Thursday, September 14, 2006

Election Reform, part 2

In a previous post I presented some suggestions on how to make voting less cumbersome to get more Americans to take part in the most important process in our democracy- voting. I present here some more suggested changes that could tweak the system but this time I focus less on making voting easier but on actually making it more effective...

Cooked down, my sequel proposals are to prohibit judges from using their incumbency advantage on the ballot, to quit voting on positions of functional government officials who must have a certain amount of job expertise and to enact some form of proportional representation or cumulative votingsystem.

In the interests of electoral fairness, let’s lose the incumbent designation for judges on the ballot. We don’t allow any other people seeking office to tout themselves as incumbents, so why should judges get such special privileges? All I ask is that Circuit Court Judge James Fisher be referred to on the ballot as simply “James Fisher.” Judges get plenty of publicity so that voters are likely to know who they are anyway, certainly as opposed to some sacrificial lamb opposing them.
It is no secret that in West Michigan, if you’re a Republican and an incumbent, the chances of you being ousted at the polls are about as good as mine trying to hit a home run off Justin Verlander. In the Detroit area, Democrats enjoy the same unfair advantages. The dealer a long time ago handed the good cards to those already in power and left those brave or foolish enough to challenge with lousy hands. It’s time to level the playing field.

Though it’s been said before elsewhere, I call for eliminating the process of electing at all for the so-called “county elected offices” of register of deeds, clerk, treasurer, sheriff, prosecuting attorney, drain commissioner and surveyor. One of my biggest worries is that an electorate that doesn’t pay attention will elect unqualified bozos, and maybe they already have,  to one of more these jobs, which really should be appointed by an elected County Board of Commissioners. Many of us, myself included, have little clue what a drain commissioner or register of deeds does or better yet what makes a good one, yet we’re charged with the solemn task of selecting such an animal. Even worse is when somebody running for prosecuting attorney or sheriff can be a demagogue or slick political salesman, but not a competent or effective professional, and the masses of the clueless easily will choose the former over the latter because they’re nice people and give us false promises to “get tough on crime” rather than promise us fair justice for all. Sometimes deciding things by a vote of the people isn’t in our best interests. Plato cautioned us about mob rule mentality.

We also need to take a look at the very nature of how we elect people to office. There are many other ways to distribute votes and elect politicians that would not interfere with the plan our Founding Fathers set into motion- in fact many of the problems I seek to address are "add ons" that came later such as gerrymandering which haven't been dealt with with by the 2 major parties simply because it helps both of them consolidate their power into their geographical bases and it leads to a government that only works as a re-election machine for incumbents. Proportional representation offers a way for people who dislike our current two-party system where both parties seem to be offshoots of one Corporate Party to have a bigger say in who gets sent to represent them. Proportional representation exists in many different forms and likely it would tough in our current atmosphere to enact such a plan let alone choose just one but it would allow for so-called "fringe" groups to have their voice heard who aren't currently being served now. Cumulative voting would allow minorities to not be completely silenced by the majority and would also perhaps provide a sensible and simple method to eliminate the "need" to gerrymander districts to reduce the power of minorities which results in skewed districts where minorities represent only a small number or an overwhelming majority producing the "wasted vote effect." These methods could be effective in breaking the 2 major parties' stranglehold on votes and power and produce a more effective government and a less divided nation.

Consider these ideas along with the proposals I advocated earlier to make it easier for all of us to vote. Let's make it so incumbents don't get an unfair advantage, let's clear the clutter off the ballot and make it so citizens aren't having to worry about who they should elect dog catcher and let's think about how the process of voting is used to send people into office and whether we can't tweak the system and reduce the grip of power from corrupt fiefdoms where the party in power has no fear of losing. Maybe there will come a time when we truly can make a difference. Until that glorious and wonderful day, I’ll have content myself with venting on a boring, repetetive and obscure blog that only a few read for occasional comedy relief...

10 comments:

Boggsone said...

Cheer up my friend. Good times ah commin! New Prosecutor, Sheriff, Board Members, can't say we're not making headway? 911 arrogants will be history soon! Maybe Neil will take over as head of Pennock Security?

Jay said...

On the judges plank: hard to accomplish because the judges lobbied for the incumbency designation during the last state constitutional convention.

On having the commissioners appoint county-wide elected officials: Would you really want someone like King James and his mob to have that much control over the public's documents and services? The county elected officials are also a check on the power of the county board after every census. If we went to your system, we'd be more in danger of the annointment syndrome.

The best weapon to combat public apathy is to educate the public on the offices. Maybe the Banner could have a "county office spotlight" where they highlight what each county office does and the services they provide. For the most part, I trust voters to weed out the bad apples. We did have a stretch where the county was accepting sub par performers, but that was because the citizenry didn't run to take on those officials.

You don't have to reinvent the wheel to get things moving in the right direction--you just have to reenergize and reinvigorate the public and the best way to do that is with educaion.

Jay said...

BTW--

Anyone else just a tad irked that JNP will not serve out her term, instead she'll leave for Allegan in October? Part of me doesn't blame her, but the other part feels it's a bit hypocritical of her since she criticized Evans for similar actions.

el grillo said...

Pol,
This could actually lead to an intelligent discussion on an important issue. Unfortunately, you are right about the limited participation and shallowness of concern. Don't quit.
My limited blogging experience tends to make me think that issues this large should be discussed by a group of much more influential people at the State and Federal levels.
Perhaps, since your bloggroup has the potential to have some influence on the local level, you need to focus on ferreting out the "whole truth" regarding local issues. I'm inclined to think that you have some resources to investigate issues in depth, and inform the public beyond the froth of inflamatory headlines. It may even be that you could appeal to this underground resource to pry behind doors that you find closed. I spoke to some sixth graders today about the effect of the First Amendment. Their generation is bombarded by massive amounts of informational crap that is perfectly legal, but is neither factual or worth notice. Your task must be difficult, since you get so much information that is probably merely an attempt to misinform and distort the truth.
There are a few local issues each week that could make for a real contribution to public understanding, if presented in full. It would be naive to think that the general public retains most of what is presented in one article for an entire week. An example comes to mind of this weeks conversation with an ethanol guy who is going to produce a bunch of Mi5s or something. I hungered for a meaningful explanation. The ethanol issue will require tons of print. Much of what is being presented is lacking the "whole truth". There are some industries that will not benefit from any successes with alternative fuels. How will the Woodbury plant affect Farmland Preservation in Barry County? The hell with global warming. Will farmers make enough more growing corn to keep them from prostituting themselves to developers?
Should Barry County sit around for another term of status quo protection, or could we actually initiate a complete thought before it was forced on us? How does Jim French, our hero of the M-37 Corridor, feel about public transportation? Should he, and could he, actually be so proactive that a bus might leave Hastings for a destination other than the COA? We pay for this service with the new millage, but a reluctant old guard will merely perpetuate the same old excuses. What are all the facts? Maybe we bloggers could enhance your staff research until enough facts were gathered to make a fully informative story.
I understand the difficulty of some people wanting to make everything personal, but if there is enough important information between the rants ... if you write it, they will come.
Imagine the day when you research actual scientific data while your staff verifies field observations.
At this point, the contention by Mike Lewis that the County is squatting on $22 million surplus tax dollars is merely the opinion of one writer. What would happen if it was actually a fact? Would the taxpayers find that interesting enough to pay half a buck to learn ALL the truth about the pot of gold, or do we prefer to tittilate their active little imaginations and compete with the American Idle.
ps: Perhaps a blogger who claims a fact could be required to supply a footnoted source or bibliographical reference for your verification.

el grillo said...

Correction:
It wasn't the ethanol article, it was the E.W.Bliss article I was hoping to see expanded. Bliss is apparently winning more MiO points than last year, or something.

el grillo said...

New voices are always welcome. Those who present ideas in place of rants are even more welcome.

agnosticrat said...

Get it... Dicks' head...lol!

el grillo said...

Enlightening idea.

truthfulpat said...

Jay and other shallow thinkers have not yet come to the understanding that people know how to vote. Non voters are made up of an unusual assortment of people. Many of them have chosen NOT to vot as they have figured out that elections in the U.S. are largely cover for the continued control of the great unwashed by the oligarcy to perpetuate it's control over the economy and people.
That one can preach democracy to the world and demonstrate the poorest participation level in the free world is hypocrity at it's finest.
A system which has produced more non voters than voters must, if it cares to even pretend to be deoocratic, examine itself from time to time and make the adjustments required to assure that the people not only are listened to, but believe they are.
Michigan has a doo nothing legislature because the people who bought it, want it that way. Period.
With the state in crisis because the domestic auto industry has pitifully failed to respond to 'market forces", our legislature continues to debate non-issues brought to us by the religious right who dominate the Republican Party.
The structural tax disaster that was carefully constructed by 16 years of GOP domination of State government is neither a mystery nor rocket science. One need ony to visit the Michigan Prospect to quickly understand why this state will never recover by cutting taxes willy nilly. EVERY state in the union who prosper and lead in the new economic challenges HAVE FAR HIGHER TAXES THAN MICHIGAN.
It was the Religious Right Wing Dominated legistature who refused to consider easing personal property taxes on manufacturing because they " didn't want to pick winners and loosers". These are the same folk who blew a 2 Billion dollar hole in the budget in accelerating the already agreed upon repeal of the SBT, and have refused to even discuss how to fill the hole until AFTER the election.
Unicam was but a beginning. The Gerrymandering of the State and Nation should be ample proof for any thoughtful person, Republican, Democrat, Independent...that the system has been corrupted and broken and will not change until the people force BASIC resturcturing.

DLW said...

You may want to consider a less-is-more approach to getting election reform that accepts the existence of a two-party-dominated party, but permits the development of a host local state-level third parties that can make local elections more competitive and shake up nat'l elections through leveraging their potential to spoil an election to gain influence.

http://anewkindofparty.blogspot.com/2008/08/initiative-for-most-people-and-polemic.html

With this change, it will pave the way for other changes and enable more much-needed reforms, in part by putting some heat on the main parties.

dlw