What is everyones opinion on a Multi Party System?I think our current Bi-Partisan system causes a lot of problems and groups too many different ideologies into two broad parties. Often times it turns the political landscape into a Black v White (Republican v Democrat) environment. I think a Multi party system would also create more accountability of elected officials within there own party due to increased competition in elections.
6/19/2007 2:54:03 PM
Definitely for it, but don't see it happening
6/19/2007 2:54:58 PM
totally agree that it should be multi party.......I think campaign reform is long overdue at every level.
6/19/2007 3:00:56 PM
What is your favorite mechanism for enabling a multi-party system? My favorite is an instant run-off system, where-by voters select their 1st and 2nd preference. I know it suffers a problem of sometimes the results not responding coherently to changes in preferences, but I still like it.
6/19/2007 3:01:16 PM
I also think bi-partisan politics tend to hurt moderate candidates
6/19/2007 3:01:29 PM
what sort of reform? publicly-funded campaigns or what?
6/19/2007 3:01:33 PM
6/19/2007 3:16:46 PM
Sounds good. Let's try coalition governments for a while--how much worse could it be?
6/19/2007 3:17:24 PM
6/19/2007 5:54:40 PM
Limiting it to individuals could be nice, but how many people here have actually individually given to a campaign?(a question asked here)http://thewolfweb.com/message_topic.aspx?topic=469264That said I like the idea of making it more individuals than large special interest groups.
6/19/2007 6:33:36 PM
We need more options and better access for common citizens, who actually want to help and not more concerned with getting reelected, to run for office. Right now its just too damn expensive.
6/19/2007 9:09:04 PM
^ less than 50% of the common citizens take the time to vote. even less of those voters don't research. nearly all of them will only pay attention to the party they are affiliated with instead of tryin to get teh best candidate overall, they look for the best in their party
6/19/2007 11:26:29 PM
It could only be better than what we currently have.
6/19/2007 11:30:20 PM
Perhaps a hybrid approach like Japan where you have about two thirds of the Congress made up of districts and then the other third by proportional representation? I believe each individual casts two votes each election: one for a candidate and one for a party. The candidate vote goes for that district's candidate elected by plurality, and the party one goes towards the proportional pool.So for example, North Carolina could have eight of their representatives elected by district (to maintain some local flavor in the delegation, perhaps forcing districts to contain whole counties to reduce gerrymandering) and then have the other five elected by proportional representation (I can see maybe two Republicans, two Democrats, and a Libertarian).
6/20/2007 2:14:43 AM
France has a good system. Anybody who followed the recent elections probably knows how it works.
6/20/2007 2:30:26 AM
^^ When did they come up with that? It is indeed creative.
6/20/2007 8:58:14 AM
^^^ Explicitly disallowed currently. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_ticket
6/20/2007 9:30:19 AM
6/25/2007 7:35:26 AM
From that you would suffer a free-rider problem. It would quickly reach a point where no one was contributing anything; you might as well just ban all campaign spending.
6/25/2007 11:49:25 AM
multi party systems get less done than what we have currently.... that's their biggest draw back
6/26/2007 12:39:26 AM