The United States is one of the only countries in the world that is controlled by 2 parties. Aside from a handful of minor political players, every single member of government belongs to either the Republican or Democratic Parties. Almost every other modern democratic country in the world has at least three viable political parties. Obviously, it would take either a massive grassroots effort, possibly to the detriment of one or both of the existing parties, or the abolishment of the Electoral College in order to create a viable third party in America.What would the country stand to gain from a move like this?What would we lose?What would be the major ideological difference that could set it apart from the existing two parties?Would other countries benefit from a two-party system, or is it best that each individual country handle their business as only they see fit?Is the Electoral College really the only thing standing in the way of this happening?
10/27/2008 10:53:05 AM
10/27/2008 11:00:01 AM
I dont know any of the answers to your questions except that I agree with the premise. I am tired of the 2 dominating parties that polarize each other to the point of ridiculousness.
10/27/2008 11:00:37 AM
No. Abolishing the electoral college would do nothing towards ending the duopoly. What we would need to do is abolish first-past the poll and replace it with something like instant run-off voting. Only then would voting for a third party not hurt your preferences. The best way to go multiparty in the extreme is proportional elections. If your party got 2% of the votes then you get 2% of the seats in congress. All these other systems would be compatible with the electoral college and as elections are still managed by state government I would strongly recommend we keep the electoral college.
10/27/2008 11:02:20 AM
10/27/2008 11:02:29 AM
10/27/2008 11:05:25 AM
If a third party were to form, there would be a lot of upheaval in the political system for a couple of decades. I would envision the Christian fundamentalists becoming their own party (the thought is scary, I know) and the rest of the party splitting into Libertarians at the voting level and moderates at the political level. Democrats would likely win the next couple of Presidential elections, providing a much needed balancing to the center, until they broke into a left-wing Socialist party and the rest were slowly siphoned off into the moderates. I can't imagine any more major parties sprouting up. The green party would grab some power, but not a whole lot probably.What would happen at the political level is a little bit harder to predict. What is it that happens if no Presidential candidate is elected outright? Doesn't the HoR vote then? That would turn our President into a Prime Minister of sorts, with the elected politicians voting someone in. That would be scary too because one of the biggest gains to be made out of a system like this would be the Christian Right who could possibly have the biggest representation in the House. But it's all too hard to predict.
10/27/2008 11:08:16 AM
What would the country stand to gain from a move like this?A lot. I think we would have a less extremist political system than we do now. Currently there is no reason to really appeal to the middle ground as much because most people either attach themselves to one side or the other, and as we become more polarized in our views we tend to elect those who show themselves having the most extreme alignment with those views. If we had a third party i think it would provide opportunity for those people who say "i believe in these 3 days with this party and not these other 3 things but i'm going to vote for them anyways." middle ground could be achieved more readily and i think that would do us good. Also the way the system is designed right now complete party dominance is the goal of both parties. One party controlling all branches of government and a greatly diminished balance of power. Voters are so brainwashed by the two party system that we just usher it in. This is why I never vote straight ticket. What would we lose? Nothing really. except for extremist on either side feeling as compelled to vote as they once did. but thats not a bad loss.What would be the major ideological difference that could set it apart from the existing two parties?That to be a fiscal conservative does not mean that you are also socially conservative. Even now there are some moderate republicans who are really turned off by the uber religious movement of the right who basically act as a theocracy. comparatively there are those on the left who are frustrated with the nambi pambi ultra liberal as well, but i don't think they're as equally put of as those on the right are by the ultra socially conservative. Would other countries benefit from a two-party system, or is it best that each individual country handle their business as only they see fit? Each country should handle their business as they see fit (a lesson america could learn), but i still don't think they would benefit from a two party system for the same reasons i suggested in the first question.Is the Electoral College really the only thing standing in the way of this happening? As was said earlier by someone else, its the two parties who are keeping this from happening. especially since they make it almost impossible for you to get in debate time and people are so attached to left and right that the other candidates have a hard time getting funding. The two parties don't want to let go because that means letting go of some of their power, and that is the antithesis of what they want to do.
10/27/2008 11:13:06 AM
This is a very touchy issue for me.I think having more than two parties would be a very good thing. I think having more than perhaps five parties would be a very bad thing.Our American system has a number of flaws that have been pointed out several times in this thread, but then, on the other extreme, you've got places like Italy, which might as well have a political party for ever 3.2 citizens. There are plenty of countries with parliamentary chaos and frequent leadership crises caused by an overabundance of parties. Plus, it's common enough in those circumstances that the many factions come together in coalitions that are just more flexible versions of our two-party system.I think the best plan is a moderate relaxation of most ballot standards -- reduce the number of votes a party has to get before it can be on the ballot, etc. Tweak public financing for elections to be equitable in that regard.
10/27/2008 1:51:44 PM
10/27/2008 1:58:22 PM
I don't know how that would work in the United States since we're a geographically large country. There's bound to be a lot of disparity between say life in Seattle and life in Kansas. I don't think it would be outside the realm of possibility that the country split into seperate nations if this happened.
10/27/2008 2:01:34 PM
Nobody wants to split into separate nations though.This isn't the USSR where the nation is being held together by sheer force.
10/27/2008 2:21:24 PM
I think you underestimate how much some of the right completely despise the left.
10/27/2008 2:24:38 PM
A lot of hate comes from the left as well, but I think you're exaggerating.Nobody with any sort of say in the matter wants to break off from the Union. thats crazy talk.
10/27/2008 2:26:14 PM
^ tell that to Todd Palin lol
10/27/2008 2:30:21 PM
I don't know. I think this election shows what the right will tell themselves in order to win. Lots of people actually want to kill Obama and many, many others have made themselves believe complete lies about him. Plus some of those people actually believe in this "Real America, Fake America" bullshit. You're seriously underestimating a lot of these people. It's not all of them, but there are a shitload of them and they're making themselves known.
10/27/2008 2:32:28 PM
Agreed. It goes both ways too: remember how there were many left-leaning types who'd talk about moving to Canada, ceding to Canada, etc. during the Bush administration? Same type of mentality just from the other end of the spectrum.As for proportional representation, I don't think it'll make a huge difference in the end. You'll still probably have two dominant parties (Democrats, Republicans) with a bunch of tiny splinter parties (Greens, Libertarians, religious party, maybe a Socialist/Labor party). One of the two big parties will achieve plurality and then court a traditional ally to form a coalition government which will look likely look very similar to the main parties we have right now. A coalition government of Democrats, Greens, and Labor? Democrats leaning on leftist factions to come to office? Republicans forging a coalition with Religious Conservatives to create a coalition?In the end, I don't think it'll really change things.Also, when we look at other nations with parliamentary systems and/or proportional representation elections, its usually still a horse race between two large parties with the small splinters joining up with small parties which tend to hang out on their end of the spectrum. British Labor in coalition with the Greens to fend off the Conservatives. Japanese LDP and DPJ with a moderate Komeito propping up the LDP.As for defending two parties, the only thing I can think of off hand is that a two party setup provides a constant and continuous opposition. A lot of times, I've seen a parliamentary setup where the ruling coalition dominates the government and the opposition puts up an ineffectual fight because the various opposition parties are too splintered to fight back. Not a strong reason, but it is one I suppose.
10/27/2008 3:34:44 PM
It would likely take a complete alteration of the US voting systemhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duverger%27s_law
10/27/2008 3:47:47 PM
If we moved to a multi party system, I can see several forming.Libertarian of course, would attract people from both current parties.Socialist, would obviously attract people only from the Democratic partyThe Green party would probably expandA Christian left party would attract plenty of people from both parties (Christians who vote republican because of social issues, Christians who vote democrat because they believe in helping the unfortunate)Neocons who believe in proactively protecting America's interests
10/29/2008 10:43:45 PM
10/29/2008 11:06:02 PM
10/30/2008 2:37:52 AM
It is inevitable that the republican party will split, and it will all be John McCain's fault for his poor choice in running mate. Sarah Palin has plenty of support within the party, but not enough to go forward as the main leader. Its not hard to believe that she would split from the party and take the Christian right with her.
10/30/2008 3:18:50 AM
^riiiigggghhhttttt
10/30/2008 4:06:03 AM
gonna bump this thread as a place to talk about the Forward Party, since this is really what they're really all about (not Yang and not 2024 Presidential races)here's a quick video explaining what the Forward Party is actually about. production values aren't great but it's concise and to the point[Edited on July 29, 2022 at 3:19 PM. Reason : .]
7/29/2022 2:14:29 PM
I'm down if we can have ranked choiceUnfortunately the people rarely get what they want
7/29/2022 3:18:50 PM
7/29/2022 3:21:36 PM
7/30/2022 2:26:09 PM
7/30/2022 5:39:50 PM
7/31/2022 10:44:14 AM
lol, 'the media is mean to me' - one of the most famous loser arguments in history.i have no problem with them getting nailed for breaking the law but dont pretend the isnt the same problem democrats have always had with the green party. dont make it complicated...none of these long-ass posts would be necessary and nobody would actually be mad if certain users would just admit they hate losing votes to these rubes.
7/31/2022 11:27:03 AM
Florida GOP literally ran ghost candidates to fuck with the election.
7/31/2022 11:27:24 AM
“The Green party probably committed fraud but it doesn’t matter because Dems have acted against their opponents in the past.”I mean, what? That’s not an argument.
7/31/2022 11:48:47 AM
7/31/2022 9:07:35 PM
8/1/2022 8:32:27 AM
I have almost zero knowledge of this story but I do know q posted 4 separate tweets and all are evidence: one recorded call, one text exchange, one secondhand witness and one first hand. One single statement is evidence. Its just evidence you don't believe or feel is worthwhile
8/1/2022 10:09:52 AM
It's extremely weak evidence and he's saying it as fact.The DSCC has legal documents and sworn statements about the behavior of the Green Party.The people making the claims against the DSCC should do so in an official manner. I mean, it's the exact same issue with all the GOP claims over voter fraud. People said all kinds of shit, but the moment you invite them to go under oath, the story changes.
8/1/2022 10:59:37 AM
I mean, the claim here is that DSCC agents are pretending to be affiliated with election officials. That's a felony. File a criminal complaint, don't just tweet about it.
8/1/2022 11:01:37 AM
8/1/2022 11:08:05 AM
Yea, the “bare knuckle dirty Dems” folded like cheap lawn chairs so we can all hold hands and sing kumbaya on the way to the voting precinct. Completely feckless. Accusations of unfairness are like the Dems’ kryptonite, they just go completely weak and fall apart even when armed with clear criminal wrongdoing.This isn’t really the last say though. Multiple petitions finding yet more evidence of fraudulent or incomplete signatures were produced at this meeting as well. The Dems will continue to find these instances until they whittle the signatures below the 13,500 threshold, at which point they will be able to sue to keep the Greens off the ballot again.
8/1/2022 11:26:55 AM
Your link to them filing a criminal complaint was a tweet to a fundraising page. Okay.[Edited on August 1, 2022 at 11:57 AM. Reason : K]
8/1/2022 11:56:54 AM
And yes, so did Sidney Powell, but she's now facing the legal consequences of her actions because she filed shit she knew was wrong. I'm not sure how that helps your argument? The guy who allegedly recorded that conversation is under no risk until he goes files an official complaint.
8/1/2022 12:02:56 PM
The legal document for NCGP vs NBSBE includes statements from witnesses regarding DSCC's actions. I don't know for sure if NCGP is suing DSCC or Elias directly. They probably don't have the resources to take on that kind of fight and are taking a calculated decision to focus on the upcoming election rather than legal battles.[Edited on August 1, 2022 at 12:10 PM. Reason : this thread is about ranked choice voting]
8/1/2022 12:09:52 PM
first sitting member of congress to align with the Forward Party
9/14/2024 10:27:35 AM
More parties or somehow empowering state parties or institutions more to where representatives are more accountable to the real issues of their states and localities than just doing whatever partisan national stuff
9/14/2024 2:34:41 PM