Brian201888 wrote: » What would be your alternative?
johnnyskeleton wrote: » mod note: Double post deleted and thread title changed to reflect OPs origional question. OP, this forum is for serious discussion not for political rhetoric. It is factually incorrect to say that FG and FF are the same party, even if the differences in their policies may be slight. Please provide substantial contributions to the discussion
Chips Lovell wrote: » Coalition doesn't make two or more parties identical. It just means they have to reach a compromise agreeable to all for the term of the government. Most of our governments to date have been some form of coalition.
maestroamado wrote: » Is it needed in modern politics where people are informed?
Harry Palmr wrote: » They are not the same party, if either has any chance to form a government without the other they will. This is just an arrangement for now. They probably should merge but that's another topic. As for voting, what I'd like to see is the end of multi-seat constituencies. They are massive waste of political energy as a TD's greatest potential enemy is a fellow TD of the same party in the same constituency. To avoid conflict parties "manage" areas so A gets one end of a county/area and B gets the other this in turns creates local fiefdoms and resentments between different parts of a county.
pixelburp wrote: » I'd say the key "flaw", if you can call it that, of PR is that it kinda generates this smorgasbord of centrists parties - given coalition is the easier and more common path to government than an outlying and more extremist set of policies.
eldamo wrote: » But seeing the polarization that has happened in the UK and US where it seems that alienating exactly 49.9 percent of the population seems to be the way to go to get into power, i think we are better off sticking with what we have.
ELM327 wrote: » I'd be in favor of FPTP and smaller constituencies. Like in the UK. Removes all the loony parties.
Chips Lovell wrote: » I don't know. I've always felt that one of the strengths of PR is that it allows for a more diverse range of political positions. You can vote for a somewhat unorthodox candidate safe in the knowledge that if they don't get in, your vote isn't "wasted" and will go to someone nearer the middle ground. Two party systems, on the other hand, tend to foster "big tent" parties whose path to power is usually through capturing the middle ground. Now that does beg a lot of questions of course. Why are most Irish parties so close together policy-wise? I think that's less a consequence of PR and more of the Irish mindset. As a nation, we aren't inclined to radicalism. Go to Spain on the other hand and you could have everything from proper communists to barely reformed Francoists and everything in between.
Peregrinus wrote: » . . . and deliver a thumping majority to a party which the majority of voters have rejected. Which may well be a loony party. (As it is right now, in the UK.) It's profoundly undemocratic.
ELM327 wrote: » It can't be undemocratic as the people elected are done so as a result of counting ballots.
Peregrinus wrote: » Historical counter-examples abound. Counting ballots isn't enough to ensure democracy. For a start, you have to not rig the system to as to reduce the choice offered to people on the ballot paper, excluding what you consider to be "loony parties" and not allowing people to choose which candidate of their favoured party is to represent them. Then, you have to have a countying method which ensures that, so far as practicable, equal weight is attached to each voter's vote in determining the outcome of the election. FPTP fails both these tests; it's a system which concentrates power in the hands of the already-dominant parties, at the expense of the voters.
maestroamado wrote: » Since the two main parties are now one party should we drop the PR system.
Macy0161 wrote: » In 2019, the Tories got 43.6% of the vote. Trump only got 46% of the popular vote. It's more than 49.9% disenfranchised in those systems.
sid waddell wrote: » ...it has led to extremes, overwhelmingly on the right.
ELM327 wrote: » So, a system where each constituency elects one TD, with the constituency lines drawn as pro rate to the population, is not democracy? Riiight