• PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    As was established in 2016, https://observer.com/2017/08/court-admits-dnc-and-debbie-wasserman-schulz-rigged-primaries-against-sanders/

    DNC/RNC Primary’s are private affairs that have nothing to do with the right to vote. They only exist to support the “legitimacy” of the parties of Capital. If the parties wanted to, they could unilateral choose their candidates with zero outside/public input. In fact they basically do.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I kind of agree here. I think we should have a “playoff” system where candidates could pick a party for advertising purposes, but otherwise compete on an open playing field with all other candidates.

        Here’s how I’d like it to work:

        • ban all political ads, outside of informing when the next debate or rally will happen
        • all debates are funded with tax-payer dollars
        • for House seats, vote by party for the general election, and Reps would be elected proportionally and based on primary votes
        • Senate seats work as they currently do, except for the voting system change below
        • all votes are some kind of IRV system, e.g. ranked choice, approval, etc
        • there would be a vote after each primary debate (should have 3-5 of those), and if you don’t participate, your previous votes carry forward through the primary process; candidates are eliminated if they go under some threshold; you could straight-ticket this, but it would weight all candidates from your party equally

        This probably needs to be refined, but I think the general approach is worth discussing.

      • BartsBigBugBag@lemmy.tf
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        1 year ago

        Independent is a party, you probably mean unafilliated, but in CO, unafilliated voters are able to vote in either R or D primaries, though not both.

          • BartsBigBugBag@lemmy.tf
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            1 year ago

            Unaffiliated makes sense to be able to vote for whoever in a primary, but if you are party affiliated, why should you get to vote in a primary for the party you’re not affiliated with? You made a choice on who you support, and registered it with the state, unlike unaffiliated voters.

    • chaogomu@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      See, this is the main reason why we need to ditch primaries altogether.

      But to do that, we need to change the voting system to one that can actually handle multiple candidates. STAR is, hands down, the single best system for this. A good runner-up would be Approval or maybe Score.

      I would strongly recommend against any other system. Especially RCV.

        • chaogomu@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Actually no. It’s at best on parity with FPTP.

          There have been some major fuckups that were only possible thanks to RCV, fuckups so bad that various places using RCV have gone back to FPTP, and the damage done has set back real reform efforts.

          So no. I do not advocate for RCV, because it’s just not a good system at all. It’s often worse than doing nothing.

      • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I like the idea of primaries, if only to narrow the field a bit. I posted above my proposal, but in general it’s:

        • one large primary for all candidates, regardless of party
        • regular, tax-payer funded debates, with a vote after each one (say, 3-5 times during a primary cycle); your vote carries from one vote to the next unless you submit a new ballot
        • use some IRV system (I’m not opposed to RCV like you are, but I do prefer STAR or Approval voting)
        • use proportional representation by party for House seats, since-candidate for all other seats (Senate, President, governor, etc)
        • ban political ads, or at least require them to be independently fact-checked

        IMO, the problem isn’t with the way we count votes, but with the whole structure of our electoral process. The current system is designed to end up with a two-party system, which means most of the country is poorly represented. We should change the system until we have a healthy mix of parties with no one party having a majority in both houses of Congress and the executive branch.

        • chaogomu@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Primaries are only needed if your voting system cannot handle multiple candidates. Just run the general election with everyone who qualifies. But yes, use STAR because that system can easily handle massive candidate pools.

          IRV cannot handle multiple candidates. It will almost certainly break after about 5.

          Proportional representation is alright if you want to lock in political parties as part of your government, and are alright with needing massive majorities to get rid of bad actor politicians. You need over 80% of the population to vote against an incumbent to get rid of them if you are filling 5 or more seats.

          Political ads are fine, if you limit spending. Strict campaign finance laws should apply. But I do like the fact that you should also apply the existing truth in advertising laws to political ads.

          As to the process, FPTP and Arrow’s Theorem say that you get two party dominance. Ordinal voting systems just result in two paty systems.

          Do note that Arrow’s Theorem also applies to IRV/RCV. But does not apply to STAR or Approval, as they are Cardinal voting systems.

          • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            Just run the general election with everyone who qualifies.

            And have like 20 candidates on the ballot? That’s just ridiculous! Have you seen the crazy primaries with over a dozen candidates, it’s just nuts!

            The point of a primary system is to narrow the field, and the point of a voting system is to help convey voter preference. Both are valuable.

            My preference is for the primary system to act like “playoffs” for the general election, as in less popular candidates are weeded out throughout the primary process until there are <=5 candidates remaining, and those would then go to the general election.

            Proportional representation is alright if you want to lock in political parties as part of your government

            We already have that though, it’s just not written into law. Do you really think that ~98% of the population fits cleanly into two parties? There are 3 independent US Senators, and they all caucus with Democrats.

            I think proportional representation would work way better in smaller states with fewer reps. For example, look at Utah, which has 4 representatives, all of which are Republican, yet the state votes like 60% Republican in general elections. So with proportional representation, there should be at least one seat going to another party. Or look at Connecticut, all five reps are Democrat, yet ~40% voted for Trump in 2020, so I’d expect the representation to be more like 3 Democrats, 2 Republicans if Connecticut adopted proportional representation.

            Political ads are fine, if you limit spending. Strict campaign finance laws should apply. But I do like the fact that you should also apply the existing truth in advertising laws to political ads.

            Yeah, my main complaint is with the blatant lies in political ads, but it’s also quite true that candidates with more screen time tend to win more. This puts way too much power in the hands of media companies, and large donors can influence elections by working around donation restrictions through PACs.

            So either we need to drastically step up our enforcement game here (unlikely given how much power is involved), or we need to just ban it all (much easier to enforce). But if we can effectively enforce fact-checking, I’d be on board.

            Arrow’s Theorem

            I think that applies to a single vote, but perhaps it doesn’t hold for a gradual system, like a “playoff” system. As in, you can have multiple winners at each stage, so all of the winners are preferred over the losers by the general population.

            I’d like to see some research on if it applies to iterative voting schemes, and whether that would be fitting solution.

            That said, I do tend to prefer STAR and Approval voting in general, but RCV has a lot of momentum and I think it could be adjusted to result in a much better system than we currently have.

            • chaogomu@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              The problem with RCV is that it’s a bad system.

              Like voting for your favorite can make them lose bad.

              And the fact that it needs centralized counting means that it can be attacked via one centralized point of failure.

              The rate of ballot spoilage is often twice what it is even under FPTP elections.

              Ballot Exhaustion means that candidates can be elected with far less than the 50% of the vote that the system claims to require.

              And the fact that it still falls victim to Arrow’s Theorem.

              It has momentum, but it’s also so bad at being a voting system that it has actually set voting reform efforts back in several places.


              Let’s talk about that Ballot Exhaustion. Ballot Exhaustion happens when your ballot no longer has a valid candidate due to them being eliminated. What RCV advocates will tell you is that “if your first choice is eliminated, your vote transfers to your second choice”.

              This statement is only true in the first round. In all rounds after that, it could be a very false statement. Say your first choice survives round 1, but your second choice does not. Now when your first choice is eliminated, your second choice doesn’t get that vote, your third choice does. If your first choice survives long enough, none of your other choices get that vote, and eventually you run out of choices and your ballot is thrown out.

              I hope you can see the problem here, but I’ll spell it out. If 90% of voters list the same person as their second choice, then that second choice will be the first eliminated and those 90% of second choice votes will be ignored.

              Another fun fact, that 50% mark that RCV must reach? That’s 50% of remaining ballots. Data on RCV elections show an average ballot exhaustion rate of about 18%. Which is just wild. 18% of ballots cast do not count towards the final count. Most competitive races are decided on single digit percentages.


              So no. I actively advocate against RCV.

              And in doing so. I can talk about why STAR is just so much better. First, it’s immune to Arrow’s Theorem.

              Being immune, you can actually load up the number of candidates in an election. Seriously, the system can handle 20-30 candidates as easily as it handles 2-3.

              This means you don’t need any imposed gatekeeping events to winnow down the field.

              STAR also handles clone candidates as easily as ideologically opposed candidates. So again, you don’t need to winnow down the field.

              If you have 5 widely liked clone candidates and one narrowly supported ideologically opposed candidate, a system like RCV will always elect the ideologically opposed candidate. STAR will likely elect one of the clone candidates. Easily.

              So no. No primaries. It also removes the ability to artificially gatekeep a popular left leaning candidate. Which has happened a few times now.

              But back to Arrow’s Theorem. Since STAR can support a wide candidate field, it can support independent candidates and third party candidates. And opening up the General election would let some of these people win. This would vastly weaken the major parties.

              It wouldn’t kill political parties, but it would make them less important. Given time, they might be able to fracture and fade.

              • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                I know the problems with RCV, but I think implementing it is still a net positive.

                People are frustrated with FPTP, especially in the majority of areas where a single party dominates. RCV is popular, so people are probably more likely to vote if they get RCV in their area (it doesn’t decrease turnout, either maintains or improves). At the very least, it seems to encourage more voting from younger voters, which is usually an underrepresented democratic.

                In other words, don’t let perfect be the enemy of good. RCV has momentum, so we should be using that momentum to get something passed. It’s easier to switch to STAR or Approval voting later, provided the public has already agreed to replace FPTP, whereas pushing for something that the public understands less less may result in nothing getting changed. In other words, if we don’t all get behind one solution, we could end up with the same spoiler effect we’re trying to prevent.

                So RCV isn’t my first choice or my second choice, but I prefer the momentum of change to trying to find the ideal solution. Most people I talk to haven’t heard of either Approval or STAR voting, and STAR voting is conceptually more difficult to understand than either RCV or FPTP, so pushing for RCV, which people are familiar with is a much easier sell.

                What I’ve read about anti-RCV talking points is mostly FUD. Yes, there are cases where you won’t end up with a majority, but you will always arrive at a plurality result. It’s not always clear which should be the winner, and each voting system could pick a different winner. For example, in the Birmingham, VT election, STAR voting could very well have had the same result, it just would’ve looked better since the winner would likely have a majority due to how votes are counted. With Approval, you can have multiple candidates with a majority of the votes, which is also different than FPTP.

                I think RCV is net better than FPTP, even if the optics aren’t as convenient in some edge cases. It’s at least a step toward getting voters thinking about what the voting system should look like.

                • chaogomu@kbin.social
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                  1 year ago

                  RCV deeply flawed. Implementing it is a step back, not forward.

                  Linking to Fairvote won’t change my mind, those guys are smoking crack or something. They don’t even acknowledge ballot exhaustion as a problem, and pretend that the spoiler effect doesn’t pop up in election throwing ways.

                  Here’s a three-hour-long video that goes into the problems of RCV. If you want to get into the breakdown of RCV specifically, it starts at about the 56-minute mark

                  Honestly, the main reason why you should advocate against RCV is that it’s almost as bad as FPTP and yet sold as this amazing solution, so when problems inevitably crop up, problems that don’t crop up in FPTP, people become incredibly resistant to real voting reform. They say, “you pushed this broken system on us, why should we try this other system?” Not knowing that it’s a small group of bad actors like Fairvote who are pushing this shit.

                  My point is; Bad reform often does more damage than doing nothing, because it makes it much harder to get good reform passed. RCV is bad reform.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    1 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    If it succeeds, and state law is overturned, 1.7 million Coloradans wouldn’t have a say in either Democratic or Republican primary elections.

    The ballot measure gave unaffiliated voters the right to vote in either the Democratic or Republican primary.

    He’s also trying to amend party bylaws to make it easier for the GOP to opt out of the open primary altogether.

    Wadhams says the amendment essentially steals the votes of members who don’t show-up.

    Wadhams says former president Donald Trump is the reason Republicans have lost and if the party dies, he says, conservatives aren’t the only ones who lose.

    We’ve tried the open primary for three cycles now and Republicans have lost more ground with each successive election," Williams said.


    I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • NaN@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    As an unaffiliated voter, open primaries don’t make much sense. The parties pick who should represent them in the general election, if I wanted to say who should represent them I should join the party. Part of being unaffiliated is opting out of that process.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      The problem is that most states lean toward one party, so it encourages moderates to just join the majority party so they can pick the frontrunner. That then results in a positive feedback loop where states tend to get more and more extreme in whichever direction has a slight lead.

      Instead of that, we should have open primaries where you can vote for multiple candidates for the same position. I am registered Libertarian, but I rarely actually vote libertarian and instead pick whichever candidate I think will do the best among those that have a real shot at winning. Instead of that, I’d much rather vote for multiple candidates (the libertarian included) that I think would represent my interests. So I’m interested in voting for candidates from all parties, because some candidates from each major party are acceptable to me, while others are not.

      That’s why I want an open primary process, ideally with all candidates competing for a handful of slots. If a state leans Democrat and there are 5 candidate slots per seat, I’d expect 2-3 to be Democrat, 1-2 to be Republican, and 0-1 to be some third party. Likewise for a Republican-leaning state, but the opposite direction. Instead, we end up with two extreme candidates, one from each major party, and 1-3 third party candidates that don’t get any real shot at winning (why would you throw your vote away?).

      • SoManyChoices@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        I have lived in one state that had open primaries. A voter still had to choose which primary to vote in that day. Some independent voters will choose to vote in the R primary and some in the D primary but you still have the problem of moderates largely joining the party primary with the most influence in their area.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          My state has open primaries for one party, and the other party is closed. Unfortunately, it’s the most popular party that’s closed, so a lot of people just register as that party.

          If both were open and I could choose one ballot other other, I’d be happy. But ideally I could vote in all primaries, but perhaps have my vote worth less for parties I’m not registered with.