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We Need a Third Party


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6 minutes ago, Tenhigh said:

The problem is in the primaries.  These people have to pander to the fringe to get the nod, then they are beholden to that pandering in the general election.

 

4 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said:

Thanks. I’m game, but seriously doubt it would result in the improvements we clearly all want. It’s far more likely that over a short time the new party would simply be swallowed up by whichever existing party it most closely aligns with and whole lot of people will be conveniently, what’s the word….. disenfranchised.

 

It all depends on the kind of electoral reform that is enacted.

 

Personally, I think the simplest fix that has the biggest potential to make a difference is ranked choice voting (nothing will solve everything, there is no panacea, but we can make steps to a better system).

 

In ranked choice voting, voters rank the candidates according to their preference. If a single candidate gets 50%+1 of the vote, they win. If no candidate does, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their votes are redistributed to the voters' second preference. This process repeats until either a candidate gets 50%+1 or there's just one candidate left.

 

This helps break the "us vs. them" mentality because Candidate A will want to try to convince Candidate B's supporters to select them as their #2 choice in case Candidate B is eliminated.

 

At first, it'll probably just be different flavors of Dems and Republicans running with multiple candidates from the same party in the race. But eventually, it should pave the way for viable third parties. You could have people pick the Libertarian candidate at #1 and the GOP as #2, or the Green Party as #1 and Dems as #2. Those third parties will no longer play the spoiler roll and will have an easier time getting supporters.

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11 hours ago, Doc Brown said:

The American people will determine when democrats sway too far to the left and when Republicans sway too far to the right.  The two party system has worked since the founding of the republic and will continue to do so.

I agree. The problem- as others have pointed out- is in the primaries. The participation rate is just too low, and that favors candidates at the far end of the spectrum for each party. It’s exactly how an India Walton ends up as the endorsed candidate for Mayor. Most people probably don’t agree with the far left/ right but they vote for their perceived “ lesser of two evils”. Often this is due to an extreme stance on one or two fringe issues. Occasionally a good candidate such as Donald Trump can emerge but not often enough. 

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2 hours ago, ChiGoose said:

 

 

It all depends on the kind of electoral reform that is enacted.

 

Personally, I think the simplest fix that has the biggest potential to make a difference is ranked choice voting (nothing will solve everything, there is no panacea, but we can make steps to a better system).

 

In ranked choice voting, voters rank the candidates according to their preference. If a single candidate gets 50%+1 of the vote, they win. If no candidate does, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and their votes are redistributed to the voters' second preference. This process repeats until either a candidate gets 50%+1 or there's just one candidate left.

 

This helps break the "us vs. them" mentality because Candidate A will want to try to convince Candidate B's supporters to select them as their #2 choice in case Candidate B is eliminated.

 

At first, it'll probably just be different flavors of Dems and Republicans running with multiple candidates from the same party in the race. But eventually, it should pave the way for viable third parties. You could have people pick the Libertarian candidate at #1 and the GOP as #2, or the Green Party as #1 and Dems as #2. Those third parties will no longer play the spoiler roll and will have an easier time getting supporters.

Our current cabal of corrupt elected officials won't even vote to exclude themselves from profiting from their positions of power.....and you think they'll vote to make it so they have less of a chance from getting re-elected. Not going to happen.  But I definitely admire your optimism! 🙂

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3 minutes ago, SoCal Deek said:

Our current cabal of corrupt elected officials won't even vote to exclude themselves from profiting from their positions of power.....and you think they'll vote to make it so they have less of a chance from getting re-elected. Not going to happen.  But I definitely admire your optimism! 🙂

 

We can get around it through voter referendums like Alaskans did in 2020 with Measure 2. I think NYC recently adopted it as well. I think people are so fed up with the status quo and the partisanship that if we can find a way to put the question to them and not the politicians, there's a chance to get something done.

 

You're right that if the politicians have a say, they will not willingly give up their power. So we need to work around that.

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In Canada we have first past the post and multiple parties, so it is definitely possible. Realistically only 3 parties (right, middle-left, left) hold any power and the third party has never held a majority, but right now the two left parties are working together as a majority. i like that they are forced to compromise to a point because they must work with each other or do nothing.

 

FPTP is crap, but at least we have more than one party which seems makes it less terrible.

 

Edited by dickleyjones
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21 hours ago, ChiGoose said:

Almost impossible in a First Past the Post system like ours. We haven't had a successful third party in more than 170 years.

 

If we really want to break the stranglehold of the two party system and end both parties, we need to advocate for electoral changes that make a third party viable. Simplest of this would be something like ranked choice voting or approval voting.

What's successful though? I think getting elected outright is a real longshot for sure but goddamn can't a third party hold out their votes to at least get some concessions from the main party they align closest with?

 

Often, I get it, people just go "Nader! NADER" and everyone gets too scared to support any third party all the way (normally the leader, not the voters) . But it sure seems to me a stubborn third party leader with a stubborn base could get REAL concessions, not just lip service, by playing REAL hardball and threatening to withhold support, and for me at least,  I'd call that successful politics too.

 

 

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32 minutes ago, ChiGoose said:

I think NYC recently adopted it as well. I think people are so fed up with the status quo and the partisanship that if we can find a way to put the question to them and not the politicians, there's a chance to get something done.

Was rank choice voting for NYC Mayor perfect? No. There were a lot of problems, not the least of which was what seemed like an eternity before the ultimate winner was announced. 
But in my opinion, it resulted in the election of a far more sensible, centrist candidate - Adams - who appeals to a larger (and yes, more diverse in the true sense of the word) segment on New Yorkers than what we got the last couple times around (DeBlasio x2) with traditional voting. Could Adams have made it with the old voting system? No. So anything that forces candidates to appeal to the great middle - where, after all, most of the voters live - is worth considering. 

Edited by The Frankish Reich
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27 minutes ago, Golden*Wheels said:

What's successful though? I think getting elected outright is a real longshot for sure but goddamn can't a third party hold out their votes to at least get some concessions from the main party they align closest with?

 

Often, I get it, people just go "Nader! NADER" and everyone gets too scared to support any third party all the way (normally the leader, not the voters) . But it sure seems to me a stubborn third party leader with a stubborn base could get REAL concessions, not just lip service, by playing REAL hardball and threatening to withhold support, and for me at least,  I'd call that successful politics too.

 

 

 

I think a scenario in which a third party candidate gets so powerful they can dictate to their voters to hold off on supporting another party until they get certain concessions and then, once they give the signal, all of their voters will support that major party in acknowledgement of the concessions seems... almost impossible.

 

Years ago, I stumbled upon CGP Grey's video on FPTP and it changed how I viewed elections and electoral systems. There is vast room for improvement, but even something as simple as a referendum to change to ranked choice would make a tremendous difference.

 

 

 

Personally, I would love us to move to multimember districts with STV for the House, but baby steps...

 

2 minutes ago, The Frankish Reich said:

Was rank choice voting for NYC Mayor perfect? No. There were a lot of problems, not the least of which was what seemed like an eternity before the ultimate winner was announced. 
But in my opinion, it resulted in the election of a far more sensible, centrist candidate - Adams - who appeals to a larger (and yes, more diverse in the true sense of the word) segment on New Yorkers than what we got the last couple times around (DeBlasio x2) with traditional voting. Could Adams have made it with the old voting system? No. So anything that forces candidates to appeal to the great middle - where, after all, most of the voters live - is worth considering. 

 

Bonus points: Twitter HATES him. Twitter ain't real life, people.

Edited by ChiGoose
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21 hours ago, JaCrispy said:

Absolutely! But I will take it one step further…

 

We need a 3rd and 4th party- one to compete with the establishment Republicans, and one to compete with the establishment Democrats…

 

Of course, it would only be a matter of time before corporations caught on and corrupted them too…

Honestly, we need a multi-party, coalition system like Europe.  I know most don't want to hear that, but here's why I think that.

 

Back before electronic record-keeping and search engines, politicians could work a back room deal and stretch their party's platform to accomplish legislation and hide it deep in the Congressional Record.  Nowadays it's extremely difficult as your own party  will find that one instance and kill you with it in the primary. 

 

I feel part of Congress not getting anything done in recent years is because of the fear this visibility creates.  If you had more parties, with only one or two crucial platform issues, then that would create less accountability for non-crucial issues and the flexibility of coalitions to get more legislation passed.

 

I don't know how we could make this happen, especially because the reps and dems won't give up power easily at the state and local levels.

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11 minutes ago, Golden*Wheels said:

What's successful though? I think getting elected outright is a real longshot for sure but goddamn can't a third party hold out their votes to at least get some concessions from the main party they align closest with?

 

Often, I get it, people just go "Nader! NADER" and everyone gets too scared to support any third party all the way (normally the leader, not the voters) . But it sure seems to me a stubborn third party leader with a stubborn base could get REAL concessions, not just lip service, by playing REAL hardball and threatening to withhold support, and for me at least,  I'd call that successful politics too.

 

 

The problem with many 3rd parties today is that they tend to represent the fringes more than the center.  The poster earlier had it right when they said we need 2 more parties. 

We'd benefit from something like this kind of party structure:

  • Socially Liberal/Fiscally Liberal
  • Socially Liberal/Fiscally Conservative
  • Socially Conservative/Fiscally Liberal 
  • Socially Conservative/Fiscally Conservative. 

 

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It's ok to not vote.  If you disagree with both - don't vote.  That sends a message.  I have no idea what the hell is going on in California.  Ds should be staying home en masse in most parts of the country.  

 

Religiously voting for Ds in places like New York, California, DC, or Oregon is absolutely insane.  Why?  Your answer is probably Trump sucks.  

 

Congrats.  You're the problem. 

 

I didn’t vote in several elections here in Virginia because the GOP nominated losers and stiffs that inspired no one and seemed little different to the Democrat back about 10-12 years ago. 

 

 

Let's go back to that time for a second to understand why we're here:

 

The first Blue Wave of the 21st century - 2006--2008.  How did that work out for everyone?  How has the country been better off since this new generation of Ds has taken over their party? 

 

The evil GOP did all they could to stop Nationalized Health Care?  That means they hated all things Obama did?  Thats what we learned?  No sorry, he ran on absolutely nothing in 2008.  We told you he and his team were just a bunch of rebranded socialists that hate this country and we were told those were lies.  

 

He did not run on the kinds of health care plans that were floating around Congress in 2009.

 

You know what else he said?  Marriage was between a man and a woman. 

 

Now they can't tell you what a woman is.

 

  

 

 

 

 

Been saying it for months.  

 

Stay home.  Don't need you to vote R.  How you're still voting D at this point is astonishing to me.   

Edited by Big Blitz
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15 hours ago, ChiGoose said:

 

I think a scenario in which a third party candidate gets so powerful they can dictate to their voters to hold off on supporting another party until they get certain concessions and then, once they give the signal, all of their voters will support that major party in acknowledgement of the concessions seems... almost impossible.

 

 

Could be--but I honestly think if Bernie wasn't such a sheepdog/wimp, he could have gotten real concessions from the Democrats at times--they need his progressive wing and the votes they bring along. And I think THAT is still far closer to reality than actual reform....not that actual reform wouldn't be better!

 

I'm trying to play in the world of the SEMI-possible, I guess!

14 hours ago, Tenhigh said:

The problem with many 3rd parties today is that they tend to represent the fringes more than the center.  The poster earlier had it right when they said we need 2 more parties. 

We'd benefit from something like this kind of party structure:

  • Socially Liberal/Fiscally Liberal
  • Socially Liberal/Fiscally Conservative
  • Socially Conservative/Fiscally Liberal 
  • Socially Conservative/Fiscally Conservative. 

 

Hey fringes need to be represented too Ten! :)

 

And again, I'd say if you can move the main agenda with your voting bloc, it is not necessary to win outright. You just help move the conversation and steer the other party. That's WAY closer to reality IMO (just one real leader with a following away, hard to stop as that can happen grassroots) than actual reform involving a Constitutional convention etc. In this way the main parties would have to stay more responsive and representative of the body of the people.

 

Or at least, MORE people.

 

 

Edited by Golden*Wheels
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