thefreshmaker
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2024
2. Nah the current system is mostly fine. Thank goodness we don't use the backwards voting system the US or UK use (First past the post)
I think there is something wrong when there's an average of 56,959 Labor voters per representative, 93,011 Liberal voters per representative, and 1,890,004 Greens voters per representative, or where the Liberals receive 92% of the votes Labor did but only 46% of the seats Labor received. The greens got 35% of the votes that Labor did and a shockingly low 1% of representatives in parliament.There's really nothing majorly wrong with the voting system in Australia. It's the lack of real choice and the absolute stranglehold the media has on normie minds.
The advantage of our system is that everyone at least gets a piece of the pie - the issue of how that pie gets divided still exists. It's all well and good to divide the seats relatively equally population wise, but it's very much double plus ungood if the seats are arranged such that entire voting blocs can be completely shunted from the political system because those voters are more isolated rather than pooled together in districts.
The advantage of the American system is that alongside the executive election there is a separate legislative election, and it's entirely possible to have states vote to be represented by one party and have the country ruled by another. The majority gets a victory regardless of the proportion of the vote, but you can be sure that the vast majority of elections result in the will of the majority and a relatively equal pairing of elected officials.
The disadvantage of the UK system is that you elect both the executive and legislature in one go, like we do, with the disadvantage of FPP. One party can get 20% of the population's vote and 85% of the parliamentary positions.
We need to find a way to effectively square the circle, because this and the 2022 election resulted in a very vast gap between the results and actual votes.