North Dakota Legislature Passes Bill to Study How to Stop the National Popular Vote Plan

On April 20, the North Dakota legislature passed SB 2271, on the subject of the National Popular Vote Plan. Originally the bill provided that North Dakota election officials would not release the state’s presidential vote totals until after the electoral college had voted in mid-December. But the bill was amended before it passed. Now it says that the legislature opposes the National Popular Vote Plan, and during the next year it will study how to prevent the plan from being enacted. It also calls on Congress not to approve the plan, should enough states pass it so that it goes into effect. Here is the text.


Comments

North Dakota Legislature Passes Bill to Study How to Stop the National Popular Vote Plan — 10 Comments

  1. I thought you were against the npv? Can anyone do anything that you don’t condemn?

  2. Yes-
    Do—
    Uniform voter in ALL of USA – States/DC/Colonies
    PR
    APPV
    TOTSOP

    — get tons of praise.

    All else is moronic if not fatal.

    NPV SCHEME – blatant subversion of 14-1 and 14-2 Amdt –
    Votes outside a State determine results inside a State. RED Donkey Communist lunacy.

  3. ALL the small below average States exist only to fuel the ANTI-Democracy minority rule USA Senate and EC

    — esp with their blowhard HACKS in the USA Senate.

    ALL of them west of the MS River in 1861 and later got created via Elephant hacks trying to have permanent control of the USA Senate.

  4. So if they were to vote to implement npv it would be a bad thing, but they voted to stop npv and that’s also a bad thing? Is every state a sovereign nation state or only above average population states?

  5. ABOLISH THE ANTI-DEMOCRACY MINORITY RULE USA SENATE AND THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE.

    PLAIN ENOUGH FOR GERRYMANDER MATH MORONS TO UNDERSTAND ???
    —-
    UNIFORM DEFINITION OF ELECTOR-VOTER IN ALL OF USA
    PR
    APPV
    TOTSOP


    ANY DIRECT TAX BASED ON VOTER TURNOUTS >>> DIRECT TAX <> VOTES

  6. The North Dakota legislature doesn’t have the power to do that even if it wanted to.

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