The evidence that this helps to mitigate the influence of special interests, forces politicians to listen to low-income groups, and makes racial race based voter suppression (though, not gerrymandering) effectively impossible is very strong, especially from Latin America. The notion that results would be 'functionally' the same is a leap that just isn't born out in experience.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2019-10-22 06:02pmAnd a pointless waste of time and resources for the sake of going through the motions of "everybody voting" when the result is functionally the same as if they stayed home.
The notion that mandating voting somehow equates to not trusting the people (when, indeed, the entire point is to listen to ALL of the people) is absurd.All of these attempts to "fix" democracy by further limiting the choice of the voter in some way, whether its by mandatory voting, or barring "stupid" or "uneducated" people from voting, or setting age limits (other than "legally an adult") on who can run, or whatever... it all comes back to the same thing for me. Either you trust the people to govern themselves, or you don't. Either you believe in government by the people, or you don't. And for every situation you can point to where the voters got it wrong, I can probably point to two where limiting the freedom and power of the voters made things worse.
If you're getting rid of the parliamentary system and separating the executive branch into its own things (America style, Baby!). Sure?
My preferred voting system would be for the head of government/head of state to be directly elected by a nation-wide popular vote, with automatic voter registration, votes cast by paper ballot (either in-person or by mail), an automatic recount for any race within, oh, two percent, and a run-off between the top two candidates if no one nets a majority. Anyone who's a citizen 16 or up can vote or run for any office, including convicted felons (the one possible exception would be for treason, as I'm not sure it makes sense to let people participate in a system they have declared war on). And citizenship would be much easier to attain for immigrants.
If you're maintaining a parliamentary system it doesn't work. In practice we saw this when Israel tried direct election of the Prime Minister for a decade, it was a complete failure.
In concept, this is also pretty easy to understand. There are three basic outcomes of an election under that system:
- The elected Prime Minister is from the same party as the majority of the house. In which case, the difference between the Status Quo and the new system is nil.
- The elected Prime Minister is from a minority party in a legislature where no party can form a majority. In a normal Wesminster system (or a system like Germany, Spain, etc.) a lack of a majority leads to a negotiated outcome in the legislative body that produces a compromise selection for Prime Minister/Chancellor/whoever. The process of the compromise is often enough to guarantee the legitimacy of their legislative program, and sets up natural bounds on what the minority government can and cannot do. Appointing the Prime Minister with an external electoral mandate to uphold via popular vote short circuits that process in ways that actively prevents compromise, and makes forming an executive from the parliament very difficult, and sometimes impossible. The only solution is to separate the executive functions out of the legislative body into a separate executive branch, but then you've undone the core tenets of the Parliamentary system.
Imagine for a moment that Andrew Scheer was the elected Prime Minister of Canada with the parliament that was just elected. In order to form a cabinet he would either need to bring the Liberals on-board to his agenda, and why would they?, or make supply and confidence deals with the NDP and the BQ who would have every right to ask for their pound of flesh. Harper was able to make that work in '06 and '08 because he had the largest parliamentary party and there was no popular mandate for an alternative (see: the '08 Constitutional crisis). But Scheer would have no such authority.
- The elected Prime Minister is from a minority party in a legislature where there is another party that commands the majority of the house. In this case, why should either side budge on their goals? Each has a strong mandate to see their vision of the future of the country fulfilled and has the power to try and enact that vision. This also begs basic procedural questions. Suppose the House passes a vote of no confidence against the Prime Minister, does he have to step down and be replaced, thus 'invalidating' the popular vote in his favor? Alternatively, can the prime minister dismiss the house and call for elections while maintaining his job? In which case isn't his stance basically declaring that the people were wrong in their electoral choices?
If you're interested in this question, Paul Keating has talked about similar proposals in Australia (especially in context of the Republican movement) and his discussion offers a number of extra objections to this. If you poke around it should be easy to find.
Philosophers and political scientists the world over will be glad to know you've solved this historically thorny issue so succinctly and quickly. Well done.That's fucking democracy.
Just gives you time to practice drawing the most anatomically correct penis that you can before you go in the booth.
But, frankly, the 'I lose time from my life' argument is one I give negative shits about. As long as the day is a compensated day off then I see voting as exactly like jury duty, a societal mandate that you should take seriously and cheapening it only does everyone harm. And, yeah, you can approach it from a set of personal values that are skeptical to the project (drawing dicks on the ballot, refusing to vote to convict anyone, etc.) but you still have to take that question and process seriously.