Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

LD and the 3 branches of government #13

Closed
dsernst opened this issue Oct 4, 2016 · 1 comment
Closed

LD and the 3 branches of government #13

dsernst opened this issue Oct 4, 2016 · 1 comment
Labels

Comments

@dsernst
Copy link
Member

dsernst commented Oct 4, 2016

Liquid Democracy only directly changes the Legislative branch of government. The people that write the laws.

It doesn't directly change the executive branch.

It wouldn't change how we pick presidents, governors, & mayors. Nor would it control day to day administration operations. It does have an indirect impact on how executive leaders do their jobs, because they'll need to convince the LD legislature to adopt new bills, rather than current Representative legislature.

It doesn't directly change the judicial branch.

And it's still kept in check by judges that test its laws for constitutionality. It does have an impact on how judges get appointed, if they require legislative approval.

Unless we passed constitutional amendments

Once we include constitutional amendments, if the LD technical system is widely trusted, we could use it to run executive branch elections, to simplify logistics.

More substantially, when LD is widely adopted, it becomes easier to introduce changes to the way we pick executive leaders. One simple reform I'd like to see is to use Approval Voting so that the winners have wider appeal, rather than winning with strategies that dominate the extremes.

Tweedledee and Tweedledum

It's easy to point at the presidential selection process as a particularly bad example of being forced to pick between the "lesser of two evils", but don't let that confuse the discussion about LD.

It's not clear how we could change the way we pick the president without constitutional amendments. And it's unrealistic to imagine the jobs of the president — Commander in Chief, vast managerial duties, highest public figurehead, and representative on the world stage — could be fulfilled by a Remote Control Politician.

And presidential approval ratings have averaged many times higher than Congressional approval ratings.

So let's focus on where the real problem is.

congressional approval rating

@dsernst dsernst added the draft label Oct 4, 2016
@dsernst
Copy link
Member Author

dsernst commented Oct 12, 2016

Closed in favor of PR #24

@dsernst dsernst closed this as completed Oct 12, 2016
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
Development

No branches or pull requests

1 participant