Topsy Turvy Week Shows Need For Fixing a Broken System
When the right and the left agree more than the center, it tells us it's time to fix our very broken election system.
The sun didn't shine at midnight. Cats and dogs weren't lying together. But it was a topsy turvy world this week when progressives and freshman right wing congressmen were in close agreement that the Bush/Pelosi/Reid bailout was bad news.
The reasons may have differed--
Republicans opposed it because it was an affront to their conservative
values, verging on socialism, and Progressives opposed it because it
sold out mains street for Wall Street-- but it has created an
interesting dynamic, one that is worthy of exploration.
If the opposite ends of the political spectrum agree to disagree with the middle, what does that tell us about the middle?
We know that not a single freshman Republican voted in support of the
bailout bill. Yet even some of the most liberal Democrats went with
their party leadership to pass it.
One thing that's clear is the Republicans have lost control of their
people, while the Democrats had far more discipline. Since the
Republican party has been so misguided lately, that may be a good thing
for them. Of course with congressional ratings below 10 percent,
perhaps the Dems could have used some rebellion too. The vote certainly
did not help their popularity.
No, my enthusiasm for most of the congressional Democrats has waned
even further than I thought possible. To me, they sold out the average
American with this bailout and showed ever more of the same
spinelessness, jumping when Bush told them to jump, being afraid and
panicked when instructed to do so.
Some progressive congressional stalwarts stood up to the wave of
panic- Dennis Kucinich, Bernie Sanders, Russ Feingold-- but most caved
and allowed the outrageous 450 page, pork-loaded bill pass, handing an
obscene gift to Bush.
More than ever, America needs to institute term limits and new laws
requiring equal treatment for third parties AND instant runoff voting,
which lets you pick your first, second and third choices, and requires
a majority victory. If you no-one wins on the first pass, then the
candidate with the least votes is dropped from the count and the second
choice of all voters who voted for the dropped candidate is counted.
This way, voters can cast true protest votes or vote for third party
candidates without throwing away their vote.
The advantage incumbent members of congress now have is bad for
democracy, bad for America. We saw it here with this vote, where all of
congress ignored the clear message they received from 90% of their
constituents not to pass the bill.
By the way, I'd bet that Obama and McCain cut a deal that they'd both
support the bill so neither could attack the other on it.
Now we sit and wait. It won't be long. Within a few days or weeks,
we'll see more banks failing. I doubt the $700 billion will put a dent
in or slow down the economic crisis we're experiencing. Too bad we
can't, like we'd be able to do if there was instant run-off voting,
send a message to our incumbent legislators, that they truly let us
down. If we did have instant runoff voting, I bet that message would
have become a landslide and a lot of incumbents either wouldn't be
coming back or would be coming back quite chastened.