Oh, if that was your question then I would've answered it more directly - I absolutely want less people to vote. I'm not a huge fan of the democratic process - it's a shitty system, it just happens to be the best system we've come up with so far. I'm not ashamed that - I've held this opinion for as long as I can remember and wear it as a badge of honor. I find the fact that a successful individual who contributes to society both economically and socially has the same voting right as a bum smoking crack on a street corner unconscionable. There are voters all across the globe whose pattern of bad life decisions makes them ineligible to own a firearm or operate a motor vehicle, but they can pull the trigger on elections and steer the direction of the country - a cynic such as myself finds that curious, to say the least. It's not a particularly popular opinion, but I've never been bothered by that. Sadly it's not a problem we can fix easily.This can essentially be shortened to, "I want fewer people to vote and/or have access to voting." I've touched on this subject before, and when your party needs to rely on voter suppression tactics to even have an outside shot at winning, that's a bad position to be in. The only chance we might have of saving the Republican party from itself is abolishing the electoral college, so that they can finally come to grips with just how outdated and irrelevant their current platform is and make the necessary adjustments.
In regards to the EC, it is a quintessential institution that serves to balance the power of individual states. The United States of America are not homogenous - the country is divided into states with very different socio-economic structures and legislatures, and they all have to have a balanced say in how the country is ran on a federal level. Not only do I not want it gone - I hope against hope that similar mechanisms will be implemented in other countries where more populous urban areas dictate what kind of regulation should affect less populous rural areas in spite of the fact that the lives they live are very different.