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Have your say in the US election

Published on September 24, 2008 · 7:43 am UK · 4 comments

in Communication, Politics, Society, Web

voteusa

A neat idea from The Economist concerning the forthcoming US presidential election:

The Economist has redrawn the electoral map to give all 195 of the world’s countries (including the United States) a say in the election’s outcome. As in America, each country has been allocated a minimum of three electoral-college votes with extra votes allocated in proportion to population size. With over 6.5 billion people enfranchised, the result is a much larger electoral college of 9,875 votes. But rally your countrymen—a nation must have at least ten individual votes in order to have its electoral-college votes counted.

If you’re interested in the workings of an American presidential contest – and let’s face it, the whole world is interested in this American election – The Economist’s Global Electoral College is a good way to understand some of the process by actually taking part, even if you’re not a US citizen with voting rights.

When I visited the website this morning and took the screenshot, above, Barack Obama was light years ahead of John McCain almost everywhere except Africa.

Voting closes at midnight UK time on November 1 after which The Economist will announce the winner.

Of course, you’re not really voting in the actual election. But it’s as close as you’ll get without being an American.

(Via journalism.co.uk)

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