[EM] Voting reform statement; a clearer and more inspiring version
Fred Gohlke
fredgohlke at verizon.net
Thu Aug 25 15:05:54 PDT 2011
Good Afternoon, Richard
re: "Your implication (at the bottom of your message) that our
goal should be to create something that is 'supported by all
members' ..."
I apologize for giving you that impression; it was not my intent.
What I was suggesting was that it might be a good idea to step back and
find out which principles all members approve - and which they don't -
so those on which there is disagreement can be examined. Examination
may lead to agreement, or to discovery of a different principle, or to
discarding the idea, or to separate lines of analysis, all of which are
helpful in achieving the goal of the discussion.
Specific feedback on your list is not possible for me because it would
require accepting the assumption that party politics is the only means
of achieving democratic government.
It's not.
A deliberative process is more effective in achieving what Lincoln
described as government 'of the people, by the people, for the people.'
There is some recent work that shows how deliberation resolves partisan
differences and is beneficial to the participants. Two papers
describing such results will be presented at the American Political
Science Association meeting in Seattle, early in next month. They are:
Pogrebinschi, Thamy, Participatory Democracy and the Representation of
Minority Groups in Brazil (2011). APSA 2011 Annual Meeting Paper.
Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1901000
and
Esterling, Kevin M., Fung, Archon and Lee, Taeku, Knowledge Inequality
and Empowerment in Small Deliberative Groups: Evidence from a Randomized
Experiment at the Oboe Townhalls (2011). APSA 2011 Annual Meeting Paper.
Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1902664
These papers should provide the impetus for seeking an electoral process
that is less destructive than party politics.
Fred Gohlke
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