Census boycott for political purposes
It occurred to me that if one is a supporter of X party living in a far Y state, one might cast an indirect vote against Y in the house and presidential races by not taking part in the census. Due to apportionment, if there were enough boycotters, the state would lose electors and eventually representatives.
Besides the potential personal ramifications (e.g. a fine under US title 13), how might this backfire in other ways?
united-states
add a comment |
It occurred to me that if one is a supporter of X party living in a far Y state, one might cast an indirect vote against Y in the house and presidential races by not taking part in the census. Due to apportionment, if there were enough boycotters, the state would lose electors and eventually representatives.
Besides the potential personal ramifications (e.g. a fine under US title 13), how might this backfire in other ways?
united-states
1
Why would any group attempt this (possibly illegal) convoluted method of gaining weak indirect influence, when they can get the stronger direct influence without such a boycott ? If you can muster such a large support base as this boycott would require you could directly influence elections and policy by lobbying. Your idea seems like using a hammer to crack a nut when you already own a nut cracker.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 2:30
2
@StephenG this same argumemt can be made against the personal act of voting.
– Scott
Nov 21 at 2:35
1
I don't see how you can make the same argument for voting. Voting is legal and a right you already have that exercises direct impact on who gets elected. Mass voting by groups is legal and powerful and may even give your group the ability to control or at least strongly influence who the candidates are for any post. Your proposal is indirect, breaks the law and you loose the ability to lobby as a group (or even to put candidates up a a group as you could be said to have acted unlawfully as a group to control the electoral process). I don't see any comparison.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 5:05
1
@StephenG I didn't say that all possible arguments could be made against voting. I said that the argument of your first comment could be. :)
– Scott
Nov 21 at 12:45
add a comment |
It occurred to me that if one is a supporter of X party living in a far Y state, one might cast an indirect vote against Y in the house and presidential races by not taking part in the census. Due to apportionment, if there were enough boycotters, the state would lose electors and eventually representatives.
Besides the potential personal ramifications (e.g. a fine under US title 13), how might this backfire in other ways?
united-states
It occurred to me that if one is a supporter of X party living in a far Y state, one might cast an indirect vote against Y in the house and presidential races by not taking part in the census. Due to apportionment, if there were enough boycotters, the state would lose electors and eventually representatives.
Besides the potential personal ramifications (e.g. a fine under US title 13), how might this backfire in other ways?
united-states
united-states
asked Nov 20 at 9:03
Scott
17816
17816
1
Why would any group attempt this (possibly illegal) convoluted method of gaining weak indirect influence, when they can get the stronger direct influence without such a boycott ? If you can muster such a large support base as this boycott would require you could directly influence elections and policy by lobbying. Your idea seems like using a hammer to crack a nut when you already own a nut cracker.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 2:30
2
@StephenG this same argumemt can be made against the personal act of voting.
– Scott
Nov 21 at 2:35
1
I don't see how you can make the same argument for voting. Voting is legal and a right you already have that exercises direct impact on who gets elected. Mass voting by groups is legal and powerful and may even give your group the ability to control or at least strongly influence who the candidates are for any post. Your proposal is indirect, breaks the law and you loose the ability to lobby as a group (or even to put candidates up a a group as you could be said to have acted unlawfully as a group to control the electoral process). I don't see any comparison.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 5:05
1
@StephenG I didn't say that all possible arguments could be made against voting. I said that the argument of your first comment could be. :)
– Scott
Nov 21 at 12:45
add a comment |
1
Why would any group attempt this (possibly illegal) convoluted method of gaining weak indirect influence, when they can get the stronger direct influence without such a boycott ? If you can muster such a large support base as this boycott would require you could directly influence elections and policy by lobbying. Your idea seems like using a hammer to crack a nut when you already own a nut cracker.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 2:30
2
@StephenG this same argumemt can be made against the personal act of voting.
– Scott
Nov 21 at 2:35
1
I don't see how you can make the same argument for voting. Voting is legal and a right you already have that exercises direct impact on who gets elected. Mass voting by groups is legal and powerful and may even give your group the ability to control or at least strongly influence who the candidates are for any post. Your proposal is indirect, breaks the law and you loose the ability to lobby as a group (or even to put candidates up a a group as you could be said to have acted unlawfully as a group to control the electoral process). I don't see any comparison.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 5:05
1
@StephenG I didn't say that all possible arguments could be made against voting. I said that the argument of your first comment could be. :)
– Scott
Nov 21 at 12:45
1
1
Why would any group attempt this (possibly illegal) convoluted method of gaining weak indirect influence, when they can get the stronger direct influence without such a boycott ? If you can muster such a large support base as this boycott would require you could directly influence elections and policy by lobbying. Your idea seems like using a hammer to crack a nut when you already own a nut cracker.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 2:30
Why would any group attempt this (possibly illegal) convoluted method of gaining weak indirect influence, when they can get the stronger direct influence without such a boycott ? If you can muster such a large support base as this boycott would require you could directly influence elections and policy by lobbying. Your idea seems like using a hammer to crack a nut when you already own a nut cracker.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 2:30
2
2
@StephenG this same argumemt can be made against the personal act of voting.
– Scott
Nov 21 at 2:35
@StephenG this same argumemt can be made against the personal act of voting.
– Scott
Nov 21 at 2:35
1
1
I don't see how you can make the same argument for voting. Voting is legal and a right you already have that exercises direct impact on who gets elected. Mass voting by groups is legal and powerful and may even give your group the ability to control or at least strongly influence who the candidates are for any post. Your proposal is indirect, breaks the law and you loose the ability to lobby as a group (or even to put candidates up a a group as you could be said to have acted unlawfully as a group to control the electoral process). I don't see any comparison.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 5:05
I don't see how you can make the same argument for voting. Voting is legal and a right you already have that exercises direct impact on who gets elected. Mass voting by groups is legal and powerful and may even give your group the ability to control or at least strongly influence who the candidates are for any post. Your proposal is indirect, breaks the law and you loose the ability to lobby as a group (or even to put candidates up a a group as you could be said to have acted unlawfully as a group to control the electoral process). I don't see any comparison.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 5:05
1
1
@StephenG I didn't say that all possible arguments could be made against voting. I said that the argument of your first comment could be. :)
– Scott
Nov 21 at 12:45
@StephenG I didn't say that all possible arguments could be made against voting. I said that the argument of your first comment could be. :)
– Scott
Nov 21 at 12:45
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
This is a bad idea for two reasons: it'll cause a decrease in state funding for where you live, and it may be tricky to actually cause your preferred party to get that representative/elector.
First, there are definitely other ways it would backfire, since census data isn't only used for apportioning representatives. It is also used for determining where federal and state funding should go:
How Our Data Are Used
...
To distribute more than $675 billion in federal funds to local, state and tribal governments each year.
Census data informs how states and communities allocate funding for:
Neighborhood improvements
Public health
Education
Transportation
Much more
If a large group of people of some political party in some state boycotted the census and it wasn't corrected, then that state would receive a smaller portion of federal funding, which would probably be spread fairly evenly over other states (i.e., both Party X and Y in other states benefit).
However, state funding for roads, hospitals, schools, etc. would only be diverted away from areas where the Party X boycotters are concentrated, to the benefit of Party Y supporters as they would receive a portion of the diverted funding.
Second, if you want a deep Y state to lose a representative, presumably you want that representative to go to a Party X state in order to represent the party you prefer. However, there is no guarantee that the representative wouldn't just go to another deep Y state.
After a census, representatives are reapportioned based on a formula intended to appropriate representation. The gist of it is that each state starts with 1 representative, and then the next 385 are given one at a time to states based on a ration between population and representatives it was already given. Here's the order of apportion for the last census.
So, not only would you need to get enough people from some party in some state to boycott the census and drop that state out position for what would have been its final representative, you wouldn't really help your party unless the new order of apportion would result in your party getting that extra representative.
Someone with a political science or mathematics degree (or just some spare time) might be able to calculate which states and how many boycotters are needed to give a new apportionment order that helps one party, but I can almost guarantee one thing: if tens of thousands of Party X voters suddenly disappeared from a deep Y state, somebody's going to notice and try to correct it.
3
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
7
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
3
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
1
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
|
show 2 more comments
Getting anywhere close to enough traction to even have an effect is a big hurdle. The average house seat represents 700,000 people, this is the upper bound for the number of people required to boycott a census. Though in the right state the required number can be drastically lower, 15,734 people could have moved a seat from Minnesota to North Carolina in 2010. If you manage to get enough people to all boycott and cause your state to lose a seat, the next problem is that it may end up being granted to a state you disagree with as much or more. The apportionment process grants seats to try and keep all states as close as possible for number of people per representative.
If your state has more than one representative the next problem could occur in the redistricting process. By boycotting the census you will cause whatever district you become a part of to grant less representation to everyone in it than intended, this disenfranchise you neighbors to some extent. There is also the possibility that the resulting districts will be drawn unfavorably for your goals or that a district though to lean in one direction actually lean more in the opposite direction. At the state level it would be a much larger impact as state representative districts could be drawn in ways that turn you in to an extreme minority further polarizing your state further away from your beliefs.
add a comment |
Interestingly enough, there's already a great deal of nonresponse in the census, they've calculated the Wave 1 nonresponse rate has grown to nearly 20% from 5%. This nonresponse bias is "corrected" by weighting those who did respond. The census already knows of your existence using administrative records (another way they correct for nonresponse) so apportionment likely wouldn't change but research that relies on your response (economic data, housing data, education data) that heavily influences government spending would be.
Fun fact: It's also a federal crime to not respond to the census, although it seems the government hasn't prosecuted anyone since the 1960 census.
add a comment |
Note that your boycott may be ineffective. The census bureau tries to correct for missing or inaccurate data in a process called imputation.
In addition to this being illegal, I also think it undermines the democratic system in much the same way as voter fraud and that harms everyone.
If you really are determined, you could actually move to a state in which you agree with the majority. You just need to establish usual residence there on census day (1 April 2020). That way your small contribution to apportionment will be transferred to that state in a legal fashion.
add a comment |
Remember also that if Party X won the House seat, there's a good chance that Party X controls the state legislature which controls drawing Congressional districts. So let's say you're successful in reducing the number of districts by 1. It's highly likely the redrawn district will favor Party X. Thus you would (in theory) help the party you want to harm, at least in the short term.
1
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "475"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpolitics.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f35491%2fcensus-boycott-for-political-purposes%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is a bad idea for two reasons: it'll cause a decrease in state funding for where you live, and it may be tricky to actually cause your preferred party to get that representative/elector.
First, there are definitely other ways it would backfire, since census data isn't only used for apportioning representatives. It is also used for determining where federal and state funding should go:
How Our Data Are Used
...
To distribute more than $675 billion in federal funds to local, state and tribal governments each year.
Census data informs how states and communities allocate funding for:
Neighborhood improvements
Public health
Education
Transportation
Much more
If a large group of people of some political party in some state boycotted the census and it wasn't corrected, then that state would receive a smaller portion of federal funding, which would probably be spread fairly evenly over other states (i.e., both Party X and Y in other states benefit).
However, state funding for roads, hospitals, schools, etc. would only be diverted away from areas where the Party X boycotters are concentrated, to the benefit of Party Y supporters as they would receive a portion of the diverted funding.
Second, if you want a deep Y state to lose a representative, presumably you want that representative to go to a Party X state in order to represent the party you prefer. However, there is no guarantee that the representative wouldn't just go to another deep Y state.
After a census, representatives are reapportioned based on a formula intended to appropriate representation. The gist of it is that each state starts with 1 representative, and then the next 385 are given one at a time to states based on a ration between population and representatives it was already given. Here's the order of apportion for the last census.
So, not only would you need to get enough people from some party in some state to boycott the census and drop that state out position for what would have been its final representative, you wouldn't really help your party unless the new order of apportion would result in your party getting that extra representative.
Someone with a political science or mathematics degree (or just some spare time) might be able to calculate which states and how many boycotters are needed to give a new apportionment order that helps one party, but I can almost guarantee one thing: if tens of thousands of Party X voters suddenly disappeared from a deep Y state, somebody's going to notice and try to correct it.
3
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
7
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
3
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
1
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
|
show 2 more comments
This is a bad idea for two reasons: it'll cause a decrease in state funding for where you live, and it may be tricky to actually cause your preferred party to get that representative/elector.
First, there are definitely other ways it would backfire, since census data isn't only used for apportioning representatives. It is also used for determining where federal and state funding should go:
How Our Data Are Used
...
To distribute more than $675 billion in federal funds to local, state and tribal governments each year.
Census data informs how states and communities allocate funding for:
Neighborhood improvements
Public health
Education
Transportation
Much more
If a large group of people of some political party in some state boycotted the census and it wasn't corrected, then that state would receive a smaller portion of federal funding, which would probably be spread fairly evenly over other states (i.e., both Party X and Y in other states benefit).
However, state funding for roads, hospitals, schools, etc. would only be diverted away from areas where the Party X boycotters are concentrated, to the benefit of Party Y supporters as they would receive a portion of the diverted funding.
Second, if you want a deep Y state to lose a representative, presumably you want that representative to go to a Party X state in order to represent the party you prefer. However, there is no guarantee that the representative wouldn't just go to another deep Y state.
After a census, representatives are reapportioned based on a formula intended to appropriate representation. The gist of it is that each state starts with 1 representative, and then the next 385 are given one at a time to states based on a ration between population and representatives it was already given. Here's the order of apportion for the last census.
So, not only would you need to get enough people from some party in some state to boycott the census and drop that state out position for what would have been its final representative, you wouldn't really help your party unless the new order of apportion would result in your party getting that extra representative.
Someone with a political science or mathematics degree (or just some spare time) might be able to calculate which states and how many boycotters are needed to give a new apportionment order that helps one party, but I can almost guarantee one thing: if tens of thousands of Party X voters suddenly disappeared from a deep Y state, somebody's going to notice and try to correct it.
3
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
7
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
3
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
1
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
|
show 2 more comments
This is a bad idea for two reasons: it'll cause a decrease in state funding for where you live, and it may be tricky to actually cause your preferred party to get that representative/elector.
First, there are definitely other ways it would backfire, since census data isn't only used for apportioning representatives. It is also used for determining where federal and state funding should go:
How Our Data Are Used
...
To distribute more than $675 billion in federal funds to local, state and tribal governments each year.
Census data informs how states and communities allocate funding for:
Neighborhood improvements
Public health
Education
Transportation
Much more
If a large group of people of some political party in some state boycotted the census and it wasn't corrected, then that state would receive a smaller portion of federal funding, which would probably be spread fairly evenly over other states (i.e., both Party X and Y in other states benefit).
However, state funding for roads, hospitals, schools, etc. would only be diverted away from areas where the Party X boycotters are concentrated, to the benefit of Party Y supporters as they would receive a portion of the diverted funding.
Second, if you want a deep Y state to lose a representative, presumably you want that representative to go to a Party X state in order to represent the party you prefer. However, there is no guarantee that the representative wouldn't just go to another deep Y state.
After a census, representatives are reapportioned based on a formula intended to appropriate representation. The gist of it is that each state starts with 1 representative, and then the next 385 are given one at a time to states based on a ration between population and representatives it was already given. Here's the order of apportion for the last census.
So, not only would you need to get enough people from some party in some state to boycott the census and drop that state out position for what would have been its final representative, you wouldn't really help your party unless the new order of apportion would result in your party getting that extra representative.
Someone with a political science or mathematics degree (or just some spare time) might be able to calculate which states and how many boycotters are needed to give a new apportionment order that helps one party, but I can almost guarantee one thing: if tens of thousands of Party X voters suddenly disappeared from a deep Y state, somebody's going to notice and try to correct it.
This is a bad idea for two reasons: it'll cause a decrease in state funding for where you live, and it may be tricky to actually cause your preferred party to get that representative/elector.
First, there are definitely other ways it would backfire, since census data isn't only used for apportioning representatives. It is also used for determining where federal and state funding should go:
How Our Data Are Used
...
To distribute more than $675 billion in federal funds to local, state and tribal governments each year.
Census data informs how states and communities allocate funding for:
Neighborhood improvements
Public health
Education
Transportation
Much more
If a large group of people of some political party in some state boycotted the census and it wasn't corrected, then that state would receive a smaller portion of federal funding, which would probably be spread fairly evenly over other states (i.e., both Party X and Y in other states benefit).
However, state funding for roads, hospitals, schools, etc. would only be diverted away from areas where the Party X boycotters are concentrated, to the benefit of Party Y supporters as they would receive a portion of the diverted funding.
Second, if you want a deep Y state to lose a representative, presumably you want that representative to go to a Party X state in order to represent the party you prefer. However, there is no guarantee that the representative wouldn't just go to another deep Y state.
After a census, representatives are reapportioned based on a formula intended to appropriate representation. The gist of it is that each state starts with 1 representative, and then the next 385 are given one at a time to states based on a ration between population and representatives it was already given. Here's the order of apportion for the last census.
So, not only would you need to get enough people from some party in some state to boycott the census and drop that state out position for what would have been its final representative, you wouldn't really help your party unless the new order of apportion would result in your party getting that extra representative.
Someone with a political science or mathematics degree (or just some spare time) might be able to calculate which states and how many boycotters are needed to give a new apportionment order that helps one party, but I can almost guarantee one thing: if tens of thousands of Party X voters suddenly disappeared from a deep Y state, somebody's going to notice and try to correct it.
edited Nov 20 at 21:21
svick
1073
1073
answered Nov 20 at 13:55
Giter
3,4001920
3,4001920
3
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
7
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
3
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
1
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
|
show 2 more comments
3
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
7
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
3
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
1
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
3
3
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
Well, of course a boycott is, on average, going to result in the seats being distributed according to the national average, not all to Party Y. That is, if half of the seats are currently going to Party Y, then the seat has a 50% chance of going to Party Y. That's clear just by symmetry. That's not a drawback, that's just the nature of the plan. It's still on average an advantage: you're going from a seat that definitely won't go to Party Y to a seat that might go to Party Y.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:24
7
7
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
It might be worthwhile to point out that boycott is strictly less effective than moving - boycotting may reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1, but moving will reduce the counted population of a deep party X state by 1 and increase the counted population of a deep party Y state by 1 (which would net part of a seat directly towards a Y representative)
– Delioth
Nov 20 at 16:45
3
3
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
@Delioth Moving (en masse) will also backfire because your individual vote in a populous deep party Y state will not count as much as an individual's vote in a sparse deep party X state. One Wyoming resident's vote for a presidential candidate is equal to 3.72 California residents' vote.
– Fixed Point
Nov 20 at 19:27
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
The very concept of a 100% count census is obsolete with the development of statistical sampling techniques through the 1800s. My understanding is that the actual decadal population count is only used for allocating Representatives and electors, as required by the Constitution. The rest of the data, for funding, roads and such, comes from continually updated statistical techniques, which uses outside data, and can, in theory, compensate for things like boycotts. For example, right now the Census website is promoting their estimate of American Indian/Alaska Native population as of July 1 2017.
– user71659
Nov 20 at 19:28
1
1
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
Though, even if it were a red House seat that CA lost, this would shift one electoral vote from the blue to red column, as all of CA's electoral votes go to whoever wins the popular vote in CA, rather than being broken out by district like House votes. Which, on a side note, is why we should amend the Constitution to require states to split their electoral votes according to percent of popular vote received.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 19:59
|
show 2 more comments
Getting anywhere close to enough traction to even have an effect is a big hurdle. The average house seat represents 700,000 people, this is the upper bound for the number of people required to boycott a census. Though in the right state the required number can be drastically lower, 15,734 people could have moved a seat from Minnesota to North Carolina in 2010. If you manage to get enough people to all boycott and cause your state to lose a seat, the next problem is that it may end up being granted to a state you disagree with as much or more. The apportionment process grants seats to try and keep all states as close as possible for number of people per representative.
If your state has more than one representative the next problem could occur in the redistricting process. By boycotting the census you will cause whatever district you become a part of to grant less representation to everyone in it than intended, this disenfranchise you neighbors to some extent. There is also the possibility that the resulting districts will be drawn unfavorably for your goals or that a district though to lean in one direction actually lean more in the opposite direction. At the state level it would be a much larger impact as state representative districts could be drawn in ways that turn you in to an extreme minority further polarizing your state further away from your beliefs.
add a comment |
Getting anywhere close to enough traction to even have an effect is a big hurdle. The average house seat represents 700,000 people, this is the upper bound for the number of people required to boycott a census. Though in the right state the required number can be drastically lower, 15,734 people could have moved a seat from Minnesota to North Carolina in 2010. If you manage to get enough people to all boycott and cause your state to lose a seat, the next problem is that it may end up being granted to a state you disagree with as much or more. The apportionment process grants seats to try and keep all states as close as possible for number of people per representative.
If your state has more than one representative the next problem could occur in the redistricting process. By boycotting the census you will cause whatever district you become a part of to grant less representation to everyone in it than intended, this disenfranchise you neighbors to some extent. There is also the possibility that the resulting districts will be drawn unfavorably for your goals or that a district though to lean in one direction actually lean more in the opposite direction. At the state level it would be a much larger impact as state representative districts could be drawn in ways that turn you in to an extreme minority further polarizing your state further away from your beliefs.
add a comment |
Getting anywhere close to enough traction to even have an effect is a big hurdle. The average house seat represents 700,000 people, this is the upper bound for the number of people required to boycott a census. Though in the right state the required number can be drastically lower, 15,734 people could have moved a seat from Minnesota to North Carolina in 2010. If you manage to get enough people to all boycott and cause your state to lose a seat, the next problem is that it may end up being granted to a state you disagree with as much or more. The apportionment process grants seats to try and keep all states as close as possible for number of people per representative.
If your state has more than one representative the next problem could occur in the redistricting process. By boycotting the census you will cause whatever district you become a part of to grant less representation to everyone in it than intended, this disenfranchise you neighbors to some extent. There is also the possibility that the resulting districts will be drawn unfavorably for your goals or that a district though to lean in one direction actually lean more in the opposite direction. At the state level it would be a much larger impact as state representative districts could be drawn in ways that turn you in to an extreme minority further polarizing your state further away from your beliefs.
Getting anywhere close to enough traction to even have an effect is a big hurdle. The average house seat represents 700,000 people, this is the upper bound for the number of people required to boycott a census. Though in the right state the required number can be drastically lower, 15,734 people could have moved a seat from Minnesota to North Carolina in 2010. If you manage to get enough people to all boycott and cause your state to lose a seat, the next problem is that it may end up being granted to a state you disagree with as much or more. The apportionment process grants seats to try and keep all states as close as possible for number of people per representative.
If your state has more than one representative the next problem could occur in the redistricting process. By boycotting the census you will cause whatever district you become a part of to grant less representation to everyone in it than intended, this disenfranchise you neighbors to some extent. There is also the possibility that the resulting districts will be drawn unfavorably for your goals or that a district though to lean in one direction actually lean more in the opposite direction. At the state level it would be a much larger impact as state representative districts could be drawn in ways that turn you in to an extreme minority further polarizing your state further away from your beliefs.
answered Nov 20 at 13:59
Ryathal
7,3431434
7,3431434
add a comment |
add a comment |
Interestingly enough, there's already a great deal of nonresponse in the census, they've calculated the Wave 1 nonresponse rate has grown to nearly 20% from 5%. This nonresponse bias is "corrected" by weighting those who did respond. The census already knows of your existence using administrative records (another way they correct for nonresponse) so apportionment likely wouldn't change but research that relies on your response (economic data, housing data, education data) that heavily influences government spending would be.
Fun fact: It's also a federal crime to not respond to the census, although it seems the government hasn't prosecuted anyone since the 1960 census.
add a comment |
Interestingly enough, there's already a great deal of nonresponse in the census, they've calculated the Wave 1 nonresponse rate has grown to nearly 20% from 5%. This nonresponse bias is "corrected" by weighting those who did respond. The census already knows of your existence using administrative records (another way they correct for nonresponse) so apportionment likely wouldn't change but research that relies on your response (economic data, housing data, education data) that heavily influences government spending would be.
Fun fact: It's also a federal crime to not respond to the census, although it seems the government hasn't prosecuted anyone since the 1960 census.
add a comment |
Interestingly enough, there's already a great deal of nonresponse in the census, they've calculated the Wave 1 nonresponse rate has grown to nearly 20% from 5%. This nonresponse bias is "corrected" by weighting those who did respond. The census already knows of your existence using administrative records (another way they correct for nonresponse) so apportionment likely wouldn't change but research that relies on your response (economic data, housing data, education data) that heavily influences government spending would be.
Fun fact: It's also a federal crime to not respond to the census, although it seems the government hasn't prosecuted anyone since the 1960 census.
Interestingly enough, there's already a great deal of nonresponse in the census, they've calculated the Wave 1 nonresponse rate has grown to nearly 20% from 5%. This nonresponse bias is "corrected" by weighting those who did respond. The census already knows of your existence using administrative records (another way they correct for nonresponse) so apportionment likely wouldn't change but research that relies on your response (economic data, housing data, education data) that heavily influences government spending would be.
Fun fact: It's also a federal crime to not respond to the census, although it seems the government hasn't prosecuted anyone since the 1960 census.
answered Nov 20 at 19:48
LearnWorkLearn
822212
822212
add a comment |
add a comment |
Note that your boycott may be ineffective. The census bureau tries to correct for missing or inaccurate data in a process called imputation.
In addition to this being illegal, I also think it undermines the democratic system in much the same way as voter fraud and that harms everyone.
If you really are determined, you could actually move to a state in which you agree with the majority. You just need to establish usual residence there on census day (1 April 2020). That way your small contribution to apportionment will be transferred to that state in a legal fashion.
add a comment |
Note that your boycott may be ineffective. The census bureau tries to correct for missing or inaccurate data in a process called imputation.
In addition to this being illegal, I also think it undermines the democratic system in much the same way as voter fraud and that harms everyone.
If you really are determined, you could actually move to a state in which you agree with the majority. You just need to establish usual residence there on census day (1 April 2020). That way your small contribution to apportionment will be transferred to that state in a legal fashion.
add a comment |
Note that your boycott may be ineffective. The census bureau tries to correct for missing or inaccurate data in a process called imputation.
In addition to this being illegal, I also think it undermines the democratic system in much the same way as voter fraud and that harms everyone.
If you really are determined, you could actually move to a state in which you agree with the majority. You just need to establish usual residence there on census day (1 April 2020). That way your small contribution to apportionment will be transferred to that state in a legal fashion.
Note that your boycott may be ineffective. The census bureau tries to correct for missing or inaccurate data in a process called imputation.
In addition to this being illegal, I also think it undermines the democratic system in much the same way as voter fraud and that harms everyone.
If you really are determined, you could actually move to a state in which you agree with the majority. You just need to establish usual residence there on census day (1 April 2020). That way your small contribution to apportionment will be transferred to that state in a legal fashion.
edited Nov 20 at 20:37
answered Nov 20 at 20:29
Thomas
1,108314
1,108314
add a comment |
add a comment |
Remember also that if Party X won the House seat, there's a good chance that Party X controls the state legislature which controls drawing Congressional districts. So let's say you're successful in reducing the number of districts by 1. It's highly likely the redrawn district will favor Party X. Thus you would (in theory) help the party you want to harm, at least in the short term.
1
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
add a comment |
Remember also that if Party X won the House seat, there's a good chance that Party X controls the state legislature which controls drawing Congressional districts. So let's say you're successful in reducing the number of districts by 1. It's highly likely the redrawn district will favor Party X. Thus you would (in theory) help the party you want to harm, at least in the short term.
1
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
add a comment |
Remember also that if Party X won the House seat, there's a good chance that Party X controls the state legislature which controls drawing Congressional districts. So let's say you're successful in reducing the number of districts by 1. It's highly likely the redrawn district will favor Party X. Thus you would (in theory) help the party you want to harm, at least in the short term.
Remember also that if Party X won the House seat, there's a good chance that Party X controls the state legislature which controls drawing Congressional districts. So let's say you're successful in reducing the number of districts by 1. It's highly likely the redrawn district will favor Party X. Thus you would (in theory) help the party you want to harm, at least in the short term.
answered Nov 20 at 15:13
Machavity
15.2k44475
15.2k44475
1
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
add a comment |
1
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
1
1
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
If Party X can redrawn districts in their favor, they can do so without the boycott, and the boycott gives them fewer districts to do it with.
– Acccumulation
Nov 20 at 16:19
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
@Accumulation - that's only if there are few enough districts where Party X draws them for a 100% domination, I would think. If they gerrymandered for a 5 to 2 advantage, and lost a seat, I'd guess the new maps would as likely be 5 to 1 as 4 to 2, potentially.
– PoloHoleSet
Nov 20 at 18:39
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
"which might control drawing Congressional districts" The legislature does not control drawing districts in every state.
– Azor Ahai
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
While you're not wrong, keep in mind that this only applies to the House seat. You would still be removing an electoral vote from Party X, as all but 1 or 2 states assign all of their electoral votes to whichever candidate gets a plurality of the vote. You can't gerrymander electoral votes in most states (or, depending on how you look at it, they're all gerrymandered 100% already.)
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:02
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
@AzorAhai One way or another, the state government does control districting in all states (except that some states have only 1 district.) Whether the legislature of a state has delegated that task is kind of irrelevant, as it can just pass a law to move that power back to itself.
– reirab
Nov 20 at 20:04
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Politics Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.
Please pay close attention to the following guidance:
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fpolitics.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f35491%2fcensus-boycott-for-political-purposes%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
1
Why would any group attempt this (possibly illegal) convoluted method of gaining weak indirect influence, when they can get the stronger direct influence without such a boycott ? If you can muster such a large support base as this boycott would require you could directly influence elections and policy by lobbying. Your idea seems like using a hammer to crack a nut when you already own a nut cracker.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 2:30
2
@StephenG this same argumemt can be made against the personal act of voting.
– Scott
Nov 21 at 2:35
1
I don't see how you can make the same argument for voting. Voting is legal and a right you already have that exercises direct impact on who gets elected. Mass voting by groups is legal and powerful and may even give your group the ability to control or at least strongly influence who the candidates are for any post. Your proposal is indirect, breaks the law and you loose the ability to lobby as a group (or even to put candidates up a a group as you could be said to have acted unlawfully as a group to control the electoral process). I don't see any comparison.
– StephenG
Nov 21 at 5:05
1
@StephenG I didn't say that all possible arguments could be made against voting. I said that the argument of your first comment could be. :)
– Scott
Nov 21 at 12:45