• Wilzax@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    If you’re in a state that will certainly be blue or red and has 0% chance of swinging unless a huge proportion of the population changes their party affiliation (California, New York, Mississippi, Alabama, to name a few) then vote 3rd party, sure.

    If your state was within 10% of flipping colors in any of the past 3 presidential elections, DO NOT vote 3rd party. Your vote matters too much to risk it.

    • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      Yeah, that’s the conventional wisdom. When Ross Perot ran, most of his support came from states that weren’t swing states.

      (Despite often being called a “spoiler”, he probably had little impact on the result of the election because of that.)

      But! Later polls showed that 35% of voters would have voted for Perot if they thought he could win. And if all those people had voted for Perot, he would have won!

      Just something to think about.

      • Wilzax@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        If we could somehow ensure that our actual desires were reflected by our votes without simultaneously risking our vote being wasted by splitting support between similar candidates, we could have actual representative democracy. But we all have a duty to prevent the worst to the best of our ability, even at the sacrifice of our support of what we think would be best, but unlikely.

        Vote for ranked choice voting however you can. This paradox is intentional design, not an unforeseen consequence. We need to rework the voting system before things have any chance to get better without violent revolution.

        • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          It’s actually been mathematically proven that ranked-choice voting does not eliminate the so-called spoiler effect. It’s called Arrow’s Impossibity Theorem.

          As people who live in a country with FPTP voting, we’re all intimately familiar with the drawbacks of FPTP voting. But all voting systems have their drawbacks.

          (I’ve actually been a volunteer election worker in a country with ranked ballots and proportional representation, and the experience actually soured me on ranked ballots and proportional representation.)

          Countries like Canada and the UK manage to have four or five parties with FPTP voting.

          Stop waiting for the perfect voting system, because there is no perfect system.

          • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Countries like Canada and the UK manage to have four or five parties with FPTP voting.

            And they both are dominated by 2 parties. Hardly a defense of FPTP.

            Stop waiting for the perfect voting system, because there is no perfect system.

            There may be no perfect system, but there are certainly systems that utterly fail to capture the will of the people, and FPTP (especially the US’s implementation of it) is one such system. People aren’t going to magically all change their centuries long behavior of voting for 1 of two parties. This is a systematic problem, and the solution is election reform.

            • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              And they both are dominated by 2 parties. Hardly a defense of FPTP.

              Justin Trudeau’s current government is a minority government being propped up by a minor party (the NDP). That minor party were able to get the government to pass a Pharmacare bill in exchange for their support.

              With just 24 seats in parliament, the NDP were able to deliver on an election promise to their voters. I’d say that’s pretty good.

              • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Justin Trudeau’s current government is a minority government being propped up by a minor party (the NDP). That minor party were able to get the government to pass a Pharmacare bill in exchange for their support.

                “Being propped up by” doesn’t change the fact that Trudeau is a member of one of the two main (and dominant) parties within Canada.

                The liberal and conservative parties make up the overwhelming majority of the seats:

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_federal_political_parties_in_Canada

                And the last time they had a 3rd party PM was in 1993, three decades ago:

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_prime_ministers_of_Canada

                And the party that appointed that PM died in 2003. The Bloc Québécois, the NDP, and the Green party have never once gotten a PM. You can’t point to a system that does that as a success.

                You’re also comparing house of commons seats to PM seats, which is a bad comparison because of the scale and difference in location of said elections. A FPTP election in a locality will inherently have easier competition than a national level FPTP election. Often times seats like that go unopposed, or functionally unopposed, or X political party has no chance, which gives a 3rd party a chance. That same effect never happens with a PM sized seat, which is why you never get 3rd party PMs/presidents.

                We need election reform. Even Canada’s elections show how terrible FPTP voting is.

                • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  You’re also comparing house of commons seats to PM seats, which is a bad comparison because of the scale and difference in location of said elections. A FPTP election in a locality will inherently have easier competition than a national level FPTP election.

                  There’s no such thing as a “PM seat”. The Prime Minister occupies a seat in the House of Commons like any other, for which he must win the election in his local riding. Justin Trudeau is the member for Papineau, a neighbourhood in north Montreal.

                  The Governor General (representative of the King) then invites one member of parliament to form government as Prime Minister, for which the other members of the parliament must give a vote of confidence. By convention, that person is the leader of the party that wins the most seats in the House of Commons.

                  The Prime Minister of Canada is not directly elected in Canada. There is no nation-wide FPTP election for PM.

                  • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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                    5 months ago

                    There’s no such thing as a “PM seat”. The Prime Minister occupies a seat in the House of Commons like any other

                    This is unrelevant semantics. You know exactly what I mean when I say the “PM seat”.

                    The Governor General (representative of the King) then invites one member of parliament to form government as Prime Minister, for which the other members of the parliament must give a vote of confidence. By convention, that person is the leader of the party that wins the most seats in the House of Commons.

                    This, I will admit is a misunderstanding on my part. However you do see how this is worse, right?

                    Like, not only do 3rd parties not have a chance in Canadian politics to install a PM, but also the general public has less of a say on this than they otherwise could. That is worse. Canada is a terrible example of FPTP working well/being sufficient for 3rd parties.

          • slickgoat@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I disagree. I too have been involved in elections in my country (Australia) and preferential voting system is pretty popular. As candidates get eliminated your vote keeps moving to your next choice. What could possibly be fairer?

            • Olgratin_Magmatoe@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              What could possibly be fairer?

              Approval or STAR voting, since they are more heavily utilized by all citizens instead of just white people, they are purely additive unlike ranked, which allows for easy auditing and making sharing the results possible in real time.

              They’re also far easier to explain, which makes voting more inclusive, and the results more straightforward to follow.

              RCV is definitely better than what we have now, but if we’re gonna have election reform we should go for the best possible system, not a half measure like RCV.

            • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              And yet minor parties fair pretty poorly in Australian elections, and always have. Minor parties currently have 6 seats in Australia’s House of Representatives (up from 3 in the previous parliament).

              In Canada, third-parties (Greens, Bloc Quebecois, and NDP) have 56 seats between them.

              In the UK, there are 11 third-parties represented in the House of Commons, with 84 seats between them.

              • slickgoat@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                I don’t necessarily think that the best system is the one that favours minor (or major) parties. The reason for the success, or otherwise, of minor parties involved a hundred variables.

                The best electoral system makes the best value of a person’s personal vote. That might be minor or major party candidate or even an independent.

                • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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                  5 months ago

                  Part of the problem with Australia’s voting method is that the Australian people don’t understand how it works. They rely on following “how to vote” cards handed out by the parties at voting booths. Most voters don’t realize they don’t have follow one of those cards.

                  If your a small party and don’t have enough volunteers to hand out how-to-vote cards at every single voting booth, you’ll miss out on votes. This massively disadvantages small parties in Australia.

                  And even amongst people who do number the boxes themselves, most of them think “I like minor party X best, so I’ll put them #2. I’ll put a major party #1 because I don’t want the other guy to win, and I want my vote to count”. Which completely undermines the purpose of ranked ballots.

                  So I think there’s something to be said for a simple voting system that the voters understand.

                  Also, it sounds like you’re only talking about the voting method used for the House of Reps. The STV method of voting used in the Australian Senate is much more complicated and is a complete omnishambles if you ask me.

                  • slickgoat@lemmy.world
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                    5 months ago

                    I hear what you are saying, and I agree with some of it, but not several key points. I have supported a couple of different parties and regularly hand out how to vote cards at different elections and have done so for decades. The idea that voters slavishly follow party advice couldn’t be more wrong. One in two voters snub the cards outright, many rudely so. Contrary to popular opinion, on the day, the vast majority of voters know which box they are going to pick.

                    Secondly, your point about minor parties struggling in Australian elections. Well, so what? There is no constitutional imperative to either favour or disfavour small parties. Or large ones, for that matter. That you think that this is important is neither here nor there constitutionally. Myself, I think that it would be better if it were so, but no system should put its weight behind it. When the constitution was put into force in 1901, parties were not enshrined, candidates were.

      • yyyesss?@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        and he still would have lost. he got nearly 20% of the popular vote and exactly 0 electoral votes. until we change the system, they cannot win. sorry. please vote against fascism

            • HomerianSymphony@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              Yes, but he would have won if everyone had voted how their heart desired.

              Both major parties want you to believe that voting third-party is “throwing your vote away”, but it isn’t true. Simply expressing your heart’s desire and having it counted on the public record makes voting worthwhile, even if your candidate doesn’t win. (And in the case of Ross Perot, he would have won.)

              You might as well say that voting for anyone except the candidate who is leading in the polls is throwing your vote away if that’s how you see it.

              A woman from a formerly Communist Eastern European country once told me a story. After their country had democratized, there was an election held on the day of a horrible blizzard. Her mother and father wanted to vote for one candidate, and her brother and sister wanted to vote for the rival candidate.

              “Why don’t we all just stay home, since our votes will cancel each other out anyway”, someone said. And so her mother and sister decided to stay home. But her father and brother went out into the blizzard to vote, knowing that their votes would cancel each other out.

              They just wanted to participate in democracy. They wanted to express themselves and be counted, even if it didn’t change anything.

              • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                Yes, but he would have won if everyone had voted how their heart desired.

                This assumes my heart desires having a president at all.