• @chonglibloodsport
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    61 month ago

    I think I could support STV but not party-list PR. Frankly, I hate political parties for the way they force my elected representative to “toe the party line” against the interests for which I elected them in the first place! STV is okay because it does not give parties any more power than they have under FPTP.

    Ideally I’d like to see political parties abolished. The founding fathers of the US feared the damage parties would cause to the system they were building. They turned out to be right!

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      PR gives more power to smaller parties as opposed to big ones. Here in Australia we have STV but not PR, and it still sucks. Our democracy is almost as broken as America’s. Most people on the left agree with the Greens more than the larger Labor party, but our votes for the Greens don’t count. We live in labor/liberal districts, and our votes transfer to Labor. Which is better than letting Liberals win, which is why we haven’t fallen to fascism like the US has, but it still sucks. In the last national election, Greens got 12% of the popular vote, but only 2.6% of the seats. Less than a quarter what they deserved! Labor loves non-proportional representation, because it keeps the two party system running. If we had PR, there would be less power in the hands of big parties.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      Proportional representation

      A useful facet of proportional representation is that it often results in you having multiple representatives (shared with more people) rather than only one (“Academics agree that the most important influence on proportionality is an electoral district’s magnitude, the number of representatives elected from the district.”). That means you are much more likely to have someone to represent you at least somewhat rather than having a 50% chance of having nobody to represent you. This has been a major selling point for electoral reform for a long time: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l8XOZJkozfI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqWwV3xk9Qk

      A TED-Ed video suggests that to “choose a defining fight” is useful. If people ask for “proportional representation” it would still be important even if we had an equal chance of ending up getting single member districts with STV or large electoral districts that elect multiple members with party-list proportional representation (list-PR)! With better representation, I expect we will find it easier to implement further improvements to state institutions.

      I personally think “proportional representation” (PR) and “better representation” will be much easier terms to use to rally support than “single transferable vote” (STV) and “not having to worry about how anyone else is voting” (which would be assisted by having independence of irrelevant alternatives), since the meaning of the former is surely much clearer to the average person. STV / other voting systems with desirable qualities are good to advocate for, but it seems even “random dictatorship” is in some ways better than plurality voting (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranked_pairs#Comparison_table), so I expect summarizing “improving the electoral system” with the term “proportional representation” will be more likely to make my life better than advocating for STV specifically.

      Note that some implementations of party-list proportional representation violate voter’s privacy (“In 2014 a German citizen, Christian Dworeck, reported this lack of secrecy in Swedish voting to the European Commission” (I suspect Israel uses a similar system: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wFbBuD32DqQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c_IvDkWGqwI)), and I probably wouldn’t specifically advocate for it. However, I will definitely advocate against having any electoral district elect only a single representative or using plurality voting. I can complain about party-list proportional representation, but I can’t presently say it leads to worse representation than what we generally get in Canada or the USA.

      Parties

      My understanding about how political parties came about is that people started voting on bills in order to influence how people voted on other bills (“I’ll support your bill if you support mine”), rather than considering each bill by its individual merits. An interesting phenomenon is that people also tend to dislike “omnibus” bills where a large number of changes result from a single vote, even though that at least formalizes the process of getting people to agree (it achieves the same thing but with one vote rather than several). These things seem to be hard to avoid, and parties provide other benefits due to being able to more efficiently provide certain benefits to multiple candidates at once, so I’m more focused on getting better representation with or without parties rather than focusing on parties specifically.

      “In modern times the votes were unanimous” for electing the king of Germany or king of the Romans, and it seems to me that the point of having a representative nowadays is to empower someone who promises to vote in your interest, so it’s a little confusing to me that people were/are surprised that people will make promises about how to vote in order to achieve their political goals.

      Parties are quite ingrained in many electoral systems, so I think focusing on them rather than a more general criticism of poor representation will lead to less effective advocacy. Some entities I expect would be described as “parties” are even funded by the European Parliament:

      Groups receive funding from the parliament.