Three major infrastructure features dominate our
political problems these days. First, the
fixed terms and residence requirements for electoral districts mean that
individual senators and representatives derive their power from a combination
of local interests and affluent funders. They are immune from the many national
party disciplines found in a parliamentary system, and as a consequence, national
parties operate actually as a confederation of politicians whose real power
derives more from local than from national interests. That’s why the Congress
is such a mob scene these days. This assures that only two parties will be
significant at any given time – the party most likely to be elected and the
party next most likely. It also assures that a coherent national strategy from
each party for solving political issues during crisis situations will not
exist.
Second, the residence requirement for electoral
districts combined with the redistricting power of state legislatures at each
census cycle has produced so many “gerrymandered” districts that congressional
races are no longer determined by the general election, but by the primaries. State
legislatures are generally beholding to one or another broad ideology, either
red or blue, and ensure districts will elect according to that point of
view. But individual districts are often
dominated by narrow views that only loosely fall within the ideas of the
national party. Thus, primaries are dominated by party extremists who produce
their own form of “rotten boroughs”, districts in which a splinter group of
extremists can guarantee continuing election without regard to what their
national party or the general electorate feels.
Third, the fixed terms two, four or six years in
length for our representatives, president and senators encourage lengthy,
expensive election campaigns which invite funding by special interests and
consequent corruption. Third parties are forced out of the process by the
residency requirement for candidates and by the sheer expense of it. In a parliamentary system, by contrast, lack
of fixed terms produces short, relatively inexpensive election campaigns. The most expensive campaign, a separate
election for the presidency, is eliminated altogether. That, combined with national party
discipline, which can involve placement of candidates in highly favorable or
unfavorable districts as chosen by party leaders, means the role of special
interests not interested in compromise is much more subdued, and room is
created for the growth of third or fourth parties capable of forcing compromise
and coalition in the national legislature.
We need, for real reform, to find changes that
will encourage the growth of third parties, promote the development of unified
strategies by national parties which can be voted up or down, reduce the
expense of elections, and strengthen the role of national parties in planning
solutions to our problems. We need not, and should not, “throw the baby out
with the bath water.” Changes might include, for example, making
residence only within a state the requirement for the House of Representatives,
thereby enabling placement of candidates by a state organization of each party,
setting a fixed short campaign length to reduce expense, or limiting gerrymandering
by establishing national standards for the creation of election districts subject
to review in federal court. Whatever we do, the goal should be to strengthen the
ability of the congress to reach solutions to national problems without
excessive impasse. The problems and
issues of our 21st century world move too quickly for us to continue
17th century methods for their resolution.
1 comment:
Ouch! I'm re-reading this 4 months later, and regret having written it so soon after celebrating New Years. That's my only excuse for having forgotten that the Constitution already provides that only state residence is required for the House of Representatives. The culprit in our current mess is the early 20th century progressive movement, which wanted to rid us of "smoke-filled-room" politics by instituting binding primaries. Before that, political power brokers could get whomever they wanted nominated as party candidate. That reform, combined with the relative weakness of political party structure doomed us to the only-local-candidates primaries we now are burdened with, There is no Constitutional barrier to a state-level party organization nominating candidates in each election district.
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