SineSwiper wrote:Zeus wrote:Don't forget, I'm one who feels that parties should be illegalized and all dealings and agreements between politicians very, very closely monitored. That to me is truly the only way you can have the government be "for the people" again. You'd force each MP to ONLY focus on the needs of his/her riding and only vote that way. Their allegiances should only be to their constituents and no one else
Careful now. Your government and ours are representative democracies, not complete democracies. We sent representatives for a reason: to (or try to) elect somebody who isn't as brain dead as the populace as a whole. If members of Congress followed the public's opinion on everything, our country would be in bad shape. (Take the unpopular bailout, for example. It's needed. It has to be done, but the population doesn't like it.)
I agree. But when you introduce parties, you get a coalition of people who band together to form a solitary opinion and all vote together (well, mostly). When you have this happen, your MP isn't really going to vote what best for his/her riding but rather what's best for his/her party. We need to eliminate his/her focus on ANYTHING but their riding as, really, that's the only thing that matters. They represent the people in their riding not some fucking party line. Up here, we don't vote for a PM, we vote for the person representing our riding. Whatever party has the most riding nominates one of their MPs as the PM.
Personally, I could fucking care less what the morons in Toronto who voted for my party want. But the party as a whole has to cater to the majority of its OVERALL constituents so my guy is pressured/forced to vote on something that we here don't want him to 'cause those prissy fucks in Toronto want it. My guy should ONLY vote on what me and my riding-mates want/need, period. That's how he/she will truly represent me and my riding-mates who voted for them. Right now, that ain't happening since what you're really doing is voting for the party rather than the person. So we as a people actually have very little true representation unless we're completely along the party lines.
Incidentally, that's why I feel that so many people don't vote, particularly the younger ones. They don't feel a connection to these dinosaur parties that don't really represent them in any way. At the same time, that's I think why you saw so many people galvanized around Obama as so many felt that he DID represent them. Really, against any other candidate, I think McCain wins.
Getting rid of the parties doesn't absolve the MP from doing what's best for his/her constituent regardless of what their opinion might be. That burden is still on them. All it does is eliminate any other pressures/influences that takes his/her focus away from the people who voted for them