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by noduerme
1688 days ago
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>> Most Americans don't have the option to vote for AOC or Joe Manchin (nor for their ideological equivalents). Neither for congress, nor for the President. But Americans do usually have a wide variety of choices in the primaries. It's the primaries where the actual policy ideological positions are fought out. There would be no AOC - or MTG, for that matter - but for some highly motivated sets of voters with various axes to grind. However, most Americans prefer political gridlock to any well-tuned agenda. The reason AOC and MTG are outliers is because most nominees are forced to run toward the center in general elections, and govern toward the center if they win. Yeah, this is why they mostly end up endorsing corporate handouts, and we can all decry it, but it's arguably a lot better than letting the more extreme left or right-wing agendas come in and flip the table. Considering other presidential systems, look how close France was recently, to Marine Le Pen and genuine fascism. Or how quickly Venezuela turned into a one-party state under Chavez. Consider how close we were to Trump replacing the elected government. The status quo in which corporations call the shots and banks rob everyone has been de rigeuer in America since the 18th C. This is an unfortunate but ultimately comprehensible state of Hobbesian chaos. The weakness of narrow-agenda political parties is the strength of that economic engine, and we are all - all of us with cars, houses, tech jobs, and money to blow on vacations and dinners - beneficiaries of a system that moves very, very incrementally and doesn't try to steer a tanker like a speedboat. |
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People who have strong opinions against proportional representation invariably seem to be completely uninformed about its particulars, and love nothing more than to bring up random countries that they know nothing about and that have little to do with proportional representation, or blame all the country's problems on an election system for no reason.
1) Both French and Venezuelian presidential elections were held under a simple voting system that is a lot closer to FPTP than to proportional representation in its mechanics. The only difference from FPTP is that they have a second round between the two candidates who got the most votes. In the US two party system that second round wouldn't make any difference 99% of the time.
2) It takes some epic lack of self awareness to complain about some right wing loser in another country, when your own country's FPTP system elected Trump despite him losing the popular vote, and then almost elected him again. Whereas the French loser you're complaining about lost 66%-to-34%, and even worse than that the previous time she ran.
3) Venezuela's problems have nothing to do with their election system. Nor do presidential elections have anything to do with proportional representation. But if you like looking at random countries and assigning all their problems to their voting systems, why don't you look at this map and tell me how well those countries have been served by FPTP: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-past-the-post_voting#/me...
> most Americans prefer political gridlock to any well-tuned agenda
You don't know what Americans prefer, because currently they are exhibiting their preferences under duress. The primaries only serve to choose a candidate who will be "electable" under a broken FPTP system come election time – it is a losing proposition from the very start. Americans are only given the illusion of choice, with all the fanfare to keep them happy. They never see any real choice the way people living in proportional representation countries do.
> a lot better than letting the more extreme left or right-wing agendas come in and flip the table.
Lol. US politics is disintegrating largely because of FPTP elections, UK did Brexit largely because of FPTP elections, you think other countries on that FPTP map are doing much better? Proportional representation systems are a lot better at keeping extremists out of power, because in FPTP extremists hijack mainstream parties who win elections and end up governing.
In proportional representation systems, extremists get elected in small quantities and then productive coalitions form to keep them out of power, so they end up just warming the seats in parliament instead of destroying the country. This isn't just my opinion, it's been studied, researched and proven. Look. It. Up.