A three party congress will almost certainly fail
Many of us have written about the necessity to abandon the two party system in favor of a multiparty system. Although a parliamentary system would be superior to the current set-up, providing it wasn't a duopoly, even a three-party system would most likely. This is a matter of simple arithmetic and past history. The Senate is easier to analyze for a few reasons. First, 100 is an easy number to deal, certainly handier than 435. Secondly the Senate has a simple majority requirement for most votes. This means of course that with 51 votes a bill passes.
Now let's take an example which is not too unlikely, although still not yet ready for prime time. Let us suppose we have three parties. As a practical matter, to appear on the ballot a third party must have at least 5% of total vote in most states and definitely for Federal elections.
Consider that in 2016, total vote for Libertarians, Greens at all did not total 7-8%. None of the parties made 5% singly. Suppose, however that one party raised 5% and that translated into 5 Senate votes (although due to duopolistic gerrymandering such is extremely unlikely). But, just hypothetically assume that Party number 3 (P3) got 5% or five Senatorial seats, no matter how distributed. Any measure proposed still has to garner 51 votes. Now imagine that PE opposes any single measure proposed by P1 or P2. Theoretically there would have to be a coalition between P1 or P2 to combine enough P3 votes.
That is not going to happen. It has been well-proven that TPTB arrange it so that enough P1 votes defect to P2, or vice versa, on any given vote. So 5% P3 representation won't be satisfactory to block a measure.
Now, on the opposite side of this would be how many P3's are necessary to pass their own bells? Answer 51--not gonna happen.
So the third possibility is how many P3 votes will it take to help either P1 or P2 to either block OR pass a measure? Please, let's not let unicorns vote--let's talk about real world. The answer depends on how much flexibility remains in P1 or P2. In a case of maximum flexibility of vote stability in either P1 or P2, the answer is Px + P3 = 51.
Voting stability means how strict party members adhere to (and vote) for the party line. In the strict marionette scenario (the strings being pulled by TPTB) and all party members fall in line, the answer to this question is:
the number to block passage = Px + P3 = 51
Assuming relatively equal P1 and P2 distribution, the P1 or P2 = 47 and 48
Assuming every stays bought in Px and that P3 members remain "pure", then this contrivance that P3 can completely block passage of any vote when P3 remains united,
the maximum amount of either minority party, P1 or P2 needs to achieve blockage = 46 + P3 = 51.
Obviously this system as postulated, requires strict conformity to the party line occurring.
But we know that both P1 and P2 are two faces of TPTB. So if P3 gains only 5% of seats there will be NO impact on politics. What would be the minimum P3 size to force a coalition? We have assume for this model that the party lines are pretty closely adhered to. In other words
If P1 = 50, P3 would have to be 51----remember, this example assumes party line adherence is strict. Is this going to happen--not in your lifetime.
Thus how small must P1 be in order to allow P2 plus P3 to pass laws (or negate laws)?
P2 and P3 are additive.
To satisfy this equation P2 plus P3 must equal 51. Which means p1
Comments
Good, Ed. You have proved that it is structurally impossible
...for a third party to enter the duopoly-designed election system. It's taken centuries to block every entrance or interface to third-party participants. The ruling cartel does not want to spoil the polarity that divides the People and moves them around the neoliberal game board.
Under a duopoly, voters tend to suffer from a mass delusion. Americans are convinced that the two parties are competing over ideals and ideologies. But nothing could be further from the truth.
The two Parties are colluding. With each other and Wall Street. Both Parties are mesmerized by the siren song of capitalism. They are protecting themselves from communism. And nationalized oil and natural resources, public utilities, infrastructure, and banking. The horror! For over a century the ruling elite has been desperately fighting an anti-communist war. It is the war that keeps us poor.
So, what happens when a third party is added to the mix? The effect is called the Prisoner's Dilemma. The vote becomes even more polarized. Well-intentioned reform turns to vapor, and voters pursue their own immediate self-interests. The heck with the future.
"Short-term self-interest" is the midwife of dystopias.
Click this for a fascinating description of how Americans vote when they are caught in the Prisoner's Dilemma.
Meanwhile, the author does go on to discuss some interesting strategies that can help voters on both sides break free. But it will require a major paradigm shift. Perhaps the looming Dollar crash and a dying Empire is just what we need.
This is probably the most useful article I've read all week.
Blah blah blah.
The point, then, of pompous "realism" backed by Poly-Sci Math, is to prove that there's no alternative to neoliberalism. The passage estimating P3's success, toward the bottom of Alligator Ed's diary, is a non sequitur from that proof:
Why the "twenty years or more"? Why not two thousand, or two billion, years? The Republican Party was a "third party" in 1854 which acquired the White House in 1860. So much for Poly-Sci Math.
The point of analyses like this is to "prove" that there's no alternative to the Two-Party System, that the choice between Texas/ Florida/ Midwest elitism and California/ Suburban NYC elitism is an eternal choice, because the elitists are in some magical way "different" and because no nice liberal (you know, the self-proclaimed Great White Hopes of planet Earth) will ever grant P2 a victory by refusing to vote for P1.
Meanwhile, in the real world outside of the world of Poly-Sci Math, the process described in Kees van der Pijl's "The Making of an Atlantic Ruling Class" continues with Internet speed.
It is thus the real world that such Poly-Sci Math analyses ignore. Let's talk about the function of passing bills in the real world, which as readers will recall was the point of the analysis above. The function of passing bills, today, is to introduce refinements of the neoliberal order, the shared function of both P1 and P2. I'm sure that if there's any real conflict between P1 and P2, it can be resolved at the next Trilateral Commission or WEF or CFR meeting. Perhaps P1 and P2 can pretend to be "different" significantly enough to fool the voters, but the common assumption of both P1 and P2 today is that it takes damned little to fool the voters, thus BFFs HRC and DJT can pretend to run "against" each other in the 2016 Presidential election.
The party that ostensibly never ends
As I pointed out a long time ago, what's needed is a realignment. But lacking that, let's go back to the question at the top:
The point of P3 is not to "help either P1 or P2," otherwise why bother with P3 in the first place?
The ruling classes need an extra party to make the rest of us feel as if we participate in democracy. That's what the Democrats are for. They make the US more durable than the Soviet Union was.
Here is the point
One intent of my analysis was to show that P3 has virtually no path to passing bills it, the "pure" party, desires to pass for the common good. In a coalition government, which is impossible under duopoly circumstances, the assumption is that the members of a coalition must compromise to get change--whether that change is for good or ill. I am assuming that P3 is not a mafia-like newcomer, just engaged to get riches for itself, i. e., divvy up the pot. This is consistent with your quote.
Inherent in the calculations is that, with current electoral rules, a third party must have at least 5% to appear on the ballot. My analysis also assumes "ideal" conditions for duopoly rule maintenance. P1 + P2 will ALWAYS obtain ≥ 51 because they ALWAYS collude to obtain what TPTB want. The only thing which definitely prevents this occurrence is P3 > 50. This will not happen, at least on any rapid sense. Think back to the Whigs, a party 60 years old, disappearing in two election cycles. This occurred in a time when rules were not so artfully bent in favor of large donors. For P3, or P4, to gain eminence, voters must gradually perceive benefits by these non-duopoly parties. Assuming news about real life is able to penetrate the MSM barricade, and that people finally get disgusted with austerity (once they have learned to pronounce it and know what it is), then P3, etc. have a chance of growing, slowly but steadily.
This is not so unrealistic in the short term IF there is a major crash in society which weakens it but does not entirely destroy the government. IF there is a crash, the "safety window" between instability versus total collapse will be narrow. Political party make-up will have only this narrow window of instability to affect change, i.e., reach a really sizable fraction of total votes. Otherwise, violent revolution will occur. Regardless of the outcome of violent revolt, the resulting country or countries will bear little resemblance to our current corruption-ridden malaise.
Also,
with P3 @ 5% and proposing legislation that the constituents of P1,P2, and P3 see as beneficial makes it more difficult for TPTB to be so blatantly manipulative.
On a strictly party line vote, yes, futile indeed.
But without P3, this legislation would never see the light of day.
P3, essentially, becomes sunshine where none existed before.
IMHO
Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.
earthling, you're right on the nail with this.
From Cassiodorus and Aspie, I get the distinct impression of "don't even try". Nihilism, by definition, never accomplishes anything. The tenor of c99 does not suggest the finality of nihilism. Some wish to reform the Dims from inside--not nihilism, but misguided. Some wish to reform politics, not P1 or P2, with new approaches--plural.
@Alligator Ed
Well, if all of the CorpoDems were replaced by Progressives working for the public interest and the Republicans were all replaced with actual Conservatives concerned with conserving things like democracy and the environment, would we be looking at anything remotely resembling the current situation?
Or would all arguments within government then be about the best way to do such as promote the public interest and repair the damage done, just as it ought to be?
Edited due to my creative use of bolding where I needed block-quotes.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
Interesting question but unanswerable in real life.
At least 2 things, probably more, need to change: (1) limit election donations by individuals and outlawing corporate donations; (2) forbid lobbying of all types.
Until then, significant change is as likely as a Unicorn winning the Kentucky Derby.
Unlikely, yes,
but wouldn't it be nice to be working toward something that technically could be overall achieved in one Party within two elections? And force the cheaters to provide the world with more proof of blatant electoral cheating, just as the world is turning against The Psychos That Be and beginning to realize what an existential threat they are?
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
So let's not do anything, then.
Let's all just get on our knees and suck dick for pennies. After all, even if the CIA Porky Dems manage to rub one out in the midterms, we're all still fucked. Why fight it, right?
Modern education is little more than toeing the line for the capitalist pigs.
Guerrilla Liberalism won't liberate the US or the world from the iron fist of capital.