Joun_Lord wrote:But arguably a popular vote disenfranchises just as many if not more because urban areas in Texas or California or where ever would carry more weight despite being only a small portion overall of the country.
This doesn't follow. Going by popular vote means a vote in New York City is worth exactly as much as a vote in Dayton, Ohio. NYC only has "more weight" in a popular vote system on account of it having the population of over 60 Daytons. Under the current system, though, Dayton has an almost immeasurable amount more weight than NYC, because it is located in one of the highly coveted swing states, while NYC is not.
I've mentioned this before, but the whole "if we go by popular vote people will only campaign in the big cities" argument is just flat out wrong. NYC is the biggest city in the US by a wide margin, and it has less than 3% of the total US population. Every city with at least 1 million people in it combined come out to just over 8%. If you combine the population of the 100 largest cities, you might get up around 25%.
Not only that, but as I said before when this came up, if your goal is to make candidates not campaign in the cities, the electoral college is not what you want to do. NYC is the most populous city in the country. When compared to the country as a whole, it has less than 3% of the total US population. But under the electoral college, as many people say, it's not one national election but 50 state elections, so we need to compare the cities to the population of the state they are in, instead of the country. By that measure, NYC is over 40% of New York State's population. In a hypothetical world where New York State is one of the deciding states in a Presidential election, NYC has massively more voting power under the electoral college than it would under a nationwide popular vote.
NYC is an extreme example, but it works out elsewhere, too. To use an example from a state that does swing elections, Columbus is the largest city in Ohio, and is estimated to be the 15th largest city in the country. It makes up about 0.2% of the US population. But it makes up about 7% of Ohio's population.
Not to mention, saying the electoral college was crafted to increase the voting power of smaller states is pretty much exactly like saying that the American Civil War was about states' rights. It is true in the most abstract sense possible, but it must be taken in historical context. The Civil War was about "states' rights", specifically the rights of states to have slavery. And the electoral college was crafted to increase the voting power of smaller states. It just so happens that the "smaller" states at that time were overwhelmingly slave states.