Oh I never said it couldnt, our own Parlimetry system has plenty of precedents to prove that.tharkûn wrote:Stuart:
I fail to see why a plurality cannot be an effective executive.
Does not your own system allow for minority executive if they can manage to find consensus in the legislature? If you have 3 parties in the government splitting the vote 30:40:30 could you not have a centrist plurality executive running the cabinet and holding the portfolios if they could keep the left and right wing parties from uniting against them? Hell what stops the middle party from effecting a coalition with the right party even if 60% of the country would have voted left rather than have a center-right government?
If 60% of the population voted 'left' that would be reflected in the House and a government, as you suggest, could not form as they would not have 60% of the seats in the House.
Nope. Whatever way you cut the pie, a minority government, cannot govern without the support and co-operation of a majority of parties and you cannot get into parliment without eitherIn the most extreme case the New Zealand government can be holly elected by a fractional percent majority and 5% plus change plurality. Yes you read that correctly, if you have a plethora of parties and one party wins the plurality in each electorate and only two parties have over 5% in the list, then you can end up with the government being totally dominated by a plurality of under 6%.
a) winning an electoral seat or
b)having gained over 5% of the party vote.
Remember that we have a proportional system {MMP}the vote will, with reasonable accuracy, be represented in parliment. And no government can form without letting others share in government if they have a minority, or have support on supply and confidence from other parties. The current government is a case in point.
Really? French.....On the French system, are you bloody serious? The French use a two tiered voting system where the top two candidates face a runoff with no third parties. Its most recent running had a field with multiple socialists of various stripes split the left vote sufficiently that the second round was between rightist Chirac and ultra-rightest xenophobic Le Pen. Chirac has less of a true plurality (20% as I recall) than just about any US president ever.
I admitted as much in my fist post in this thread. But I never advocated spliting the presidency.snip.
Actually campaigning to change this type of stuff is almost tilting against windmills; to get anything close to MMP you are going to need a super majority of states to sign on and good bloody luck getting places like Montana and North Dakota signing on. Splitting the presidency is anathema to all political stripes in America.