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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Jan
And it's not a free speech issue at all. "No taxation without representation" can just as easily be turned on its head as "No representation without taxation" - which is one of the points you make and I agree with. Voting ultimately is about individual voters anyway - not corporations, unions, etc. What I get tired of are people with a lot of money going into other states and trying to affect their politics even though they aren't going to be the ones affected by decisions made for that district - like Bloomberg's recent stab at Virginia's gun rights or the Wisconsin education union vs Scott Walker or a hundred+ other such attempts. I want politics to get back to being local because I believe it would encourage more people to get involved and educated - which leads to better decision-making and better life in general.
"I think that the change to only letting taxpayers vote would change things considerably..."
I completely agree, but I would advocate for something slightly more specific: that those who receive welfare checks waive their rights to vote from the time when they receive the checks until the voting year after they stop receiving them.
In other words, only those who are net contributors to the wealth of the community may vote, those who are net consumers of that wealth created by others may not. This also does away with the "education" qualification. Education, certainly in the public school system, is more indoctrination than anything else anyway.
Just dreaming. LOL
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And the democrats voting thing just doesn't hold, while its certainly true that he is very much attracting independents and disenfranchised Blue Dog Democrats, I fail to either see where that is a problem, nor does it significantly change the outcome. He continues to win whether its an open or closed primary, not by as large of a margin, but that only indicates to me that Cruz is just not attractive in a general election.
The other criticism - Trump can't beat Hillary, is also BS, they only poll 'likely voters' for that, not the 65% that don't usually vote... when its really about 1 establishment versus 1 rebelling figure, the 70% that are unhappy with the establishment are going to vote for their preferred, in fact, many Bernie voters suggest Trump is their alternative because they have so much hatred of Hillary.
Nonetheless the numbers that show up continue to be very different from what was polled. Ask Hillary about Michigan. If she can't beat a self-declared socialist, she can't beat a marketing master. Secondly, he hasn't even started on her, he has no personal boundaries, the whole Clinton Bimbo Eruption is coming out, Benghazi, Email, Impeached for not defining 'oral sex' as 'sex', lying to congress, its all coming out... Granted, much of that is 'not Hillary', but it's certainly Bill and he's on the trail for her, so he's certainly fair game. Just wait until the Clinton Foundation donor records are commonly known.... Is it really wise to have a person as President that takes millions from friends of Putin, supporters of Islamic terrorism, or Russian mafia figures?
I would argue that a more likely conspiracy is not that democrats are 'crossing lines' to make sure that Trump wins out of a perception that he is a weaker candidate, rather, I would be amazed if Bernie is not getting significant contributions from Republicans to help keep him in the race and keep clubbing on Hillary... that would be conservative 'malpractice' to not do so... heck, both my wife and I threw him some cash, and I know many who have as well, I think its hilarious. That's just good defense.
Cruz and his people are so arrogant that they can't possibly imagine that not everyone sees his point of view. Regardless of his politics and that question, that standpoint of his is probably his most negative trait. Having a legitimate conversation and debate is a hallmark of our republic, you would think he as a trial lawyer would understand that.
I like it. And don't pay any committee member who doesn't produce a functional test!
"Would you have to take the test in the voting booth, concurrent with voting?"
Sure. And make it an adaptive test so sharing answers doesn't get you very far.
Also, persons running for any office, even dog-catcher, should be made to take the test. And they must pass by 85%.
I can see a way to create a list of questions that 'all sides' would agree on: Allow all parties unlimited vetoes on the questions and a limited amount of time in which to create the test. If it does not get created in that span of time, then dissolve the committee, appoint new people and try again. Do this until a test emerges.
I wounder 'how' this would work, though. Would you have to take the test in the voting booth, concurrent with voting? That would be the only way you could be sure that the person taking the test and the person casting the vote were the same individual.
Jan
Now one idea I have floated before is to restrict campaign finance contributions to individuals who actually lived within a representative's district. If you - personally - don't live in that district, you can't donate money to them. Can you imagine what that would do to the excesses of lobbying?
That's largely a result of the Twelfth Amendment. Prior to its passing, the President went to the highest vote-getter and the Vice-President went to the second highest. I'd like to re-institute that system.
Your concerns about coalition government are well-founded and I am not trying to dismiss them. What I think broadening out the Party system would do is make it much harder for any single Party to run government. That's how we've gotten Obamacare and other similar disasters.
"What is really a fact, is between Sanders, Trump, and Cruz, about 70% of the voters are saying "I've had enough of this BS""
I agree. The people do not feel as if any of the mainstream candidates is truly representative of them. There was a great article I read that was an analysis of many of Trump's supporters and it contended that it wasn't Republicans who were voting for Trump as much as the disenfranchised Democrats!
I generally agree on the spectrum and multi-party thing, but our electoral college system more or less makes a third-party, or multiple parties unlikely. If you split up the electoral vote counts, it quickly becomes impossible to win the presidency. I know other countries do the coalitions to form a government thing, but I don't see how that would work without significantly changing the constitution. For example, would the 'Peace & Freedom Party' or whatever support a Democrat in exchange for a couple of cabinet positions and turning over their 30 electoral votes (?), would the Senate then confirm the cabinet positing, what if it doesn't? etc.
The other argument I'm sick of is "if so & so is on the top of the ticket, every Republican down the ticket will suffer..." Oh really? what does one have to do with the price of tea in China? Romney was the top of the ticket in 2012, and the Republicans gained seats... and you can't find a worse candidate than that guy was. We've had strong Republican presidents that lost seats during the mid-year, so if any Republicans are in trouble, it's the winds of change blowing.
What is really a fact, is between Sanders, Trump, and Cruz, about 70% of the voters are saying "I've had enough of this BS"... and are voting for something completely different. It's not 65% voting against Trump... I still have yet to figure out that math on that bullshit when he's getting the high 40's pretty regularly in a 4-man race. It's 70% are not happy, period.
The smart thing to do would be to understand that, embrace that, and maybe start realizing that the guys that have been there for 20, 30, and 40 years need to go back to being a 'citizen' as the elected government was intended. I'm not in favor of term limits if someone is doing a good job, but the gerrymandering of districts to makes sure the same person always wins is really a problem for me. I live in a district that literally follows a freeway lane (one freeway lane) for 30 miles, connecting two very conservative districts and skipping over 30 miles of very liberal political leanings... consequently, we have Tom McClintock. I happen to like Tom McClintock very much, he's very ultra-conservative, does he necessarily represent the general political direction of Northern California? Not really. He's also impossible to defeat even if the district wanted to change direction, he didn't even have an opponent in the last election to my knowledge. That's not good for the Republic. Tom uses the term "Rathead in a Coke Bottle" by the way. I think I first heard it from him actually.
But I question the wisdom of aggregating both political power and money in the same hands with no counterbalance. If you were to suggest one portion of the Legislature to be voted on based on property and another to be a popular representation... Oh, wait: you'd get back to the original Senate and House.
In a very real sense, however, the country is already being ruled by the rich. It's called Lobbying. And what has been the result: laws passed that favor a few at the expense of the many. Your suggestion is interesting, but basically leads to business oligarchies running the country and we can pretty much see that in Japan with the keiretsus. Their economic meddling led to their meltdown in the 90's from which they haven't really recovered.
You are correct, of course. Most of this is a merely a thought experiment. But it's also an interesting commentary on how far our nation has fallen into mob rule.
"obviously, there is a combination of both new primary voters, as well as established primary voters"
I happen to believe that there is an even simpler answer: that there aren't two ideologies/parties which can sufficiently cover the voting spectrum. I think that the Democratic Party figured this out twenty+ years ago when they started moving their party toward hard-core progressivism and ignoring the large "blue-dog Democrats" that were so popular around Reagan's time. It's no wonder that the Democratic Party now votes almost entirely as a party because they are only supporting and campaigning for those who share progressive/socialist values.
The Republicans stupidly assume that this gives them a larger voting base. It doesn't. It is impossible to appeal to everyone at the same time. Anyone who has taken Marketing 101 in college will tell you that the secret to successful product marketing is segmentation - focusing on specific/targeted markets. This is where the Republicans are absolutely awful and why they get in so much trouble: being a Republican in today's age means absolutely nothing ideologically! It used to be that the Republican party was largely conservative in nature. That hasn't really been true for two decades at least, but is one of the reasons RINO is such an common pejorative. RINO really means anti-conservative Republican.
What really needs to happen is that we need more choices in the political landscape. We have only two choices right now and together they only barely represent about 50% of the voting public and that number decreases every year. I think we need more market segregation so that there are more options for people to pick from. We need a Libertarian Party (Rand Paul). We need a Constitution Party (Ted Cruz). We need a Business Party (Donald Trump). We need these to fill in the holes left by the Republican Party (Marco Rubio), the Democratic-Progressive Party (Hillary Clinton), and the Democratic-Socialist Party (Bernie Sanders).
Dems who'd oppose such a test as well as picture IDs would surely circulate cheat sheets.
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