The electoral college was (and is) a way to check the power of the majority.
Everyone remembers from grade school civics class that the "separation of powers" idea was a core part of the Constitution because of the problems that ensue when a particular part of government (state v. federal, legislative v. executive v. judicial) has too disproportionate a share of the power to govern.
What people forget, however, is that the founders also considered "the popular majority" a power that needed to be limited. In general, it is why they went with a republic rather than a pure one-man/one-vote democracy. In specific, it is why they did not want direct election of senators and why they wanted an electoral college determining the President.
They believed in
representative government, but they also believed a workable/sustainable representative government had to incorporation multiple modes of representation. They chose a bicameral legislature because they wanted to tension that came with one house determined by the majority of the total population (the House of Representatives) and one where the differences between states were represented without regard to relative population size (the Senate). They needed a popular-vote determined House to check the power of the patricians/elite, but they also needed a non-popular-vote determined Senate and President to check the power of ordinary people/the mob. They saw what was starting to happen in France (and, even more so, with what had happened in Britain with Jacobinism, the Gordon riots, etc).
We as a nation, of course, have spent the last 75 years increasing the possibilities for the "tyranny of the majority" and the rise of unchecked federal power, and now approach our elections and the rest of "we the people" governance. Instead a government designed to limit the power of anyone (or any type of division) getting bigger, we now are all about "empowerment." Instead of looking emphasizing solutions based on how they
take away power that a group has or might accumulate, we now emphasize solutions based on how they
increase the power of one group over another.
In short, it took us a bit longer, but we now believe and approach governance the way the French peasantry and "ordinary people" did c. 1789, not the way Madison, Jefferson, Washington, and company did c. 1789.
Unfortunately. As a nation, we have forgotten that a 51%/49% outcome means almost half of the population doesn't want what the "winner" offers, regardless of how that winner is chosen; and that means we ought to restrain ourselves in our fervor to pursue and use the power of the majority to impose our will on the minority. Or, to put it another way, there are times when "we, the 50.001% people," ought not to be allowed to get "what we want" vis-a-vis the 49.999% people, any more than the 49.999% ought to be allowed to tramp on the 50.001%.
If either Sanders or Trump is elected, I fully expect those wishing for the popular vote determining the president will finally get their wish. They are both riding the populist wave, and encouraging it (albeit for different reasons). If Clinton is, it is less likely, since she's more an old-fashioned "Senatorial" type.
Ironically, the result will likely be that even as the some of patricians get tossed out or tossed under the guillotine), others (call them the "inside the Beltway" people) will get more power than ever.
And the possibility of a Robispierre and Committee on Public Safety arising in accordance with the populist will gets greater all the time.
And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Romans 12:2 (NKJV)