The question is which system is more democratic. The Republican model of winner-takes-all representation, or the Democrat model of proportional representation.Volkov wrote:Democracy = rule by majority, someone taking all the votes in a state they won is actually more democratic than a proportional vote
It isn't. This is the basis for gerrymandering. Let me give you a simple example.
Suppose we have two states and two candidates for their party's nomination in the presidential race. State A has a voting population of 100 million and sends 100 delegates. State B has a voting population of 50 million and sends 50 delegates. Candidate A has 60 million voters in State A, and Candidate B has 40 million voters. Candidate A has 10 million voters in State B, and Candidate B has 40 million voters. What happens under the different systems?
Republican model: Candidate A wins State A and loses state B. Gets 100 total delegates on 70 million voters. Candidate B gets 50 delegates on 80 million voters. Candidate A gets the nomination, and the majority loses.
Democrat model: There are no absolute wins. Candidate A gets 70 delegates for 70 million voters, Canaidate B gets 80 delegates for 80 million voters. Candidate B gets the nomination and the majority wins.
So you can see easily that the Republican method of nominating delegates is undemocratic, not to mention that it marginalises the minorities and small states. A practical example of winner-takes-all vs proportionality is as recent as the 2000 election in the US, where Al Gore had about a million more popular votes, but lost the election.
Because it isn't on the number of states, but on the number of voters. What I described is not possible with the democrat system, because it's democratic.Volkov wrote:So? It's just as possible with the democrat system. Obama badly beat Clinton in number of states won, but she came out ahead on delegates by winning the bigger states.
There is a great deal of difference between methods of electing one candidate versus electing 646 (the British House of Commons). I am not saying FPTP is perfect, or even the best system. For instance, here is a nice run-down of the cumulative changes that FPTP versus proportional voting can produce (a real-world counterpart to the previous example):Volkov wrote:And don't talk to me about parliamentary systems where representatives are seated proportionally either. The US does not have a house of parliament and candidates are elected by direct vote.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/vote2001/hi/engli ... 205536.stm
Example:
Also, candidates in the US are not elected by direct vote. Let me give a brief overview of the history for those who don't have Volkov's historical background....the Liberal Democrats, who would have doubled their representation to about 90 MPs.
When the people who formed the American systems of government did so, their idea was to take the framework of the British system of democracy, which (though not fully democratic at the time) they considered the best (the main problem was that it did not extend to the colonies, hence the cry "no taxation without representation"), and improve those areas which they did not like. To cut a long story short and focus just on what's relevant: they liked the idea of a House whose job it was to elect the head of government, a body who would be distinct from the people but responsible to it, a body with political expertise but representing the actual voters. On the other hand, they wanted to separate the legislative and executive branches of government, which were tied in the English constitution, as the Cabinet (the executive) is elected by and answerable to the House (the legislature). To sever this link, they created a third elected body in addition to the House of Representatives and Senate (based on the House of Commons and the House of Lords), which they called the Electoral College. This would have only one function, to elect the President (head of government). However, by removing the day-to-day legislative function of the House of Commons and splitting it, they effectively neutered the Electoral College. Electors are not active, independent people with day-to-day involvement in politics; they do not stake any reputation or career on their votes, and are nothing more than puppets in the electing process. The formation of political parties very soon obviated any vestige of individuality they might have had; they became just another extra step. They sometimes voted against the party line, but this never swung an election and only enraged the people. In fact, many states have made it illegal to vote against the party's candidate. So today in fact the U.S. has a semi-direct election of its president, complicated only by the states in which electors may vote as they choose (which happens with a few in every election), the fact that states are winner-takes-all, and the fact that voters in larger states have less of an impact. The effects of this are clear, as you saw in the US's 2000 election.
For completeness: the rise of political parties in Britain, the party whip, etc., has indeed reduced the power of MPs, so in effect, in both democracies, the real decision-making is in the hands of the party and the head of government, not really in the legislature anymore. Despite this, the real remaining power of MPs is illustrated by some differences between the two systems:
* Votes in Congress are almost all on party lines; votes in the Commons are often not.
* There are still real debates in the Commons; this is a formality in Congress.
* Parliamentary governments can fall at any time due to a loss of confidence by the House (a vote by MPs).
Nevertheless, if an MP is removed from his party, he can often do very little and must become an outsider from the decision-making process. This was illustrated in a scandal surrounding a Tory MP recently. Only very tenacious ones (I think Churchill omes to mind) with actual political skill can do anything about it. In the US, the Congressman has a fixed term and can participate (to the extent of his powers) until that expires.
There may be a few inaccuracies, and perhaps there will be disagreements, so I welcome debate.