Zeus wrote:I LOVE the idea of a minority government. That way, you get two points of views forced to be serviced by any action as opposed to 1. The fact that our parties were too childish to make it work and we didn't punish them for it (we rewarded the Conservatives) don't diminish the fact that minority governments will do far more to serve more of the public than anything short of abolishing the formation of parties, my favoured course of action.
I'm not talking about personal preference, but the reality of the situation. With the current form of elections, 3+ parties cannot be a stable political landscape. It's just taken a bit to have one party decide to combine forces and defeat the rest. Sure, I would love to have more than 2 parties here, but I know that's not going to happen, because the smaller parties are going to be defeated the larger ones. (In fact, you're seeing this kind of behavior in corporate mergers and the like.)
Zeus wrote:You get rid of national parties and then you'll see, after an adjustment period, true government for the people. With parties, it's just choosin' Tweedle Dee over Tweedle Dum.
No, you'll see an even worse outcome. People don't spend the time to research the choices. It already happens with local office positions:
For the elections with parties involved that hasn't received national attention, many people just vote whoever has the R or D in front of their name. For the ones WITHOUT parties (judges and the like), the methodology is even SIMPLER: picking people based off of their name. Why do you think they promote signs with last names in big letters? Name recognition. And it works. It's horrible that it does, because it betrays an abusive problem with our election process: People don't have time to research this stuff.
(We had a Dept of Agriculture head named "Richie Farmer". It was the perfect name for the position, because he's basically a "rich farmer". We all figured he had the job for life, until he made the dumb move to be a running mate for the Republican governor race. He lost. People now know more about the guy, so he'll never get his guaranteed position again. He threw away a good thing because he thought people actually liked him. No, people liked his name.)
I mean, hell, we have a representative democracy for a reason: Our forefathers KNEW that the proles can't and won't research the topics, so they made it representative. Even our representatives don't research the bills they are given to them most of the time.