TheDave wrote:
Many democracies across the world have mulitiple major parties which I believe should be implemented into the American democracy. I think it will help Americans to choose the right candidate.
Yeah. There's a plus-minus to that type of system as well though. The biggie is that since you have a larger number of parties, each one typically represents the views of a smaller segment of socieity.
You pretty much have a choice between either having two parties were neither party perfectly matches your personal views on all issues, or having a number of parties where one is much more likely to match your views, but has a smaller percentage of the total population as members.
I tend to think that a society that flew off the handle and still ******* about a president being elected with less then 50% of the total popular vote would have a huge problem with the multiple parties system. The party in power might represent their constituent's views *very well*, but they will win power often with something like 20-30% of the total vote (and potentially less). I just don't think Americans would go for that at all. The nations of "majority wins" has a hard time letting a party have power with just a plurality.
It kinda makes sense in a legistlative system though, since it allows the "little guys" some representation. It makes very little sense when electing an executive though since it gives a relatively small block of voters a very large amount of the power. Vagarities in political shifts can easily give say the "KKK party" enough votes as a block to beat out numerically any other single party, where that particular set of ideals would likely never have any real influence on a larger party's policies, and would never beat a larger party on its own. Ultimately, we do something similar on the legistlative side anyway with special interest groups, so it's not like the smaller organizations and movements have no voice in our government. You take the good with the bad though.