Zelandakh, on 2020-November-26, 08:32, said:
I think the 5% barrier is a useful improvement over pure PR to avoid Italian-style conditions with too many tiny parties to make for stable national politics. At the moment, the German model is the best compromise between democracy and stability that I have found anywhere.
Maybe one should combine the 5% barrier with some partial form of instant run-off?
Everybody ranks the parties in order of preference. You follow the instant-run off algorithm (eliminate the smallest party, assign their voters to their next choice) until there are no parties with less than 5% of the vote left.
By the way, if you judge the German model by its outcomes, I'd say it is weighed very heavily towards stability... Since I started primary school, the German head of government changed twice. It went from center-right (CDU) to center-left (SPD) back to center-right. It was the center-left coalition who implemented welfare state reforms, which it viewed as disincentivizing work too much...
[Or I could tell the story of how the
Ladenschlussgesetz (law governing shop opening hours) got changed. It would be a loooooong story, over 17 years, with many years of discussions leading up to it beforehand...which eventually led to the dramatic change of extending shopping hours by...you won't believe it...90 minutes every evening, plus a little bit more for Saturday... before the authority then got delegated to the states. It'd be an overstatement to say that this topic dominated political discussions from when I started primary school until way after I finished my PhD - but not much of an overstatement!
A revolutionExtending shopping hours by more than 90 minutes is done properly, orderly, and deliberately in Germany!]
The easiest way to count losers is to line up the people who talk about loser count, and count them. -Kieran Dyke