phil_20686, on 2012-July-23, 10:29, said:
When I said "broad consensus", i think that is much more stringent than "majority". If you are winning teh debate, and have a majority, its almost always right to wait for a stronger consensus to develop, as generally you only get good law when there is a consensus. Thin majorities lead to compromise. Look at the healthcare law in the US. If you were going to do it, you should cut the insurance companies out of the loop. Single payer is the only way to go here in terms of efficiency, with an opt out if you get private insurance where you get your "share" back to pay for your health insurance. Instead you got a series of terrible compromises, mostly because Obama didn't have the kind of consensus that you really need for a broad social change.
Gay marriage in Australia is a 62% majority in support, no hope of being passed.
Drug legalisation - 50 to 36 isn't a slim majority. If I take out the 'don't cares' it comes to 60-40 in favour. That's pretty big. No hope of being passed. I guess you can say this is a slim majority, so lts consider something else. Let's consider your healthcare example. Pre Obamacare, 62%(!) of Americans were in favour of a single payer universal healthcare system(!!). Did that even come close to getting up? Hells no. If 62% in favour is a slim majority, I would love you to identify what a comfortable majority would be, and which laws actually have it.
Note that failure to pass these laws doesn't lead to compromise - it just means they don't pass.
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It is certainly true that the partisan bickering in the US is counterproductive, and more parties (the Founding Fathers believed that there should be none), so that there would be no majority party, would be helpful. The concept of "forming" a coalition, though, has no real meaning in the American context; coalitions would be made and later broken for every vote.
The de jure and de facto status of parties is essentially irrelevant though - why are their ballot access restrictions to minor parties in the US? Because de facto the parties rule the roost.
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The purpose of the United States Senate, as Stefanie mentioned upthread, is to protect the rights of States and to present the views of States. It seems you believe that this should not be its purpose. Rather you seem to believe that the Senate should represent the people directly, same as the House of Representatives. While I would say that it seems to me we've been moving that way ever since the method of selecting Senators was changed (17th Amendment, 1913), I have never thought it was a good idea.
I do not understand how changing the number and method of election of senates has any impact on their role. This conflation seems unfounded. I would suggest that the role of the senators is to represent the people of the state directly, for what is the state is nothing if not the will of its people.
How familiar are you with other countries legislative systems? At least one has exactly the same challenge you had (multiple independent colonies forming a state and whom wanted to protect their rights equally in some sort of.. senate), and manages the objectives of protecting states rights while having 10 senators proportionally elected by each state.
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I like first past the post systems.
Why? It is simple to show the problem. Consider this 11 voter electorate.
There are 5 Nationalist voters, 4 Patriot voters and 2 'Third Way' voters. Each bloc has nominated its own candiate.
1) Nationalists prefer their candidate to both other candidates, but prefer the 'Third Way' candidate to the Patriot candidate.
2) Patriots prefer their candidate to both other candidates, but prefer the 'Third Way' candidate to the Nationalist Candidate.
3) 'Third Way' candidates prefer their candidate to both other candidates, but prefer the Patriot candidate to the Nationalist candidate
Who should win the election?
The first past the post problem is that the 'Third Way' candidate shouldn't run - he damages the interests of his electors by doing so! This is insane - instant run off voting is clearly better, though still does not return the Condorcet winner.
This is hardly a hypothetical either, if Nader had not run and exit polling is representative, the flow of preferences would have been sufficient for Al Gore to win the 2000 presidential election. Is this really the result you desire from democracy, where it is better not to participate in the democratic process? STV/IRV is strictly superior to first past the post against any criteria you care to name.