I don't know what you said but for some reason I feel like I agree.Humans claim to be complex, and issue orriented. However most gravitate to either be for an issue or against. The problem is government is not supposed to control every aspect of life. The more complex the government gets, the more the polarity nature of issues are going to put off humans who think the government is the answer to all life's problems.
Single Transferable Vote
Humans claim to be complex, and issue orriented. However most
Come on man.I disagree, humans aren't issue oriented at all. Voting is almost always based on some mix of emotion, culture, identity, and values. That's why it is so easy for our electorate to become polarized - it isn't actually about finding solutions to problems or tackling the issues, it's about people wanting their culture and their values to win out in the end.
It's easy to compromise on issues and policy, but it's nearly impossible to compromise on one's values.
If it is not about issues, then why have a complex government where every voice is heard?I disagree, humans aren't issue oriented at all. Voting is almost always based on some mix of emotion, culture, identity, and values. That's why it is so easy for our electorate to become polarized - it isn't actually about finding solutions to problems or tackling the issues, it's about people wanting their culture and their values to win out in the end.
It's easy to compromise on issues and policy, but it's nearly impossible to compromise on one's values.
Come on man.
I voted in favour of that, it was called Alternative Vote, in the May 2011 UK referendum.
However people here in the UK did not then consider that to be true proportional representation.
The term proportional representation was then used to refer to systems where the number of representatives to be appointed
for a party was directly in proportion with the total number accumulating for all constituencies of votes for that party.
The question, if I am getting it right is why are governments not more diverse in the political spectrum? What does that even entail if not for the fact that the more "issues" you introduce into goverment, the more the "issues" themselves are going to conflict with one another. I would also argue the point where a person does not vote on the issues that effect them. Of course they are going to choose the party that best represents their views and belief system. The point about "winning" is also going with a party that has the best track record, if I can be so crude.His post still posits that issues are a basis for voting, even if a simplistic a polarized one. I'd argue that issues are merely a proxy for culture and values. This becomes obvious whenever you talk to people, because most people neither toe an ideological line nor adhere to absolutist, extremist views on stuff like guns. But they vote as if they did. Because a politician or party stance on the issue itself isn't what matters to them.
Single Transferable Vote is not what you called Alternative Vote and what we call preferential voting. AV/preferential retains single-member districts and thus still leads to non-proportional results.
The large improvement AV/preferences offers over your current system is instead an end to tactical voting and vote splitting dilemmas. Nothing to do with proportionality.
STV necessarily involves multi-member electorates, ie it is a form of voting which achieves proportional representation via ranked voting for individuals. This is as distinct from systems that achieve proportionality through party list systems or mixed-member proportional ones.
I agree with some of what you are saying, but you don't think that a substantial percentage of voters also pick a pet-issue or group of issues and pick "sides" based on the party line on that one (or handful) of issues? Gun control is one that springs to mind. I am skeptical that an avid gun/2nd amendment enthusiast is using the gun control issue as a pretense for being Republican.His post still posits that issues are a basis for voting, even if a simplistic a polarized one. I'd argue that issues are merely a proxy for culture and values. This becomes obvious whenever you talk to people, because most people neither toe an ideological line nor adhere to absolutist, extremist views on stuff like guns. But they vote as if they did. Because a politician or party stance on the issue itself isn't what matters to them.
Yeah, the Netherlands stands out as an exception that has ultra-proportional representation, without even a cutoff at 3-5% the way most places do, and still seems to get stable coalitions of like three or four out of zillions of parties. I have no idea why this arrangement works well for you guys but worse elsewhere.Not here
(Depending on where you put the boundary for short-lived governments)
One of the ideas behind FPTP voting is that a party has to be "responsible" and govern effectively and this prevents the sort of political fragmentation you see sometimes in parliamentary systems where you have a bunch of parties that would rather sit in opposition complaining than govern.
We can all see how well this is working out right now in the USA.
The German-style mixed-member proportional system is a good way to do this. The single-member constituencies are elected as before along with a separate choice for whose party list you prefer, and the party-list members are added on top to create proportionality for parties that were underrepresented in the single-member elections compared to their party-list share. You can get ~3/4 of the people in parliament to still represent a district and be answerable to the voters of their district, but maintain proportionality at the same time.But we're going to move towards a part-proportional system. With like 3/4 of seats being awarded the way it is now and 1/4 awarded proportionally. At least that's what our new president is proposing.
To play devil's advocate, it should probably also be mentioned that FPTP voting with single-member constituencies is the reason the UK ended up with only 1 UKIP MP in 2015, instead of about 80-85 as they would have gotten under PR. Of course UKIP actually accomplished its mission without being electorally successful by getting the Tories to call the Brexit referendum in order to keep them from doing better and appease some of their own backbenchers, but the far right would have had much more presence regardless.
The German-style mixed-member proportional system is a good way to do this. The single-member constituencies are elected as before along with a separate choice for whose party list you prefer, and the party-list members are added on top to create proportionality for parties that were underrepresented in the single-member elections compared to their party-list share. You can get ~3/4 of the people in parliament to still represent a district and be answerable to the voters of their district, but maintain proportionality at the same time.
I see one advantage, and one that could go either way. Coalition-building is intrinsic to parliamentary politics, all PR does is force it out into the open.Proportional representation tends to favour smaller parties and does not often produce a majority government. Two disadvantages there.
If the electorate prefers its representatives to complaint rather than govern, that is surely up to the electorate.One of the ideas behind FPTP voting is that a party has to be "responsible" and govern effectively and this prevents the sort of political fragmentation you see sometimes in parliamentary systems where you have a bunch of parties that would rather sit in opposition complaining than govern.
Part of the problem was that the Alternative Vote system retained single-member constituencies, so for all the high rhetoric, it wasn't really going to help anyone other than the Liberal Democrats. If you're going to get people in favour of reform, you have to convince them that the new system is genuinely more representative. What we'd really need to look at is multi-member constituencies, as in Ireland, which would allow voters to feel like they were electing a candidate they actually wanted, rather than merely accepting one they could tolerate.I voted in favour of that, it was called Alternative Vote, in the May 2011 UK referendum.
However people here in the UK did not then consider that to be true proportional representation.
The term proportional representation was then used to refer to systems where the number of representatives to be appointed
for a party was directly in proportion with the total number accumulating for all constituencies of votes for that party.