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Ross Levin: ‘Thinking beyond the two party system’

February 18th, 2010 · 13 Comments

Posted at Alternet:

This piece was written as part of GreenChange Blog Action Day. Learn more here.

I’m not going to pull any punches here. I detest the two party system. I believe that it undermines representative government. It makes our government more responsive to corporations than to citizens. It decreases the chances of progress and it results in many good ideas being shut out of the national political debate.

The limits imposed on this nation by the two party system are slowly leading to its demise. Partisan gridlock in Washington, outright corruption, the absurd difficulty of kicking out incumbents, corporate control of Washington, and the infamous backwardness of many local governments (among many things) are all symptoms of this same disease. And I do not use that language lightly.

Many have said that there is no difference between the two major parties. This is obviously false. However, they can accurately be described as two sides of the same corporatist coin. On one side of the coin, Republicans give away billions to the “defense” industry and appoint lobbyists to head government agencies and are just blatantly corrupt. And when you flip it over, Democrats…well, give away billions to the “defense” industry and appoint lobbyists to head government agencies and are just blatantly corrupt. Sure, there are many differences, too – Republicans generally support less regulation, Democrats tend to be pro-choice, Democrats are generally more supportive of health care reform attempts, and Republicans have recently turned into the party of Oppose Anything That Would Vindicate Obama. In the words of Bill Maher,

We have a center-right party and a crazy party. Over the last 30 years, the Democrats have moved to the right, and the Republicans have moved into a mental hospital.

These are not great choices. And that’s the essence of the duopoly on politics: it limits voters’ choices to the point of them not having a very representative government. When they want climate change legislation, they get nothing. When they want single payer, they get nothing. When they want to end the war in Iraq, they get an increase of military contractors.

This limitation of choice is not a coincidence. And that brings me to my first bullet point…

———————————-

Incumbent politicians – and their parties – are looking out for their own interests, not yours!

Basically what I’m saying here is that the two party system is not as much of a naturally occurring phenomenon as many people believe it is. There are many laws and practices in place that create a vicious cycle of third party failure. As election law expert Richard Winger points out,

The U.S. voter has less choice for whom to vote than his great-grandfather did.

Although the U.S. has made great strides during the 20th century in enfranchising citizens who formerly were denied the right to vote (women, blacks, poor people), we have been losing ground on the parallel problem of what choice a voter has, once he gets a ballot.

In the 1896 general election, every single congressional district in the nation had at least two candidates on the ballot. The average district had 3.1 candidates on the ballot.

In the 1912 general election, the average election ballot had 4.1 candidates for Congress. But in 1984, there were only 2.3 candidates for Congress on the typical general election ballot, and one-ninth of the districts (49 out of 435) had only one candidate on the ballot.

The modern-day voter’s choice is even more limited in state legislative races. In 1984 6,881 seats were at stake. An astounding 2,815 (41 percent) had only one candidate per position on the ballot.

In some important states, such as Texas, Massachusetts, and Florida, over half of the legislators were elected with no one on the ballot against them.

The blame for the declining number of choices on our ballots can be laid squarely at the feet of state legislators. Many of them have made it far too difficult for candidates to get on the ballot.

These laws and practices include, but are not limited to:

Ballot access laws. These are laws that set up varying benchmarks that a candidate must meet in order to appear on the ballot. They differ from state to state and from office to office and are harshest against third party candidates. Other than a cursory rule for candidates to register for the ballot, it’s unclear what the purpose of these laws are, other than restricting competition and keeping incumbents safe. As Daily Kos user Big Tex states (I highly encourage you to read the whole piece),

The ballot access barrier isn’t the only tool that the Republican/Democratic duopoly has used to maintain its hold on political power, but it has been one of the most important and effective tools in their arsenal. And their control over the workings of the American political system has had an observable degrading effect on democracy in this country: what was once a relatively robust political system with viable minor parties has devolved into a dysfunctional mess plagued by low voter turnout, low turnover, and gridlock. Contrast this with the situation in other democracies, where ballot access thresholds are set much lower and minor parties are a much bigger variable in the political equation. In the UK, for example, where three major political parties and several minor parties have all been able to seat members of parliament, parties don’t have to petition to get on the ballot, and are only required to complete a relatively (in comparison with America) simple registration process with the nation’s Electoral Commission. The threshold for party ballot access is low enough that there are nearly 400 registered parties in the UK. And individual candidates for parliament in the UK are only required to submit the signatures of 10 registered voters and a £500 deposit.

In fact, these incumbent protection laws are so absurdly stringent that Richard Winger claims they potentially violate an an international agreement.

In reality, America’s ballot-access laws are so stringent, and third parties are repressed to such a degree, that the U.S. is probably in violation of the Copenhagen Meeting Document, an international agreement the U.S. signed in 1990 that requires nations to:

“Respect the right of individuals and groups to establish, in full freedom, their own political organizations and provide such political parties and organizations with the necessary legal guarantees to enable them to compete with each other on the basis of equal treatment before the law and the authorities.”

How does the U.S. violate this agreement? Suppose that a new party were founded in 1994, with popular support that equaled that of the Democratic or Republican Party. In order to contest all the executive and legislative offices up for election on November 8th, 1994, it would need to collect about 4,454,579 valid signatures. And some of these signatures would need to be collected ten months before the election. By contrast, the Democratic and Republican parties would not need to submit any signatures to get themselves on the ballots, and their candidates would need only to collect about 882,484 valid signatures to place themselves on primary ballots.

In another piece, Richard Winger reminds us what is fundamentally wrong about ballot access laws. It is the politicians who are looking after their own interest who are deciding who gets a chance to win the election, not the voters.

We must go back to basics, and re-think the question, “What are ballots for?” Ballots are to permit the voters to vote for the candidates of their choice. If there are voters who wish to vote for a candidate, and that candidate is omitted (against his or her will) from the ballot, then the ballot is faulty. It isn’t doing its job. The purpose of ballots is to facilitate the wishes of voters, NOT to control whom they vote for.

Gerrymandering. Now, this isn’t necessarily a product of the two party system, but the two party system does a wonderful job of reinforcing it. I have seen many progressives use the argument that if Democrats don’t gerrymander then they won’t be competitive with Republicans. Unfortunately, because of the nature of the two party system, that may very well be true in today’s world. In the words of Steven Hill, in his eye-opening book “Fixing Elections,”

At its best, then, the redistricting process is hardly an innocent one, nor are its outcomes best for American democracy or national policy, despite the claims of the professional political class. In fact, when closely examining the redistricting process…the last thing on anyone’s mind, even that of noted political scientists, is the impact of redistricting on voters, on representation, on our democracy – indeed, on our national future. One of the most corrosive effects of…the gerrymandering of legislative districts is its understated impact on the psyche of voters, and whether each individual voter is imbued with an internalized sense that their vote is powerful. During the redistricting process most voters are plunked into safe, one-party districts, and at that moment their vote becomes either superfluous…or impotent…the act of voting becomes a waste of time, and a cruel hoax to their democratic aspirations.

In this case, competition on the ballot isn’t the only thing that’s harmed. By making the races uncompetitive and guaranteeing that either the incumbent or the incumbent party will have a certain reelection, voters are systematically dis-empowered, and the foundation of republic starts to rot.

And the idea of one party districts brings me to my next point.

———————————-

We live in a one-party nation.

Once again, don’t get the idea that I think we live under the rule of the Warfare Party or the Demopublican Party. I mean that large swaths of the country literally have only one major party. For instance, if Massachusetts had ballot access laws as strict as Pennsylvania’s, then the Republican Party would not be qualified for the ballot there. And in 2008, every single county of Oklahoma went to John McCain. In major cities across the United States, there are unbelievably Democratic – that’s a big “D” for sure – governments.

First of all, why is this a problem? Well, it means that there is no competition. The nominee of the ruling party is the general election winner nine out of ten times. Make no mistake – this is a symptom of the two party system. The voters become unimportant, because they are offered a choice of “the same old” or “possibly worse” and they pick “the same old.” This lack of competition breeds corruption, incompetence, and neglect of the voters’ sentiments. There is something fundamentally wrong about a republic that has no competition – it defeats the purpose of being a republic!

But there is potentially a silver lining to this one party rule. It generally means that voters crave a new political voice (I mean, a vast majority of voters want some new parties anyway!). And that new political voice could be a successful, viable third party, as has been in the case in cities like San Francisco and Burlington.

A few months ago I spoke to Terry Bouricius over the phone about the Progressive Party’s success in Vermont. Terry is rare, politically. He was actually a successful third party politician, elected to ten years on the Burlington City Council and five terms in the Vermont House of Representatives. He ran as an independent, and then later as a Progressive. Now, the Vermont Progressive Party is the most successful third party in the nation. Terry told me that one of the three most significant factors in that success was that when it started in Burlington, the city was filled to the brim with Democrats and no one else. Voters wanted choices, and they were sick of the comfortable Democrats not listening to their demands. So the Progressives stood up and successfully filled that gap. They now hold the mayoralty of Burlington, along with two city council seats there, five seats in the state House of Representatives, and one seat in the state Senate. Not to mention, although he’s not officially affiliated, US Senator Bernie Sanders is closely associated with them. They are a political force in Vermont.

Something similar, albeit not as dramatic, is going on in San Francisco and nearby areas. Although its membership is currently on the wane, the Green Party has developed something of a base in the city. It has elected multiple city supervisors, it almost elected a mayor, and it has produced some very successful Green politicians. Nearby Richmond, with over 100,000 residents, is actually the largest city in US history to have a Green mayor. As can be seen from Green San Francisco Supervisor Ross Mirkarimi’s scuffles with San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom, having a second party in a big city can provide some much needed political competition.

However, this one party effect is not felt only in a geographic sense. In some cases, there is a social context to it, as well. Take, for instance, African Americans. They tend to vote overwhelmingly Democratic. And that’s no surprise, when Republicans are calling for a return to literacy tests for voting and resorting to cheap racial shots at the President. So, in our two party system, African Americans are faced with a choice: do you want the party that creates much of its success from race baiting or do you want the other party? Unappealing choices like that result in widespread disillusionment (although that’s obviously not the only problem with minorities and voting) and result in the same things as a geographical one party system. Just take a look at a New York Times article from Sunday highlighting the juggernaut of corporate fundraising that is the Congressional Black Caucus:

From 2004 to 2008, the Congressional Black Caucus’s political and charitable wings took in at least $55 million in corporate and union contributions, according to an analysis by The New York Times, an impressive amount even by the standards of a Washington awash in cash. Only $1 million of that went to the caucus’s political action committee; the rest poured into the largely unregulated nonprofit network.

~snip~

In 2008, the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation spent more on the caterer for its signature legislative dinner and conference — nearly $700,000 for an event one organizer called “Hollywood on the Potomac” — than it gave out in scholarships, federal tax records show.

~snip~

The claim that this is a truly philanthropic motive is bogus — it’s beyond credulity,” said Meredith McGehee, policy director at the Campaign Legal Center in Washington, a nonpartisan group that monitors campaign finance and ethics issues. “Members of Congress should not be allowed to have these links. They provide another pocket, and a very deep pocket, for special-interest money that is intended to benefit and influence officeholders.”

———————————-

So what does a successful third party look like? And what will it take to get there?

In a broad sense, there are two routes one could take toward creating a successful third party (using either a brand new party or an existing one). One is that the party could take a very long term approach. That is, wait for or work toward election reform that makes elections more competitive. This is an area that certainly needs work in our country. As mentioned before, practices like gerrymandering and ballot access reinforce the two party system, and nations like Canada and Britain show that a more vibrant electoral system emerges if these barriers are removed. Another fundamental flaw in how most of our elections are conducted is the “winner take all” (aka first past the post and plurality) method of voting that is employed in a vast majority of US elections. This system is only fair when there are only two choices in an election, thereby creating an incentive for the two party system to exist, and creating the problem of “the spoiler effect” when more than two candidates are in a race. Instant runoff voting for single winner elections is attracting a lot of attention and is being implemented in many cities. Range voting is a system that I personally find interesting. And proportional representation, as seen in a vast majority of representative democracies throughout the world, can be a much more effective system for electing legislatures than the one we have in America. Once some or all of these changes are implemented, it will indeed be much easier for third parties to succeed.

The other route is to take a shot at success in today’s political and electoral environment. The way to do that, in my opinion, is to follow the model of the aforementioned Vermont Progressive Party. Although I am young, from what I have seen in the third party world, the key to success seems to be perseverance, having reasonable goals, and – as with any political mission – a bit of luck.

The idea of reasonable goals deserves some consideration. Many people tend to think of third parties in terms of Ross Perot or Ralph Nader and the glamor of the presidency. But that is not where third parties will have their success. If you look throughout history and at modern politics, you inevitably come to the conclusion that third parties must focus on the local and possibly the state level in order to have success. Before a Green Party or Progressive Party or whatever party candidate wins a gubernatorial election, it makes a lot of sense for them to prove themselves politically, build a base, and build “political capital” by winning lower offices throughout that state. The Progressive Party has already proven that this strategy works. If implemented intelligently, I believe that it can work in countless places throughout the United States.

———————————-

To give people a choice between two different parties and allow them, in a period of rebellion, to choose the slightly more democratic one was an ingenious mode of control…

In a two-party system, if both parties ignore public opinion, there is no place voters can turn.

–Howard Zinn, “A People’s History of the United States”

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Filed Under: Third parties, general

13 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Ross Levin // Feb 18, 2010 at 9:38 pm

    Thanks for posting this here (btw, you pasted it twice).

  • 2 Jeremy Young // Feb 18, 2010 at 9:43 pm

    Ross, this is really excellent work. I agree with every word.

  • 3 paulie // Feb 18, 2010 at 9:45 pm

    Meant to earlier and spaced it.

    Dunno how the double post happened……..should be fixed now

  • 4 David F. Nolan // Feb 18, 2010 at 10:32 pm

    A lot of good points here, but I have to take issue with the following: “When they want climate change legislation, they get nothing. When they want single payer, they get nothing.” The problem with these statements is that most voters DON’T want “climate change legislation” or “single payer [healthcare]” – as numerous polls have shown. Unfortunately for partisans on the left, those are NOT popular issues issues except in “progressive” circles.

    That aside, the basic points made about the two-party system, combined with gerrymandered districts, are valid. The system is largely rigged.

  • 5 Clay Shentrup // Feb 19, 2010 at 12:13 am

    Score Voting (aka “range” voting) needs to be priority #1 for election reform advocates, even its simplified form Approval Voting. Otherwise you’re stuck with two-party “duopoly”, and it’s more important for candidates to convince you that they’re electable than that you SHOULD elect them.

    Here’s why.

    With any deterministic (non-random) voting method, voters are incentivized to help their favorite front-runner, relative to their non-favorite front-runner — even if neither one is their favorite candidate. To use a historical example, just think of a Nader supporter who prefers Gore to Bush. He wants to help Gore defeat Bush, even if it costs him the ability to support his sincere favorite. Thus Nader can’t win, even if voters’ don’t think he can win — even if he’s actually the voters’ favorite candidate. So appearing electable is priority #1 — and you get electability by getting lots of money (from corporations for instance), and by getting the endorsement of one of the two major parties. Basically, you have to bow to the establishment.

    But with Score Voting, using the above strategy doesn’t preclude supporting “unelectable” candidates. If I sincerely feel Nader=10, Gore=6, Bush=0, then I can strategically give Gore a 10. But I still can give Nader a 10 with no fear.

    This is not the case with most rank-based methods, namely Instant Runoff Voting. Case in point, IRV was used for the mayoral election in Burlington VT in 2008. A group of voters who preferred GOP>Dem>Progressive could have caused the Democrat to win instead of the Progressive if they had tactically top-ranked the Democrat, even though they sincerely preferred the Republican. There is of course a risk that using that tactic could cause the Democrat to win instead of the Republican, but that’s far less likely to happen than that the move will cause them to get the Democrat instead of the Progressive.

    In other words, this IRV tactic is more likely to help than harm, so it’s an advisable tactic. IRV die-hards like FairVote’s Rob Richie will dismiss such strategy, insisting that it requires an unrealistic amount of prior knowledge on the part of voters. But that is simply statistically/mathematically wrong.

    See here for a rigorious mathematical explanation:
    http://scorevoting.net/TarrIrv.html

    And for those who want Proportional Representation in the USA, bear in mind that you probably won’t get it until you FIRST get Score Voting and end the duopoly.
    http://scorevoting.net/PropRep.html

  • 6 Dale Sheldon-Hess // Feb 19, 2010 at 3:22 am

    I can’t emphasize enough the importance of the lopsided-representation of Democrats in Burlington as a reason of the VPP’s success. The D:R ration there is practically 2:1, which means the Democrats could (have) run two candidates for most offices and not had to worry about “spoiling” themselves; they didn’t, and that’s where the VPP found an opening.

    Perhaps you’re familiar with the Cook Partisan Voting Index (PVI, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cook_Partisan_Voting_Index) If we presume that this sort of opening exist whenever the largest major-party has a 2:1 edge, we would need to see a PVI of greater than about 16 points, which means there’s the possibility of this strategy working in the 36 most-Republican districts and the 66 most-Democratic districts, as well as the 4 most-Republican states for the Senate. (These numbers are very rough and assume an approximate even voting spread over the last two presidential elections (close to true) and comparable voting patterns on national- and local-level elections (not true at all in many states.)

    Check the list; if your district is on there, think it over!

    =========

    Second point: remember that the greatest change in US party-dynamics happened because *neither* of the major parties would/could take a stance on the most-pressing issue of the time: slavery. With this in mind, the weakness of the two-party system might not be the fact that both parties favor corporatist; an anti-corporatist party would see united opposition from both incumbent parties, which would be a difficult battle to fight.

    Rather, an effective weak-point would be to find an important (to the voters) issue that both parties are SPLIT over; that way, as the debate rises, both will tear themselves apart.

    Although no such issue immediately comes to mind.

  • 7 Dave Schwab // Feb 19, 2010 at 8:40 am

    “The problem with these statements is that most voters DON’T want “climate change legislation” or “single payer [healthcare]” – as numerous polls have shown.”

    These here polls say otherwise:

    http://www.nytimes.com/cwire/2010/01/26/26climatewire-if-polls-say-yes-to-a-climate-bill-why-do-la-41121.html

    http://www.wpasinglepayer.org/PollResults.html

  • 8 DR BAD // Feb 19, 2010 at 11:11 am

    I do not know what bothers me most,
    The murdering liars and htives in washington,
    Or the mindelss greedy apathetic sheep and parrots who let them go on and on. Top to bottom america is corrupt and brokin.
    The media blatnatly controlled and fill with crap. Wars built on lies. And all i Hear is excuses.
    These elctions are all rigeed. Bought and paid for. Only Zionest and Jew backed politicians get any press at all. Dummycrats and Repiglicans two sides of same coin. NO differant.
    Well I have a message for Both parties.
    Lie all you like. Insult like children. Make excuses. Argue like Old women.
    Truth is you both cancel each other out.
    In the end? It is “I” the true Independent has the last vote.
    May YOU ALL, rot in hell, for what you have done.
    You are War Criminals.
    YOU, have now destroyed America.

  • 9 Don Lake ........... rearraigning the deck chairs ?????? // Feb 19, 2010 at 11:52 am

    DR BAD // Feb 19, 2010:
    “…… sheep and parrots who let them [Democans and Republicrats] go on and on …….. corrupt and brokin[g] ……. .media blatantly controlled and fill with crap. Wars built on lies …… excuses ………. Bought and paid for …….. In the end? It is “I” the true Independent has the last vote.” (or words to that affect ……….)

    Even worse than you imagine!

    [a] Not only is the California and national vote rigged via Gerrymandering; there is the skewing of the establishment dominated Electoral College. The lack of representation in American Samoa, Guam, Virgin Islands, DC, PR and other Imperial fascist global American Empire out posts. Almost 200 expensive, intrusive, military out posts around the earth.

    [b] Striving to be competitive in a global economy while in a scientific metric environment. USA, Libya, and some other third world tide water still using the unscientific, out dated Imperial system. Inches any one ??????

    [c] Federal Reserve ‘funny money’ ……

    [d] One of the few nationhoods to not have an expressive Parliament. Captive congress any one ?????

    [e] [in general] we are some what successful in spite of our selves, not because of ……..

    [f] any bets that you cannot recognize the [so called] USA in another century ??????

  • 10 Jim Knapp // Feb 19, 2010 at 4:48 pm

    Our country needs a revolution, voting for a Democrat or a Republican is not revolutionary, it is big business as usual.

    Neither party represents the average hard working American.

    THE DNC = appear on the surface to represent socialist, welfare recipients, illegal alien loving, multiculturalists and those who look to the government for free cheese. But if you follow the money and their votes, they are whores for big business and Wall Street just as much as the Republicans. AND THIS WILL NEVER CHANGE!

    THE GOP = appear to be patriotic, flag waving, constitution loving Americans, but if you follow the money they are New World Order loving, oligarch supporting, pro Wall Street, Pro Communist China, pro illegal immigration, pro outsourcing American jobs, pro shipping our manufacturing base overseas and just all around lying sacks of manure. AND THIS WILL NEVER CHANGE!

    America needs a populist third party alternative to break up the corporate globalist controlled oligarchy we now have.

    A third party would not need to vote out every RINO, neocon, Republican or Liberal Democrat. We only need to take 10% of the House seats, this is very doable in conservative states. With 10% of congress we could control the agenda in Washington. Eventually, as the party proved itself and grew, we could take the Whitehouse.

    http://www.thirdpartypatriots.org
    Facebook: Third Party Patriots

  • 11 Green Party fan // Feb 19, 2010 at 7:31 pm

    Ross,

    You are on fire with this Green Party article.

    Thank you for the strong message.

    One point. Defense Spending Theft. No auditable accounting system at the Pentagon. Both of the larger parties waste $TRILLIONS, not just billions, on defense.

    Take the 2011 Fiscal Year federal budget request from the current administration. $250 billion in interest on the federal debt – accumulated borrowing money for Pentagon waste. $895 billion for 2011 DOD spending. That’s $1.1 Trillion.

    A crime against every American tax payer.

    Thanks to the Green Party for calling attention to this!

  • 12 Blanco // Feb 20, 2010 at 5:43 am

    Dr. Bad and Jim Knapp might (maybe) have a clue!

    We need a real third party to deal with the real issues in this country that all the parties are ignoring:

    The threat of Islamic terrorism and the rise of Islamic extremism around the world.

    The flood/invasion of illegal aliens taking away American jobs which will cause white people to be a minority in this country soon…has anyone wondered what will happen then?

    Abortion of white babies, which is contributing to this disturbing demographic trend if it is not outlawed.

    Corporations outsourcing American jobs – where is the paycheck for the white working class man going to come home to feed his family?

    The war on Christianity in our schools, courthouses, etc., and the war on Christmas.

    The Zionist bankers and their control of the money supply.

    The rising economic and military threat posed by China.

    The flood of dope on our streets and the leniency of the police and courts toward non-white street thugs.

    NAFTA/GATT/WTO/United Nations threats to American sovereignty.

    Multiculturalist brainwashing of our children.

    Filthy garbage of the worst imaginable sort being allowed in the movies, TV and on the radio, producing generations of degenerates.

    Feminization of the American male through the promotion of feminism and normalization of sodomy as a “lifestyle” – this can’t be helping our demographic trends! Before long this country will look like a cross between Mexico, Zimbabwe, Pakistan and Gomorrah if we don’t do something.

    While Wall Street is partying, the Zionist bankers are closing our factories and foreclosing on our farms.

    Is there a party, major or minor, that will rise up to address these issues?

    Will we do something before it’s too late?

  • 13 Pat // May 6, 2010 at 10:44 pm

    1992 – needed it then, and need a third party now. Congress has shown it has no respect for the needs of the American people, and run it as a private club for their own interests – in both parties.

    Only solution to that is a third party that can compete globally with other nations with more than two parties. America, even with so many new immigrants, legal or illegal, has become parochial. It needs a broader perspective that cann only come from more than two parties in competition with one another, squeezing Americans in their vise.

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