Good news today for those wanting easier ballot access for third parties...
5/5/2006 10:58:26 PM
I have a question: is there a constitutional provision preventing a state from pooling it's available house representatives and apportioning them in proportion to the votes received? I know it wouldn't mean anything in small states with few reps, but California or Texas would work quite well. For example, California has 53 representatives, the parties submit a list of patrons in order of importance and if the Republicans received 51% of the votes then they get 52 seats, etc. Such a system would guarantee the presence of 3rd parties in Congress and make everyone feel safe voting for 3rd parties. It might also cut down on the push for small-scale pork as to get elected you must impress the whole state and buying off one communitywon't help much.
5/6/2006 12:39:54 AM
^ No, but it's in the interest of the Republicans and Democrats that are the elected representatives to keep things as they are. Despite California having 53 seats, there are only 2 or 3 districts that have competitive elections every cycle. So even though Republicans hold less seats in California, if you were a Republican whose district was gerrymandered so that it was overwhelmingly Republican to keep Republicans out of neighboring Democratic districts, you're not going to complain if you get 80% of the vote every election. There was more turnover in the old Soviet Politboro between sessions than there is in the U.S. House of Representatives for a reason.I think such a system could work, although like instant runoff voting, people would have to be educated on it and there would be a lot of people that would be initially against it. You could setup a list based on statewide primary results. The person that gets the most votes in the primary would be the #1 candidate on the general election list, and then have people vote for party. So for example in North Carolina (with 13 seats), lets say the following results happened.Not necessarily realisticRepublican 50%Democrat 43%Green 5% Libertarian 2%100% would be 13 seats. So for every 7.69% of the vote, a party receives one seat.Republican 50% - (6 seats * 7.69%) = 53% - 46.15% = 6.85%Democrat 43% - (5 seats * 7.69%) = 43% - 38.46% = 4.54%Green 5%Libertarian 2%So there are 2 seats remaining. What you do then is take the highest remaining percentages and give them seats. So the final makeup would be:Republican 7 seats, Democrat 5 seats, and Green 1 seat. The top 7 candidates from the Republican list based on the primary are elected, as are the top 5 Democrats, and the #1 Green.Pros: More equitable distribution of seats, no more having biased legislatures gerrymander election districts, top two parties are no longer able to use "the Nader excuse" for why to not vote for third parties, election for representatives will actually be competitive, still maintains a minimum level of support needed to get a representative that is more workableCons: Foreign concept to most Americans, regional elections for districts no longer used, the top two parties are not going to realistically push for a system that possibly takes away power from them and gives it to another entity[Edited on May 6, 2006 at 11:54 AM. Reason : .]
5/6/2006 11:53:18 AM
What usually happens with regards to viable 3rd parties is that the GOP or the Dems will morph and "steal" the populist mantra that makes said 3rd party so popular. The only way I see a 3rd party emerging in this country is if one of the two major parties collapse and another one fills the void and takes their place. I don't see that happening.
5/6/2006 1:56:00 PM
^^ Exactly right, I think it could be a better system. However, the current system, even heavily gerrymandered, is not entirely politburo worthy. If the Republicans receive 80% of the vote every election that just makes the primaries that much more important (the 20% that are democrats should change parties to Republicans and sway the republican primary towards democratic values).
5/6/2006 2:54:52 PM
^^ I don't know. The Democrats have been a complete joke of a party the last six years.An important point to make is that there are third parties that have emerged somewhat, it's just at state level. [Edited on May 6, 2006 at 4:33 PM. Reason : .]
5/6/2006 4:32:24 PM
That's an interesting question. What is the highest political position that is held by a 3rd party candidate in this country at the state level (socialist Bernie Sanders from VT is an "independent" and I'm pretty sure he's still in Congress).
5/6/2006 4:42:14 PM
5/7/2006 3:51:17 AM
5/7/2006 9:43:53 AM
If the two parties continue on their current paths, we may not even have a party system of any kind. Instead of having a realignment, we may end up with a dealignment (as was suggested by David Brooks last year) where voters are so turned off by both parties that they just stay home.(emphasis mine)The SystemThe problem is in fact the FPTP voting system. Unless we can find a way to get to a more suitable system, the nonsense in Washington will continue.
5/10/2006 9:28:31 PM
Stop acting like we only have two choices. If we don't like either of the candidates from the major parties we have only ourselves to blame. The primary process is no longer back-room, it is almost exclusively democratic. If everyone would just vote in the friggin' primaries then we could be assured candidates we like. Look, the U.S. democratic process is exactly like automatic run-off voting. There are two election cycles, in the first one anyone that wants to run can run for either party, then the two winning candidates hold a run-off in November. We don't need another system, the system we have is already rediculously democratic. What we need are better voters (that actually bother to VOTE in the primaries) and better candidates (all systems suffer from this problem).
5/11/2006 8:47:47 AM
5/12/2006 3:40:50 PM
5/12/2006 6:17:09 PM
5/12/2006 6:58:48 PM
now you're just being dense.
5/12/2006 7:22:51 PM
^ Why don't you explain it to me? I conceed there are only two parties. But who gets nominated by those parties is a democratic process. Is there some nefarious reason Ralph Nader cannot run for the nomination of the Democratic Party? Yes, he'll have to start calling himself a democrat, and he probably will never actually win the nomination, but he'll have a better chance than winning the Presidency as a 3rd party candidate.[Edited on May 12, 2006 at 7:53 PM. Reason : .,.]
5/12/2006 7:52:30 PM
It's like he explained it to you completelyand you didn't even read it.
5/12/2006 8:50:17 PM
He explained, conclusively, that the U.S. system has, and can only have, two parties. He did not address the existance of a primary election cycle and the plurality of candidates that participate in that election. If I haven't made myself clear, everyone should join one of the two parties and then actually VOTE in the May primaries. In the event that you do not like any of the candidates in the Democratic party, then you should switch parties early enough to vote in the Republican primary. By doing this, the American system is nearly identical to instant-runoff-voting. The only restriction is that the final run-off cannot be between two democrats or two republicans, a situation that would be very unlikely in a true run-off system anyway.
5/12/2006 11:12:00 PM
Poll:Majority of Americans want viable third party Fact:You don't always get what you want
5/12/2006 11:20:17 PM
I think another major problem is that, when the majority of americans say they want a viable third party, what they mean is that they want a major party that identifies with their beliefs 100%.
5/12/2006 11:34:13 PM
5/13/2006 12:11:45 AM
^^ But they do, in a weird hackish sort of way. Ralph Nader used to be a democrat before he started his 3rd party. Barry Goldwater was as good a Libertarian as most people could hope for, and he actually won the nomination in 1964.
5/13/2006 8:55:30 AM
5/14/2006 5:35:00 PM
Interesting conspiracy theory. So, are the ballot boxes at the conventions stuffed or rigged in some other way? For example, Howard Dean was unelectable, but he did win a few a few state primaries, just not any after "AEEHHEEEY!" or whatever that sound was.
5/14/2006 8:48:13 PM
5/18/2006 10:44:28 AM
I remember a bunch of exit polls that had John Kerry winning a landslidestill though, I would like a 3rd party that has a chance in hell of winning something
5/18/2006 11:57:45 AM