarted by odd glitches that could easily be cured in advance by a clarifying statute enacted before any actual death occurs.
Another democratic nightmare: If something were to happen to both President Clinton and Vice President Gore, current law would name Rep. Dennis Hastert as president—and after him the nonagenarian Sen. Strom Thurmond—even though the American people in 1996 voted to give the Oval Office to Democrats, not Republicans. Indeed, there are compelling reasons to think that the current succession statute is itself unconstitutional: The Constitution gives Congress the power to pick which Cabinet officer may move into a vacant Oval Office, in effect enabling the president to name both his vice-presidential running mate and his backup Cabinet successor. But Congress in 1947 unconstitutionally and unwisely switched away from Cabinet succession by putting congressional barons—the House speaker and the Senate president pro tem—first in line, ahead of the secretaries of state and defense.
Last but not least of the democratic accidents waiting to happen: The man who loses the national popular vote next month might nonetheless win the electoral vote. If it doesn't happen next month, one day, statistically, it will. When it does, will the loser/winner have the requisite democratic legitimacy at home and abroad? If not, why are we waiting for this tire to blow rather than acting, via constitutional amendment, to fix the system before it crashes?
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Reader Comments from The Fray:
[Notes from the Fray Editor: We're raising our eyebrows a little at the relish for disaster shown in this Fray, the need to consider every possible level of unlucky chance that could happen, if they were all lawyers they couldn't be more precise. Judy Eastman's post, below, seemed to show solid good sense, logic, an attempt to keep calm: what a spoilsport you can hear her fellow-posters thinking.
DA disagrees that switching away from Cabinet succession was unconstitutional. Read about the possibility of an electoral college deadlock and the possible Gore-Cheney result. Whaddya know about election years ending in zero? (That's right--nothing good will come of them). A detailed suggestion on reforming the Electoral College came from Tim Lundberg. Andrew and Mark C sorted out what would happen in the event of a President dying between election and inaguration.]
Well, of course this is a serious issue, but is it a real one? Let's start with the assumption that Americans vote for a person and not a party: Raise hands everyone who would vote for George "Dubyah" Bush if he were (one of) the Reform Party candidate(s)!
Be fair: Most candidates need the support of their party. The entire primary system is designed to select candidates who enjoy the support of their party. Even at the detriment of the candidate's chances in a general election, for the party faithful who decided the primary are very different from the swing voters who are crucial to the outcome of a general election. If Americans voted for persons and not for parties, the current contest would probably be one between John McCain and Bill Bradley.
Therefore it is not that unreasonable that the vice-president-elect should take the place of the president-elect. If it is law after the election, then it should be acceptable before it.
And the effect of this problem on the credibility of U.S. elections is minimal, compared with the damage done by many other factors: The fact that so many potential voters don't vote, the fact that money is almost the decisive factor, the fact that not all Americans have an equal say in the primary process, the fact that the two big parties use their clout to exclude other candidates from the debates, and so on.
These issues of real importance should be dealt with first. Hypothetical problems can wait.
--Mutatis Mutandis
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We cannot legislate for every single possible contingency that could ever occur, although I'm sure there are folks willing to try. Somehow, if the "unthinkable" happened (a presidential candidate being killed, say in a plane crash, just before election day), I think we citizens and the country would survive just fine. Yes, the president is important and yes, the election is important, but do I think there would be a panic in the streets mentality? Hardly! Is it not possible in that unlikely event that Congress could pass emergency legislation postponing the election for a short but reasonable time? I'll bet it is
--Judy Eastman
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It is suggested that the possibility of a person becoming the president despite losing the popular vote (but gaining the majority of electoral votes) is in some way a mistake in our current system. This is not true. The rule that electoral votes determine the presidency exists because the framers wanted to balance the needs of the individual with the needs of each state. That is why membership in the House of Reps is based on state population but membership in the Senate is equal for all states (2 senators per state). The electoral votes designated to each state reflect exactly this reasoning (electoral votes = # of House of Reps + # of Senators for that state). If we are to suggest a change in the election of the president--that it should be based on popular votes--then we should be equally willing to change representation in the Congress such that membership in both houses is in proportion to the population of the states. It is likely that there would be a lot of opposition to this idea by those concerned with state rights. Such opposition seems reasonable.
--Deepak Malhotra
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You mention how one day, a presidential candidate may receive a popular majority (or plurality), yet lose the election in the electoral college. This has of course already happened, both in 1876 and in 1888 (Samuel Tilden and Grover Cleveland lost with a popular majority and plurality, respectively). I teach U.S. history in the 1850-1930 period, and of the 20 presidential elections in that time period the popular vote winner lost twice, while it easily could have happened in three more elections (Winfield Scott Hancock in 1880 could have won 40,000 more votes and become the popular winner without winning the electoral college, James Blaine could have done the same in 1884 with even fewer votes, and Charles Hughes would have won in 1916 with only 4,000 more votes in the right states, even though he lost the popular vote by almost 600,000).
During periods of highly competitive elections, the chance of electing a popular loser seems quite high... probability that it happens this year: at least 15-20 %.
--Knut Oyangen
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(10/24)