Snow Leopard
Hibernating
- Messages
- 5,902
- Location
- South Australia
This is why you need a preferential voting system like in Australia. (even then it only works when politicians don't lie to your face the day before the election, but its a start).
I don't personally consider this government to have democratic legitimacy,
We'll have to agree to disagree then. Under the present system the result is as legitimate as it gets and there are no grounds for complaining if you didn't get the result you wanted.
Perhaps we would be better directing our energies to something constructive like supporting research that might just get some of out of the situation were we need to rely on benefits and also putting our weight behind Charles Shepherd and co who are acting on our behalf to try to fix a flawed system with regards to those with fluctuating conditions.
Certainly more constructive than spraying obscenities on a war memorial on VE day or other such gesture politics.
We'll have to agree to disagree then. Under the present system the result is as legitimate as it gets and there are no grounds for complaining if you didn't get the result you wanted.
Lastly if you have a first-past-the-post voting system, then it is possible (and usually the case) where the elected leaders are not those which the majority of the population would have chosen directly. This questions the legitimacy of such a system.
And if you elect using systems like PR you end up electing a disparate range of the least disliked parties with the collective life expectancy and decision making ability of any number of Italian governments. Horses for courses.
How about both? A PR senate, combined with a lower house of local representatives, combined with a preferential voting system. Such a thing already exists in at least one country.![]()
Let me see if I understand this correctly...
In Uncle Sam land we have an authoritarian executive elected by a little-understood and slightly mysterious "Electoral College". The executive branch routinely ignores the legislative and judicial branches with impunity (as well as any and all international treaties and laws that are inconvenient).
In Canada and UK we see a parliamentary system both using "first past the post" where the legislative and executive are the same people.
In Australia folks use some sort of proportional system to select a parliament.
And yet in each of these countries the policies are essentially the same: domination of native peoples, smashing of foreign societies, impoverishment of their own citizens.
Does anyone seriously believe that re-jiggering the electoral charade will change policies?
Does anyone seriously believe that re-jiggering the electoral charade will change policies?
Absolutely. If there was a majority in the senate, rather than the balance of power in the hands of those minor parties/independents, then our government would have set our country back decades, with just one year of scary-bad policy.
The reason why things are comparatively better in Australia as they are in the UK or the USA is precisely because we have a slightly better system, because it certainly isn't due to better quality leaders. The USA has far better leaders (they aren't always elected though), yet fails to deliver better outcomes in so many respects. Why?
The reason why things are comparatively better in Australia as they are in the UK or the USA is precisely because we have a slightly better system, because it certainly isn't due to better quality leaders. The USA has far better leaders (they aren't always elected though), yet fails to deliver better outcomes in so many respects. Why?
I think one of the most interesting things about the Australian system is the compulsory voting. One of my concerns in the UK is that all parties tend to aim policies at the groups they feel will vote which can often skew things.
Isn't Oz taking the lead in expelling asylum seekers/economic migrants by stopping them at source rather than the EU's save and think about the consequences later stance? Not saying it's right or wrong but that was an executive decision which doesn't seem to have been counterbalanced by any other branch of government.
UK people - sign this petition to keep the Human Rights Act:
https://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/save-our-human-rights
94,000 signatures already (including me).![]()
In Australia folks use some sort of proportional system to select a parliament.
Because it's completely accepted for US politicians to be controlled by the interests of the corporations which have funded them. In fact, it's pretty much required that a politician be funded by (and indebted to) various corporate interests if they are to have a serious shot at winning any election.The USA has far better leaders (they aren't always elected though), yet fails to deliver better outcomes in so many respects. Why?