Current:Home > NewsMonths ahead of the presidential election, Nebraska’s GOP governor wants a winner-take-all system -Profound Wealth Insights
Months ahead of the presidential election, Nebraska’s GOP governor wants a winner-take-all system
View
Date:2025-04-16 17:55:48
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — With only months to go before what is shaping up to be a hotly contested presidential election, Nebraska’s Republican governor is calling on state lawmakers to move forward with a “winner-take-all” system of awarding Electoral College votes.
“It would bring Nebraska into line with 48 of our fellow states, better reflect the founders’ intent, and ensure our state speaks with one unified voice in presidential elections,” Gov. Jim Pillen said in a written statement Tuesday. “I call upon fellow Republicans in the Legislature to pass this bill to my desk so I can sign it into law.”
Nebraska and Maine are the only states that split their electoral votes by congressional district, and both have done so in recent presidential elections. Both states’ lawmakers have also made moves to switch to a winner-take-all system and have found themselves frustrated in that effort.
In Nebraska, the system has confounded Republicans, who have been unable to force the state into a winner-take-all system since Barack Obama became the first presidential contender to shave off one of the state’s five electoral votes in 2008. It happened again in 2020, when President Joe Biden captured Nebraska’s 2nd District electoral vote.
In the 2016 presidential election, one of Maine’s four electoral votes went to former President Donald Trump. Now, Maine Republicans stand opposed to an effort that would ditch its split system and instead join a multistate compact that would allocate all its electoral votes to whoever wins the national popular vote for president — even if that conflicts with Maine’s popular vote for president.
Democratic Maine Gov. Janet Mills has not said whether she’ll sign the bill, a spokesperson said Wednesday. But even if the measure were to receive final approval in the Maine Senate and be signed by Mills, it would be on hold until the other states approve the National Popular Vote Interstate Compact.
Nebraska Republicans, too, have continuously faced hurdles in changing the current system, largely because Nebraska’s unique one-chamber Legislature requires 33 votes to get any contested bill to passage. Republicans in the officially nonpartisan Legislature currently hold 32 seats.
Despite Pillen’s call to pass a winner-take-all change, it seems unlikely that Nebraska lawmakers would have time to get the bill out of committee, much less advance it through three rounds of debate, with only six days left in the current session. Some Nebraska lawmakers acknowledged as much.
“Reporting live from the trenches — don’t worry, we aren’t getting rid of our unique electoral system in Nebraska,” Sen. Megan Hunt posted on X late Tuesday. “Legislatively there’s just no time. Nothing to worry about this year.”
Neither Nebraska Speaker of the Legislature Sen. John Arch nor Sen. Tom Brewer, who chairs the committee in which the bill sits, immediately returned phone and email messages seeking comment on whether they will seek to try to pass the bill yet this year.
___
Associated Press writer David Sharp in Portland, Maine, contributed to this report.
veryGood! (61)
Related
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Paul Alexander, Texas man who lived most of his life in an iron lung, dies at 78
- House Democrats try to force floor vote on foreign aid for Ukraine, Israel, Taiwan
- 8 children, 1 adult die after eating sea turtle meat in Zanzibar, officials say
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- A Massachusetts town spent $600k on shore protection. A winter storm washed it away days later
- Rats are high on marijuana evidence at an infested police building, New Orleans chief says
- Which 40 states don't tax Social Security benefits?
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- TEA Business College team introduction and work content
Ranking
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Republican Valadao and Democrat Salas advance in California’s competitive 22nd district
- Brooklyn's 'Bling Bishop' convicted for stealing from parishioner, extortion attempt
- Active-shooter-drill bill in California would require advance notice, ban fake gunfire
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- New Study Shows Planting Trees May Not Be as Good for the Climate as Previously Believed
- Teen Mom's Cheyenne Floyd Says This Is the Secret to a Healthy Sex Life
- TEA Business College team introduction and work content
Recommendation
Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
Author Mitch Albom, 9 others evacuated by helicopter from violence-torn Port-au-Prince
Seavey now has the most Iditarod wins, but Alaska’s historic race is marred by 3 sled dog deaths
Appeal coming from North Carolina Republicans in elections boards litigation
Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
Gerrit Cole all but officially ruled out as the Yankees’ Opening Day starter
Proposal would allow terminal patients in France to request help to die
Health care providers may be losing up to $100 million a day from cyberattack. A doctor shares the latest