|
|
|
|
|
by bjornsing
422 days ago
|
|
This seems to gloss over the major difference between Scandinavian voting systems and e.g. the US one: They are very party-focused. At the end of the day it’s the cabals at the top of the major parties that decide who gets to sit in parliament and how they vote. Sometimes it feels like it would be more honest if e.g. Swedish parliament just had 8 members and their voting buttons controlled more / fewer lights on the voting results dashboard. Leads to a very collectivist political culture. |
|
https://xcancel.com/justinamash/status/1486169720911020036
On the other hand, I suppose we do have primaries in the US. Sounds like that's not a thing in Scandinavia.
I understand a big part of the job of party leadership in the US is simply negotiating with / persuading representatives of your own party to vote for upcoming bills. So perhaps that's another sense in which party leadership is weaker in the US. The focus on local representation also creates problems though, since representatives are incentivized to deliver federal projects in the district they represent, even if that's not best for the nation as a whole.
I really wish there a method for prototyping new democracy designs. I feel that this area has been very stagnant, and radical improvements could be possible.