arthwollipot wrote: ↑Wed May 08, 2024 12:20 am
When 50.0001% of the vote controls 100% of the representatives, that is not democratic.
????
Are you referring to electors, because that's the only place I can think where that, sort of, happens. I say "sort of" because it's on a state by state basis, so it usually balances out. We've had a total of 5 elections out of 58 where the winner of the popular vote didn't become President. That's bad. I think it should end. But it doesn't mean democracy doesn't exist here.
As for gerrymandering, if there are districts, there is gerrymandering. Even if some sort of algorithm is used to draw districts so it isn't so blatant as it is here in the US, the choice of algorithms will favor one party or another. In Australia, the party that receives the most votes for the legislature doesn't always end up with the most seats. There's no way to make that happen.
At a minimum, America needs to turn over the administration of elections and the management of electoral boundaries to a genuinely independent statutory authority. That will eliminate the gerrymander
In Michigan, we did exactly that. Created an indempendent commission to draw the boundaries.
A federal court threw it out because it was gerrymandered, in an illegal manner. (As opposed to all the other times, when it had been gerrymandered in a perfectly legal manner.)
and make sure that all citizens get equal access to polling places.
If you think this is a huge problem, I think you've been overly influenced by selective media coverage. It's not that it never happens. Ohio had a big problem with blatant polling place manipulation back in the 00's. That was pretty scandalous. But for the most part, my experience of voting is almost identical to what you described, except we don't get sausages. There were a couple of times I waited in line for about 10 minutes. And I've lived in poor neighborhoods, majority black neighborhoods. Middle class neighborhoods. Never in rich neighborhoods....because I can't afford that.
It's really not so bad here. The media makes everything look worse than it is because, "Everything went smoothly" is a boring headline.
For the most part, it's ok. Yeah, there's a thumb on the scales just a bit, and at this point in history it favors the Republicans, but not by much. We're doing ok here. We've got room for improvement, but the demise of democracy in America is greatly exaggerated, at least for now. As I said, I worry about people bashing it around here because if people believe it's already not a democracy, people won't mind giving it up.
ETA: I always assumed that as soon as the electoral college and popular vote didn't match, the voters would throw out the elctoral college. Obviously, that didn't happen. I'm not sure what will happen in the long run. What will it take to dump the EC here in America? Unfortunately, I think something very bad would have to happen. The 2016 election wasn't all that close, in the popular vote. It wasn't like 2000 where the race was essentially a tie. Hilalry got 2% more votes. Not a landslide exactly, but not a squeaker, either. I think the "wrong" guy would have to be elected, and then he would have to do something that made everyone hate him, as opposed to just half the people hating him.