RealGoober said:I think a "True Democracy" can be best described as when "the majority of the population elects, in a free, fair, unbiased election, to elect a party to government that they feel can best represent their wishes, generally"
In this, essentially the President IS the Government. Usually he receives the majority of votes from the majority of voters, the one (I think) exception was 2000. So, to answer the question, in all but extreme cases (like 2000), yes, the USA is a True Democracy.
Yeah but he goes and does it anyway, back bench rebellion or not.Panzerking said:The USA is most definitely a Republic whereas Britain is a Democracy. Incidentally that is one of the things which amuses Europeans about US politics as the President is never made to publicly explain or argue the case for any actions or decisions to anyone! Over here in the UK Tony Blair has to argue the case on almost every decision and peice of legislation with Ministers of Parliament (who are all individually elected).
Appearently, this is related to the founding fathers fear of mob rule. In Europe, the word republic is used as an opposite to monarchy and not related to how democratic a country is. An american visiting Europe and claiming US isn't a democracy would put it in the company of China and North Korea. Today, when hostility towards US have reached new levels among European leftists, a common remark is that US isn't democratic, referring to the President being controlled by billion-$$ multinationals bla bla bla. Agreeing with them wouldn't exactly help european US-supporters in a discussion.In the United States republic came to mean a state that did not practice direct democracy but rather had the government only indirectly controlled by the people. In the rest of the world this is known as representative democracy.
No. The US is a Representative Demcratic Republic(if you will)Colonel said:So to begin, a simple question, Is the US a true Democracy?
Akka said:Gosh... Again this ignorant rant about "it's not a democracy, it's a republic !".
Democracy and republics are different and totally compatible.
Read this and use words correctly, please.
RealGoober said:In this, essentially the President IS the Government. Usually he receives the majority of votes from the majority of voters, the one (I think) exception was 2000.
Howstuffworks "How does the Electoral College Work?"# 1824: John Quincy Adams received more than 38,000 fewer votes than Andrew Jackson, but neither candidate won a majority of the Electoral College. Adams was awarded the presidency when the election was thrown to the House of Representatives.
# 1876: Nearly unanimous support from small states gave Rutherford B. Hayes a one-vote margin in the Electoral College, despite the fact that he lost the popular vote to Samuel J. Tilden by 264,000 votes. Hayes carried five out of the six smallest states (excluding Delaware). These five states plus Colorado gave Hayes 22 electoral votes with only 109,000 popular votes. At the time, Colorado had been just been admitted to the Union and decided to appoint electors instead of holding elections. So, Hayes won Colorado's three electoral votes with zero popular votes. It was the only time in U.S. history that small state support has decided an election.
# 1888: Benjamin Harrison lost the popular vote by 95,713 votes to Grover Cleveland, but won the electoral vote by 65. In this instance, some say the Electoral College worked the way it is designed to work by preventing a candidate from winning an election based on support from one region of the country. The South overwhelmingly supported Cleveland, and he won by more than 425,000 votes in six southern states. However, in the rest of the country he lost by more than 300,000 votes.