Political parties in the US
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Political parties in the US
election is comming up and i have no clue whom to vote for. i´ve never lived in the us but i can vote in california, the state which was the last place my mom lived in.
anyway, never having lived in the us i´m not really familliar with the different parties. what parties are there?
there´s the democrats and republicans of course, and the greens but what else is there. could someone put down the most important parties so i can look up their programs on the web?
anyway, never having lived in the us i´m not really familliar with the different parties. what parties are there?
there´s the democrats and republicans of course, and the greens but what else is there. could someone put down the most important parties so i can look up their programs on the web?
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Well, if you like Bush, vote for Bush. If you don't like Bush, vote for Kerry. That appears to be the sum of the current political issues within the nation.
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well, actually that´s exactly what i don´t want to do.HemlockGrey wrote:Well, if you like Bush, vote for Bush. If you don't like Bush, vote for Kerry. That appears to be the sum of the current political issues within the nation.
i want to read all the different programs of the parties and vote for whom i think has the best program. perhaps that´s too idealistic since they´re going to screw us over anyway, but well, vacation is comming up and i need something to do.
- StarshipTitanic
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Well Bush and Kerry are the candidates for the Republican and Democratic Parties, respectively. Those parties are the only ones with any chance of winning an election.salm wrote:well, actually that´s exactly what i don´t want to do.HemlockGrey wrote:Well, if you like Bush, vote for Bush. If you don't like Bush, vote for Kerry. That appears to be the sum of the current political issues within the nation.
i want to read all the different programs of the parties and vote for whom i think has the best program. perhaps that´s too idealistic since they´re going to screw us over anyway, but well, vacation is comming up and i need something to do.
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well in a long term voting for some third party might result in a more established third party.
a couple of years ago the greens here in germany were nothing. now they´re part of the government. i realize that it´s much harder in the us since you don´t have this form of coalition among governing parties, but, well who knows, perhaps in 40.000 years...
a couple of years ago the greens here in germany were nothing. now they´re part of the government. i realize that it´s much harder in the us since you don´t have this form of coalition among governing parties, but, well who knows, perhaps in 40.000 years...
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Hehehe.. maybe so, maybe so.. But it seems every election year, more and more people are voting third party. However, I think it's more going to be one-on-one with Bush and Kerry this go-round.. I don't think that it should be that way, but it is.. -sighs-salm wrote:well in a long term voting for some third party might result in a more established third party.
a couple of years ago the greens here in germany were nothing. now they´re part of the government. i realize that it´s much harder in the us since you don´t have this form of coalition among governing parties, but, well who knows, perhaps in 40.000 years...
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Here in the United States politics in general are more conservative than in Europe. For example, a liberal European party would seem to American politicians like communists, whereas a conservative European party would...also seem like communists.
I kid, I kid. But seriously, there are only two parties that matter, the Republican (conservative) party, and the Democratic (relatively liberal) party.
Just about all the third parties are run by idealists and whackos that wouldn't actually know enough to run the government effectively.
I kid, I kid. But seriously, there are only two parties that matter, the Republican (conservative) party, and the Democratic (relatively liberal) party.
Just about all the third parties are run by idealists and whackos that wouldn't actually know enough to run the government effectively.
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My vote is independent of either party. I'll still vote for one of the major candidates if I think one of the major candidates is the best person for the job, but if I think that, say, the Green Party candidate could do better (never happen, but just for the sake of argument) then that's where my vote goes. Screw political parties.
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I'd say screw political parties too, and vote based soley on the candidate; however, none of the fringe party candidates are even remotely in touch with reality.
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- PrinceofLowLight
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There's a quote an old SNL skit that sums it up the best-
"Remember, when you don't vote for the candidate you find least offensive, you run the risk of winding up with the candidate you find most offensive"
"Remember, when you don't vote for the candidate you find least offensive, you run the risk of winding up with the candidate you find most offensive"
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Since I'm not an American, I don't want to get too out of line here, but I think that people voting based more on who they don't want elected than who they do is a sure sign that something is wrong with the system.
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As parties exist to get someone in the President's office -- and that requires 50% of the electoral vote -- it is unlikely that a third party will really become viable.salm wrote:but on the long term a third party might get big OR which i think is more likely, the two other parties might actually adopt ideas of the third party because they see that too many voters run off, if enough people vote for a third party.
as said, it´s unlikely, but there´s still the possiblity that the big parties adopt ideas from smaller parties, if the demand is there and expressed by enough people by voting a third party. i´m not saying that this is going to be withing the next 50 years either.phongn wrote: As parties exist to get someone in the President's office -- and that requires 50% of the electoral vote -- it is unlikely that a third party will really become viable.
The large parties in the US are actually rather diverse which further minimizes the utility of third parties. They have covered the center out to some moderately extreme (in the US sense) fringes pretty well.salm wrote:as said, it´s unlikely, but there´s still the possiblity that the big parties adopt ideas from smaller parties, if the demand is there and expressed by enough people by voting a third party. i´m not saying that this is going to be withing the next 50 years either.
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Large numbers of votes for a third party signals the two majors that there's a dissatisfied voter base out there just begging to be swept into the arms of a major party. See for example the Progressive Party, which never came close to electing a president but the ideals of which were eventually absorbed by the Democrats. The value in voting third party is sending a message that certain issues are important enough to you that you'll vote for someone sure to lose the election because you like his position on those issues best.
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Erm... No, it isn't. If you can't find a candidate who agrees with you on everything to your satisfaction (which I guarantee you won't) you vote to make sure that the guy you like the least does not gain office. But that's only the intelligent voters. No, a good 80% of the electorate picks a party and votes the party line no matter what just because of their parents or whatever. Its about 40% going to either side automatically just because people allow the parties to herd them like cows. So yes, the Presidential election is decided by about 20% of the voting population.Psycho Smiley wrote:Since I'm not an American, I don't want to get too out of line here, but I think that people voting based more on who they don't want elected than who they do is a sure sign that something is wrong with the system.
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The one with the most would still win. In fact that's as common as not given the way the system is set up.Uraniun235 wrote:What would happen if no candidate got 50%?phongn wrote:As parties exist to get someone in the President's office -- and that requires 50% of the electoral vote -- it is unlikely that a third party will really become viable.