Description

Most Americans never stop to ask why their Senators’ names appear on the ballot 1. Senate races are simply there, part of the familiar rhythm of campaign seasons, lumped in with presidential contests, House races, and ballot initiatives 2. Direct popular election feels natural, even inevitable, in a political culture that speaks the language of “one person, one vote” almost by instinct 3. In most high-school textbooks, the Seventeenth Amendment, ratified in 1913, appears as a straightforward triumph: an early-twentieth-century reform that ripped Senate seats out of the hands of corrupt state legislatures and finally “gave them to the people.”…
