I'm wondering what's the necessary mechanism for change. I know there are several better voting methods, but what are the mechanics for implementing one of them in USA? How exactly is the change made?
If I understand your system correctly, the change must be made at a federal level.
(Federal constitution change? Good luck with that)
What do you propose to do about it?We will still have regulatory capture. Apathetic voters. Big money's influence. Corruption. Pork barrel projects. The military industrial complex. Bureaucracy's from hell. Rogue agencies.
That's Panglossian nonsense. It can and has been improved on. Does anyone want to return to how the President was originally elected? Seriously. As in an Obama-Romney Presidency.We have a federal republic, with separation of powers, bicameral legislators, a common law tradition, a civilian commander in chief, and a Bill of Rights. That's pretty good.
You've got your work cut out for you, don't you think?Now we just need to make better people.
That effort's home page: National Popular Vote -- Electoral college reform by direct election of the President States agreeing to give their electoral votes to the popular-vote winner. It would be triggered by enough states agreeing, enough to give them a majority of electoral votes. So far, 11 states have agreed, with 61% of the electoral votes needed to win. Strictly speaking, 10 states and 1 pseudo-state (DC). I've tried to estimate the prospects of it passing. It's gotten the farthest in blue states, but to go into action, it will also need some purple and red states. Given the recent political polarization, that will likely be very difficult.
In recent years it's always been the other way around.
I think the first thing we need to do is get it done state by state in the states that allow for ballot initiatives. If you get it done in a single state, that state can also use that voting method to elect federal representatives and senators. After it becomes more common place, we should try to get it passed through regular legislation in states that don't allow for ballot initiates. Maybe you need a united third party to actually get this done.
You can also change the way Presidential elections work state by state. You could have legislation that allowed for approval voting to select the winner of the state and allow the winner to decide who the electors have to vote for.
Another thing we need though is for asshole progressives who have a voice like Cenk Uygur to acknowledge this is a serious problem. Unfortunately, he has his head in the sand and thinks that talking about anything other than money in politics is a distraction.
In recent years it's always been the other way around.
There have only been two times from the time of Washington when the candidate winning the most popular votes didn't also win the presidency.
Electoral vote adjustment is a non-starter.
Long term problem requires long term solution.
My thought: Adjust civics education requirements in public and private schools for graduation. Improve it so that every student, to graduate, must know all his elected officials well enough to write papers on them. Ensure that every student knows governmental form, operation, and status, of every department, function, and office, and that she can demonstrate such on a citizen certification test prior to graduation. Teach that voting is a responsibility and duty just like, and as honorable as, serving in the military, that failure to carry out her responsibility is as bad as disrespecting her mother, deserving of being disowned.
Pay everyone who vote a sum equal to her time worked, and, at the same time fine everyone who doesn't vote a percentage of the cost for running the election, or alternatively keep elections open until everyone has voted including having them on weekends or being declared holidays except with the requirement, subject to loss of wage for the election period, to vote
Ballot initiative - BallotpediaI think yes, it needs to be done state by state.
I guess I still wonder, how does that happen. (maybe it was linked above and I didn't read far enough (which would be ironic, huh?)) Do we start with a petition? require a state rep to sponsor? How can we pressure them to vote for it? Hmmm.
So you have to organize a campaign to get it on the ballot, if your state allows it.The ballot initiative is a means by which a petition signed by a certain minimum number of registered voters can bring about a public vote on a proposed statute or constitutional amendment. Ballot initiatives are also called, depending on the state, "popular initiative," "voter initiative," "citizen initiative" or just "initiative."
Twenty-four states allow ballot initiatives, which are a form of direct democracy.
Rhea, have you ever examinedRhea said:I do think apathy can be fought with a voting system that does not punish for non-mainstream choices. I think if that were so, we might be very surprised how many votes the non-2-party candidates get, if the voters knew they had a backup of the next least bad.
I don't understand the US party system; it seems to be completely different from anything in the developed world.It'd take a Constitutional Amendment, likely at each state level because it'd take time for the momentum to grow in favor of it.
I think more would be accomplished by doing other things:
1) Limit campaigning for primaries between September and October
2) Limit campaigning for general elections between October and November
3) No more ridiculously stupid primary seasons!
This can help reduce the money that possibly be involved in elections which would go much further to helping than changing voting options. If you don't kill the money, you can't kill the two-party system. But the primary system is run by the Parties themselves. How fucked up is that?
What do you propose to do about it?
That's Panglossian nonsense. It can and has been improved on. Does anyone want to return to how the President was originally elected? Seriously. As in an Obama-Romney Presidency.We have a federal republic, with separation of powers, bicameral legislators, a common law tradition, a civilian commander in chief, and a Bill of Rights. That's pretty good.
You've got your work cut out for you, don't you think?Now we just need to make better people.