No, each state does not have roughly equal influence in the House. House representation is doled out based on population. Furthermore, California has 50 electoral votes, while Montana has 1. I don't see anyone in the smaller states pissing and moaning about that, but it just happens to be the same situation they'd be in if the vote was a straight popular one.
That's not what I meant; I was referring to the fact that the electoral college gives each state the same amount of power in the election of the Presidency as it does in the House, since electoral votes are based on House seats. The Senate completes this structure, which tends to favor the smaller states, in contrast to the House and Presidency which favor the larger states.
With the technology we have today, yes it would. The only thing preventing it from working is this fetish that smaller states have for the electoral college. The electoral college was supposed to represent the popular vote. But there's no need for it anymore, since the popular vote can represent itself in a practical manner, where as in the 18th century, it could not.
No, the electoral college was part of the federal system designed by the Founders. It was
never meant to reflect the popular vote, it was meant to reflect the will of the states; the Presidency was never meant to be the massively powerful office that it is today. And of course smaller states like the electoral college, because it prevents them from being dominated by the heavily populated, urban states in the Presidential election.
The electoral college does nothing but add error margins to the final count. Any time you put in an extra step, you're going to increase your error. If we simply used these little things called computers, we could have a much cleaner election not riddled with subjectivity, like the current chad system, assuming that proper security precautions are taken, of course. But if the government is confident enough in the internet and 128-bit SSL for me to file my taxes online, then it should be good enough for the presidential election, as well.
Quite untrue; the electoral college merely contains vote fraud (which is inevitable, even with modern technology) to the swing states. In a direct election system, states with majorities would be induced to produce more votes for that majority, and election night would become even more than it has been in the past The Night of the Living Dead Democratic Voters. States with clear majorities won't bother with such vote fraud under the electoral college, because it won't matter; it doesn't matter if a candidate gets 51% or 99% of the popular vote in a state, he still wins those electoral votes.
The appeal of a direct election is also widely overstated; if I'm not mistaken, only three of the world's industrialized democracies have a purely direct election for the President, and for Russia that ended disastrously in 1996, with Boris Yeltsin winning the Presidency with only 36 percent of the vote. The electoral college discourages too many candidates from running, allowing one candidate to receive a clear electoral mandate. A direct election system, by contrast, would almost guarantee Presidents elected by the minority.