Hi Richard, 

It's always a pleasure to hear from you.

Comments below...


On Apr 24, 2013, at 10:46 PM, Richard Fobes wrote:

> On 4/22/2013 7:30 AM, Jonathan Denn wrote:
>> ...
>> My conclusion to the IVN piece is likely going to be to immediately
>> advocate for "Approval" voting nationwide.
> 
> "Nationwide" is both ambiguous and ambitious.  If you express the reform that 
> way, I'd suggest clarifying what you mean.  Personally I'd suggest more of a 
> ramping-up approach.


I should have been clearer: In the Presidential election. With "Approval" the 
third parties should do well enough to get matching funds in future elections 
therefore greatly improving the quality of the next debates.



> 
>> And after voters get used to
>> the change to then have an independent commission study which method is
>> best for the ranking of candidates.
> 
> A strong "no" on the idea of an independent commission study!

Well, this really is the crux of the matter—epistemic democracy versus 
participative. I see the "establishment" always trying to censor the reformer 
voice. In economics, a recent National Issues Forum study guide on the deficit 
completely left out Modern Monetary Theory from UMKC. MMT, IMO, is Ockham's 
Razor. In electoral reform all you hear about in the media is Citizen's United 
which is mostly a minor issue compared to the legal extortion and bribery of 
elected officials, the revolving door, term limits, gerrymandering, and the 
abridging of free speech and rights to assemble. 

My thoughts on the matter are that the citizen's commission choose the experts 
with the goal of hearing ALL sides, inside or outside the box ideas. With 
guidance from a diverse panel of intelligentsia. 

> 
> Ontario Canada created a citizen's committee to study voting methods and they 
> (under the influence of a biased "expert") came up with the "closed-list" 
> form of PR (proportional representation).  It allows the people in power to 
> stay in power, which is the opposite of what voters want.  I and others then 
> worked to defeat that choice when it came up on the ballot.  In the 
> Declaration Of Election-Method Reform Advocates we specifically denounce the 
> "closed-list" approach by recommending the "open-list" approach instead (if 
> PR is used).

How do you run open-list and assure the information is actually disseminated to 
the voters? With attention spans of 7 seconds, how does the average citizen 
digest hundreds of hours of deliberation? Most Americans don't have time to 
prepare a healthy meal at the end of the day, share it with family, or visit 
with friends. Parsing out complex electoral reform is competing for eyeballs 
with American Idol, sports events, school recitals, etc. etc. etc...

E.g. When I'm in discussion groups about the economy, almost no one even 
understands the difference between fiscal and monetary policy, let alone that 
the US government has a monopoly issuing US currency. My point being, the 
public is long on virtue, but someone has to do the scholarship and figure out 
how to disseminate it.

> 
> Let different cities and states use different methods -- preferably with 
> guidance from the information in the Declaration.  There is no need to 
> converge on a single common approach.  In fact, even though I advocate the 
> Condorcet-Kemeny method, even I would recommend having used Approval voting 
> in the recall election that Arnold Swartzeneger (sp?) won to become 
> California's governor because there were 135 candidates competing for that 
> single seat, and Approval voting is less confusing to the voters when there 
> are that many candidates.

I'm certainly open to ideas about how a free and fair hearing of evidence is 
assured. 

I agree on local rule. I was just referring to a single approach for POTUS.

Thanks for this. My mind remains open, and I do want to feature DEMRA. I invite 
more input, and I'm now thinking this is a series of columns.  


Cheers,
Jon



> 
> ...
>> 
>> So, would anyone like to send me a quote, or be interviewed, or want to
>> dissuade me from my conclusion? I'm a sucker for a greater argument. I
>> can't guarantee your input will make it into the article, but as you
>> know I'm a big fan of DEMRA's work.
> 
> You can regard this as either an attempt to influence what you say, or as a 
> quote, or a series of quotes (your choice):
> 
> "The most important part of advocating better ballots and better counting 
> methods is to educate voters as to why election results so often yield 
> winners who most of the voters dislike.  We know that money has an excessive 
> influence on election results, but not enough people understand that it 
> happens because we use single-mark ballots. Single-mark ballots are only 
> intended to handle choosing between two choices.  We need to use ballots and 
> counting methods that handle three or more choices.  This need is especially 
> important in primary elections because that is where the biggest campaign 
> contributors take advantage of vote splitting if a reform-minded candidate 
> dares to run against a money-backed candidate.  Remember that the biggest 
> campaign contributors control both the Republican and Democratic parties, and 
> by controlling the primary elections of both parties they don't have to care 
> whether the Republican or Democrat wins the general election.  Most voters, 
> and politicians, are too distracted by the left-versus-right debate to notice 
> where the real control of power occurs, and why it is so easy for moneyed 
> interests to control both parties.  The biggest potential for reform is for 
> third parties to adopt better ballots and better counting methods in their 
> primary elections.  That change, besides attracting lots of voters to those 
> third parties, will educate mainstream voters that there are alternatives.  
> Approval voting is the logical place to start because the existing 
> ballot-counting hardware can be used, and it just involves allowing more than 
> one mark per race.  Yet any use of any kind of better ballot -- in any kind 
> of decision-making situation -- will quickly educate lots of voters about the 
> unfairness of the single-mark ballots we now use."
> 
> "Education is the key!"
> 
> Richard Fobes
> Author of "Ending The Hidden Unfairness In U.S. Elections"
> 
> 

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