Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Ways to Make America Better: End the Two Party System

[This is the first in a series of related blog posts regarding simple things we can do to make our country better.]

Throughout virtually it’s entire history, the United States has had two dominant political parties.  Since the collapse of the Whigs in the 1850s, those two parties have been the Republicans and the Democrats.  With the exception of the Bull Moose party in 1912 and some short-lived racist Southern parties (the Dixiecrats in 1948 and the American Independent Party in 1968), it’s been nothing but Republicans and Democrats in the oval office and Congress.  This is the longest stretch of the same two parties being power in U.S. history. (A third party candidate has not even won a single state in a presidential election since 1968, when George Wallace carried five Southern states.)

On the surface, that kind of stability may seem like a good thing.  But when you look a little deeper, what has this system really gotten us?  We have a government that is paralyzed by partisan politics that prevent almost anything from getting done.  Over the past few decades, the Democrats have moved further to the left, the Republicans have moved further to the right and the gap between the two sides has grown larger.  Moderates from both parties have been jettisoned in favor “true believers” who stick to the party line and view compromise as a four letter word.  Whereas many of our Founding Fathers were eloquent statesmen, the halls of the capitol in Washington and the various state legislatures across the country are now populated with sycophants and cronies who spend more time hurling insults across the aisle than actually reaching across it to do the jobs they were elected to do.

Republicans claim to be the party of small government while at the same time trying to tell people who they can and cannot marry and starting wars overseas with money we don’t have.  Democrats view the government as the solution to everyone’s problems and if we take enough money from the wealthy and give it to the poor, everyone will be happy.  Republicans denigrate Democrats as “tax and spend liberals” while themselves voting to spend money like drunken sailors on wars and the military while trying to keep taxes low.  It doesn’t make any sense.

Both parties are in bed with lobbyists and banks and special interests and corruption appears to be behind every corner.  Republicans are fiscally and socially conservative, while Democrats are fiscally and socially liberal.  But what about those folks – and there are a lot of them – who are fiscally conservative and socially liberal?  Those folks who agree with one side on the economic issues and the other side on the social issues?  They have to pick one or the other because there isn’t a viable party out there that truly represents their views.

This is why we need a viable third party (and, heck, why not a fourth party, too) in this country.  First of all, it would potentially provide an option for moderates and others who may see the benefits of both sides.  But more importantly, it could help break the stalemate in government and force our elected officials to actually do the jobs they were elected to do!  With two parties, everyone can vote along party lines and the result is filibusters or legislation that one side shoves down the other side’s throat.  Imagine, though if we had a viable third party that was, for instance, fiscally conservative and socially liberal.  Those folks in that party would potentially vote with the Republicans on economic issues but the Democrats on social issues.  It would be a new dynamic that would force the existing two parties to reach out to others outside their party to get things accomplished.  Maybe it would wind up not working any better, but can it really be any worse than it is now?  People keep saying they are fed up with politicians and surveys show dismal Congressional approval ratings.  However, we keep perpetuating this same mess by continually electing the same people from the same parties over and over again.  As Einstein said many years ago, that’s the definition of insanity.

So, when you go to the polls next month or in November, don’t just automatically think your only options are the people with the D or R after their name.  Do your research and consider what the person with the L or G or C behind their name has to offer.  If enough people voted their conscience (sorry to quote Ted Cruz) rather than just choosing the lesser of two evils, we might actually be able to begin fixing our broken government.

Thanks for reading.

 

 

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