Plurality voting??masterdebateApril 20 2008, 05:44:15 UTC
The United States doesn't have a plurality voting system. We have a two-party system. Plurality elections have more than two parties running, for example in the UK, the Labor* party, the Liberal party, and the Conservative Party, respectfully.
Re: Plurality voting?randwolfApril 20 2008, 06:05:02 UTC
I think you are confusing plurality voting--where the candidate with the most votes wins, even if there is no majority--with proportional representation, where coalitions of parties of various sizes form ruling and opposition groups in the legislature. I've never seen a US ballot with only two parties on it.
Re: Whatever it is, I'm against it.randwolfApril 22 2008, 05:13:33 UTC
Thank you for your reply; I'm glad someone is reading.
The fairness doctrine used to work well enough, though I agree there is some risk; "Experts dispute shape of earth." I hate having the FCC exercising editorial control, period, but what we've got now is worse
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The fairness doctrine used to work well enough, though I agree there is some risk; "Experts dispute shape of earth." I hate having the FCC exercising editorial control, period, but what we've got now is worse ( ... )
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