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#67 |
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Dec 2003
Hopefully Near M48
2×3×293 Posts |
That reminds me of an article I read once. It claimed that a two-party system is the virtually inexorable result of a winner-take-all electoral system, even in the absence of corruption and diabolical schemes from politicians. The argument went something like this (ok, I am adding some of my own thoughts):
1) In the beginning, when the electoral system is first established, there are many groups of people with competing interests. There are not enough people with the same interests to form a single group that can overpower the rest. 2) However, not all groups are exactly the same size. Some are (perhaps only slightly) larger than others. Gradually, people in the smaller groups realize that they are in the minority. Frustration builds as the electoral losses mount and the government ignores their wishes. Eventually, people in the smaller groups are torn between conscience (continuing to vote with the group) and pragmatism (searching for a more effective way to influence the elections). 3) People in the smaller groups generally have different interests from the leading parties, but these differences range from moderate to unacceptable. Pragmatists from the smaller groups decide to choose the "lesser of two (several) evils" and vote with larger groups with which they share only moderate differences, in an effort to have their voice heard and prevent the parties they truly abhor from gaining more power. This decreases the size of the small parties, making them even less influential and putting more pressure on the remaining members of the small parties to switch to larger parties. 4) Step 3 becomes a vicious cycle for small parties; eventually, only a few die-hards remain who are idealistic enough to press on in the face of losing virtually all elections. Larger parties realize this potential to gain new voters and, in an effort to gain an advantage over their large rivals, try to recruit voters leaving the smaller parties. As a result, large parties end up taking positions on different issues that are mutually irrelevant (contortions aside, there is little a priori reason why supporting the position of say the Democratic, or Republican, party on one issue should make one more likely to support the party's position on a totally different issue). The process of consolidating power in large parties continues until elections are dominated by two parties. 5) The two-party system perpetuates itself. Concerns about loss of influence dissuade voters from giving too much power to one of the parties, which would lead to a one-party system. This keeps the two parties at roughly equal strength over the long-term. The vast power of both parties (both have the support, even if only grudging, of nearly half the electorate) makes it very difficult for a third party to mount a serious challenge to the status quo. People in both parties are strongly discouraged from leaving to support a third party because the two parties are almost equally matched; leaving could tip the balance of the election in favor of the greater evil (i.e. the other major party). Furthermore, people in large parties may think "That party is so small, even if I give it my support, it has no chance of winning". Some may even think "That party has so little support and is so out of the mainstream; it must be because it takes very bad positions." Note: This is an attempted description of why two-party systems form, not an evaluation of whether they are a good or bad thing, i.e. I'm talking about "is", not "should be". Last fiddled with by jinydu on 2008-01-10 at 05:23 |
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#68 |
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Dec 2002
81510 Posts |
Every population has about 5 to 10% of political extremists, no matter how stable the country is. One of the very nice aspects of the equal representation systems is that these extremists have a large set of political parties that they consider their homes. They end up in parliament where they can be easily and accurately counted and ignored. It doesn't make sense for them to try to influence major parties. In a two party system the only way for them to exert power, which they tend to do more vigorously than moderates, is by trying to hijack one of the bigger parties.
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#69 | |
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Bamboozled!
"𒉺𒌌𒇷𒆷đ’€"
May 2003
Down not across
2·5,393 Posts |
Quote:
Paul |
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#70 |
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"Jacob"
Sep 2006
Brussels, Belgium
171010 Posts |
If one looks at countries with proportionnal representation Israel is a special case : there are more splinter parties than anywhere else and most important the main parties refuse to compromise by forming a coalition. Other countries do not have that problem : Belgium (disregarding the recent political crisis which has other causes *), the Netherlands, Luxemburg, Austria... But true enough the case of Israel shows that no system is perfect by construction.
Jacob * The problem in Belgium at the moment is that a nationalistic party has recently splintered, the resulting splinter parties have formed election alliances with different mainstream parties. But they negociated their alliance in a similar way as the splinter parties negociate their support in Israeli coalitions. The different mainstream parties have accepted conditions from the splinter parties they allied with before the elections they cannot compromise on anymore. In other words the mainstream parties are hostage to their preelectoral alliances, just like Israeli coalistions are hostage to the little parties they need to form a majority. I think (hope) that before the next elections the situation will normalise again. |
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#71 | ||
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
2D7F16 Posts |
Quote:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/10/op...10collins.html Excerpt: Quote:
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#72 |
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"Mark"
Apr 2003
Between here and the
635610 Posts |
I keep hearing things of this nature:
but I haven't seen any proof. Outside of the health care debacle from Slick Willie's first term in office, what reform has she supported? When I mean reform, I don't mean the liberal vs. conservative notion, but the concept of working across party lines to solve a problem. |
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#73 | |
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P90 years forever!
Aug 2002
Yeehaw, FL
19×397 Posts |
Quote:
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#74 |
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Dec 2002
14578 Posts |
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#75 | |
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∂2ω=0
Sep 2002
RepĂşblica de California
19·613 Posts |
Billary caught fibbing about the Iraq War resolution:
NY Times: In Defending War Vote, Clintons Contradict Record Quote:
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#76 | ||
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Jan 2008
2·32·5 Posts |
Quote:
![]() I will say, however, that it's an interesting experience to have this much attention thrown at us over a protracted period of time -- one year plus, reaching a fever pitch over the final six weeks. I have had literally dozens of candidate minions tromp up to my house to make their pitch. Another interesting fact that some might not know (particular in other countries), is that NH is unusual in that you don't have to register for either party -- a plurality of registered voters here, including me and my wife, are independents. Basically, the way it works is that I walk into my polling place and say "I'd like to be a Republican please", and they hand me a Republican ballot. I vote, pass in my ballot, and go to a table they have setup near the exit and say (via a cute little highly informal form), "I've had enough of being a Republican, I've now decided I'd like to be an independent". So.... the net effect is that which primary people decide to vote in is highly variable in each election cycle. For my wife & me, we ignore the whole darn circus (to the degree that is possible) and then make our decision the night before... There are ample resources out there -- the candidates websites with their stated positions, video of all debates on the website of whomever sponsored them, voter guides, etc. -- to make an informed decision. Personally I think this approach makes it much easier to avoid getting overly influenced by the spinach in someone's teeth during debate #2 in July. Ultimately, for us, the decision is made based on an amalgam of how closely the candidates align with our views, how "electable" they are, and our strategic desire to have certain candidates pushed further along in the process -- even if it isn't someone we would necessarily vote for in November. In NH, opinion polls mean little. All that matters is who shows up on the day. ![]() Quote:
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#77 | ||
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"Jacob"
Sep 2006
Brussels, Belgium
2×32×5×19 Posts |
Quote:
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