Less fun fact, the GOP still wins statewide elections. That’s the power of voter suppression.
I personally believe in mandatory voting. Not because more people agree with me, but because voter suppression is undemocratic. And I’m including gerrymandering as a type of voter suppression.
Depressing fact, native born Texans are more liberal than the average Texan. If it wasn’t for these damn immigrants (from other states), we’d be much closer to being a blue state.
Yes. With a mandatory “none of the above” option for every office, and an actual majority of eligible voters is required to win, and if “none of the above” wins you get a new election with new candidates.
I’ve heard of a completely different idea that is designed to get politicians to appeal to everybody as much as possible, but because it is not repeatable, I think it’s an infeasible idea.
Anyways, it’s called “random ballot”. The idea is that, either for the entire election, or for one candidate at a time, you simply choose one random ballot, and that person is the winner.
The upside of random ballot is that, no matter what percentage of a politician’s constituents approved of them, it would never be enough unless it was 100%. Even if they had a 99% approval… well, even in just the federal house, there are 435 reps, so on a nationwide level, you’d regularly see things happen that only had a 1% chance.
But the huge downside is if there was any problem with the ballots or with collecting them, even if you missed a single ballot, it can completely change the results, and there would be no way to fairly recount or rerun the election.
But I do like any scheme that incentivizes politicians to try to appeal to as many constituents as possible, not just to beat other candidates.
There’s still incentive an to obstruct and suppress certain demographics from voting with a scheme like that. Not to mention the whole possibility that the winner could have literally received only 1 out of 17, 000, 000 votes being pretty horrible.
Oh I was thinking about it as alongside mandatory voting. I honestly don’t know that democracy really works at all without mandatory voting.
Also, the problem with a very unpopular winner isn’t really too different from what we already have. How many times has a candidate won unopposed? How many times has a candidate been elected saying that they’d vote one way, and then immediately start voting the opposite way?
It probably wouldn’t be great for an executive position of great power, like president or governor. Like, imagine what one moron could do with the power of pardons. But for positions where they are just a member of a large legislative body? I think the amount of damage they can do in a single term is usually somewhat limited.
I forget the name of it, but one option I really liked is a kind of default voting. You register with whichever party you choose, and if you don’t actively vote, your vote goes down-ticket with that party. If you do actively vote, the default gets overridden with wherever you submit, to include abstentions. So, you can still ‘not vote’ or vote outside your party lines, but doing either requires you to actively show up.
Still not a perfect solution, but the people’s preference would be way more accurately reflected by the results.
Combine that with some ranked choice, and… - chef’s kiss -
We do have party affiliation. It’s automatic by voting in a party primary and expires at the end of the calendar year. It’s only there so that you can’t vote in a primary runoff unless you voted in the original primary.
Your own link even says “Voters do not officially register with a political party.”
Also fun (and sad) fact, in 4 of the last 5 Texas Gubernatorial elections, the Republican nominee and winner received fewer votes than the Democratic nominee for President from two years prior.
We can absolutely take the governorship from Abbott. We just can’t be bothered to try.
Fun fact, registered Democrats outnumber Republicans in Texas by 1.5M
https://independentvoterproject.org/voter-stats/tx
Less fun fact, the GOP still wins statewide elections. That’s the power of voter suppression.
I personally believe in mandatory voting. Not because more people agree with me, but because voter suppression is undemocratic. And I’m including gerrymandering as a type of voter suppression.
Depressing fact, native born Texans are more liberal than the average Texan. If it wasn’t for these damn immigrants (from other states), we’d be much closer to being a blue state.
Yes. With a mandatory “none of the above” option for every office, and an actual majority of eligible voters is required to win, and if “none of the above” wins you get a new election with new candidates.
I’ve heard of a completely different idea that is designed to get politicians to appeal to everybody as much as possible, but because it is not repeatable, I think it’s an infeasible idea.
Anyways, it’s called “random ballot”. The idea is that, either for the entire election, or for one candidate at a time, you simply choose one random ballot, and that person is the winner.
The upside of random ballot is that, no matter what percentage of a politician’s constituents approved of them, it would never be enough unless it was 100%. Even if they had a 99% approval… well, even in just the federal house, there are 435 reps, so on a nationwide level, you’d regularly see things happen that only had a 1% chance.
But the huge downside is if there was any problem with the ballots or with collecting them, even if you missed a single ballot, it can completely change the results, and there would be no way to fairly recount or rerun the election.
But I do like any scheme that incentivizes politicians to try to appeal to as many constituents as possible, not just to beat other candidates.
There’s still incentive an to obstruct and suppress certain demographics from voting with a scheme like that. Not to mention the whole possibility that the winner could have literally received only 1 out of 17, 000, 000 votes being pretty horrible.
Oh I was thinking about it as alongside mandatory voting. I honestly don’t know that democracy really works at all without mandatory voting.
Also, the problem with a very unpopular winner isn’t really too different from what we already have. How many times has a candidate won unopposed? How many times has a candidate been elected saying that they’d vote one way, and then immediately start voting the opposite way?
It probably wouldn’t be great for an executive position of great power, like president or governor. Like, imagine what one moron could do with the power of pardons. But for positions where they are just a member of a large legislative body? I think the amount of damage they can do in a single term is usually somewhat limited.
I forget the name of it, but one option I really liked is a kind of default voting. You register with whichever party you choose, and if you don’t actively vote, your vote goes down-ticket with that party. If you do actively vote, the default gets overridden with wherever you submit, to include abstentions. So, you can still ‘not vote’ or vote outside your party lines, but doing either requires you to actively show up.
Still not a perfect solution, but the people’s preference would be way more accurately reflected by the results.
Combine that with some ranked choice, and… - chef’s kiss -
Sounds like an invitation for those in power to make the act of voting difficult.
And to suppress registration within blue areas even further, yes.
I don’t trust any political party enough to give them that sort of power.
Funner fact, Texas doesn’t have party affiliation on voter registration!
https://www.votetexas.gov/register-to-vote/voter-registration-certificate.html
https://www.sos.state.tx.us/elections/laws/advisory2020-05.shtml
We do have party affiliation. It’s automatic by voting in a party primary and expires at the end of the calendar year. It’s only there so that you can’t vote in a primary runoff unless you voted in the original primary.
Your own link even says “Voters do not officially register with a political party.”
So where are they getting these numbers?
Also fun (and sad) fact, in 4 of the last 5 Texas Gubernatorial elections, the Republican nominee and winner received fewer votes than the Democratic nominee for President from two years prior.
We can absolutely take the governorship from Abbott. We just can’t be bothered to try.
I think last election the top google search was “excuses to not vote”