2025-10-21

Three Ways to Improve American Politics

I am writing this as a citizen of a world (and also as someone with a degree in Political Science) that no matter where we live are strongly impacted by whatever America does and whatever happens in America.

There are no easy solutions to the problems facing America today as I wrote in THE FIFTH COLUMN: Can America Be Saved.

These are the three most important changes I think need to be made to American electoral politics, although all three would require a tremendous amount of political will to make them happen.

1 – Eliminate politicians from controlling the electoral process

Elections cannot be free and democratic if they are run by politicians that benefit from their results, especially when they have a history of gerrymandering boundaries and suppressing the voting ability of their opponents voters. The United States needs a single neutral non-partisan non-political agency similar to Elections Canada to oversee their federal elections.

2 – Eliminate money from controlling the electoral process

Money should not be a gatekeeper to the electoral process. Elections should not be something that can be bought. Voting should not be like shopping where whoever spends the most on marketing gets the most customers. There need to be reasonable limits on spending by parties and candidates. There also needs to be reasonable limits on donations to political parities and candidates including a ban on corporate donations and the elimination of PACs and Super PACs. If people want to donate they should donate to the candidate of their choice or to a registered political party..

For example Canada’s spending and donation limits are outlined here:

Understanding spending limits – Elections Canada

Limits on Contributions – 2025 – Elections Canada

3 – Eliminate the domination of two parties in the electoral process

The American two party system, which shuts out any other party’s candidates, with a few notable exceptions like Independent Senator Bernie Sanders and a few left leaning Democrats who might be considered Social Democrats, limits the representation of Americans political views to those of the two major parties and leaves many voters not voting for their choice of candidate or party but for the lessor evil of the two parties they do not support, and leaves many voters feeling unrepresented and that their votes do not count.

The solution to this, at least for the House of Representatives, would be the implementation of Proportional representation that would see all Americans political views represented and all votes counting.

Proportional representation would be difficult to do in the Senate with only two Senators per state, although possibly feasible with 4 Senators per state. Alternatively Ranked voting would at least allow voters to select their preferred candidate as their first choice.

And then there is the Presidency with the archaic Electoral College system which can, and has, allowed the candidate with the fewer votes (of the actual voters) to become President. Why there has not been a popular uprising against this I will never understand. Clearly since proportional representative cannot be used for a single position, the obvious choice is a direct popular vote of citizens using ranked voting to elect the President, allowing every voter to vote for their preferred candidate as their first choice without losing the opportunity vote for their choice of the two leading candidates at the end of the process.

Postscript –The Senate

When I was looking at the impact of the two party system on the representation of American voters political positions and philosophies in Congress I could not help but think about the Senate and the issue of Representation by population. I am aware the Senate was not intended to be based on rep by pop but I was not aware of just how egregious the rejection of that principal was, considering that the Senate has as much political power as the House of Representatives and indeed individual Senators seem to be more influential than individual Members of the House of Representative.

As of 2025 the population of the 50 American states is 347.3 million (Source), while the population of the 25 least populated states is under 10 million (Source). The math says the voters in the least populated states have over 30 times the representation in the Senate than the voters in the most populated states. Again I have to say I do not understand why there has not been a popular uprising against this among the 97% of excessively under-represented voters.

I have no solution for this but it seems to me to be an affront to democracy. I sometimes wonder if Americans think their political system is god given and they have no right to change it.

2025-10-14

Obama, Trump & The Nobel Peace Prize

The world took a collective sigh of relief when Donald Trump did not receive the Nobel Peace Prize, though nobody but Donald expected he would.

Donald Trump has always been someone craving praise and ever since the first black American President was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize he has coveted it.

Trump claims to have ended six or seven wars and has an actual claim to helping negotiate the recent Gaze ceasefire, although that actually happened just after this years Peace Price recipient was chosen.

How long this ceasefire will last is not known but many experts do not see it as a path to lasting peace.

The Nobel Peace Price over time has evolved to become about much more than just peace. .

Obama received it “for his extraordinary efforts to strengthen international diplomacy and cooperation between peoples”.

It is as much about making the world a better place as it is about peace. It is also not just a prize for one single achievement but is as much about what the recipient stands for and believes in and for their character, which is why Obama received it and Trump never will.

2025-10-04

What Is True Democracy

If your idea of democracy stops at majority rule it is not true democracy. If your idea of democracy allows the majority to oppress minorities it is not true democracy. If your idea of democracy provides political power based on income and wealth it is not true democracy.

Yes true democracy includes free elections based on one person one vote but it is much more than that. The electoral system must not be unduly influenced by money and it must elect a legislature that represents all philosophical/political viewpoints of it’s citizens, preferably through some form of proportional representation.

True democracy must balance majority rule with minority rights and it must balance individual rights with collective rights.

True democracy must include some aspics of libertarianism as well as many aspects of socialism.

From libertarianism we discard the extreme individualism but keep individual freedom of thought, belief, conscience and freedom of expression, including freedom of the press/media. We also add, though not usually considered libertarian but certainly philosophically libertarian, the right to be ones self, particularly regarding sexual orientation and gender identity.

From socialism we include collective and economic rights including freedom of association and collective bargaining, freedom of peaceful assembly, the right to employment and access to affordable housing, publicly funded education and health care, as well as economic security provided via a guaranteed annual income or universal basic income, as well as a progressive tax system that reduces economic inequality.

You cannot have political equality and thus a true democracy in a country that has massive economic inequality.

True democracy also includes individual responsibilities, such as being politically aware and active and caring for and helping your fellow citizens.

Diversity also strengthens a true democracy.

True democracy is not electing a dictator every four to five years.