View Single Post
Old 10-04-2004, 10:47 AM  
Libertine
sex dwarf
 
Libertine's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 17,860
Quote:
Originally posted by Pleasurepays
This is a good idea in theory, but Russia ended up having over 50 parties with presidential candidates by the second election and the reality was that NO candidate was even close to representing the majority view on any issue. In the end, they had to severely limit the total number of political parties. Some represented the dying military. Some represented Communism. Some represented the idea of social reforms. Some represented Labor unions and the list goes on and on.

In this scenario, the "biggest group" with "the most support" could actually be representing a very small minority of people in the country.

It was not possible or realistic for people to know where each candidate stood on any issue because it would be mathematically unrealistic. I think that is a primary reason for the political polarization that almost all countries see and why everything settles into similar points of equilibrium - 1-3 parties that have a chance.... and the rest that don't.

If a system like that were to happen, the questions would then have to be... how long would it take for number parties to dwindle down and die to a limited few, before it would make sense. would they? And if that happened... would you have more than 2-3 parties such as we do now and if so, what was the point in the first place.

People can safely stand behind a party, knowing how that party stands on all issues and have the security of knowing that they agree with 90% of what that party stands for regardless of the candidate.

- anyway, i just wanted to point that out... not really wanting to be drawn into a protracted debate on political theory and practise.
Ehm... loads of countries in Europe are using a somewhat similar system rather successfully, and you want to make the comparison to Russia, a country which has only known democracy for a few years yet?

Besides, an electoral threshold will solve the problem of too many small parties quite easily... as it has in just about every western country.

Also, you're missing the main advantage of the system I'm talking about. A party does not need to "have a chance of winning" to be a viable option. One can vote for a party which will get only 10% of all votes, and that party will get 10% of the seats in parliament.
About 4-6 parties can easily exist, and new parties with new ideas have an actual chance of gaining a foothold.
__________________
/(bb|[^b]{2})/
Libertine is offline   Share thread on Digg Share thread on Twitter Share thread on Reddit Share thread on Facebook Reply With Quote