For the last three
years we've heard it over and over: the Green Party spoiled the
election for Al Gore and helped elect George W. Bush. But the
question that rarely gets asked is what have the Democrats done
about it? You'd think that since Bush won all of the electoral votes
in Florida without
winning a majority of votes cast, that the Democrats would have
spent the last three years pushing for majority elections so that
what happened in
Florida couldn't be
repeated. But they
haven't.
This is odd
given how relatively easy it would be to fix this problem. In the
event that no candidate for President obtains a majority of the
vote, you could have a runoff between the top two vote getters. Such
a runoff could take place a month later (as is done in state and
municipal elections around the country) or it could take place the
same day using new voting technology to implement instant runoff
voting (IRV), also known as “rank choice” voting. By allowing a
person to vote for their first, second, and third choices, in one
trip to the ballot box, you gather their candidate preferences thus
allowing for a same-day runoff, if necessary. IRV has worked to
elect the President of
Ireland,
the Mayor of London, and for a variety of offices throughout
Australia.
But interestingly, the Democrats haven't pushed this
reform.
In fact, the Democratic Party recently opposed
Measure 1 in Alaska
that would have called for IRV in all
Alaska elections,
including the upcoming presidential election of 2004. Imagine that.
Though Democratic Party leaders complain at every turn that the
Greens spoiled a presidential race for their candidate, they opposed
a measure that if used in
Florida, would have
likely resulted in a Gore Presidency. (Ironically, the Republican
Party supported Measure 1. Apparently, they did so because they had
been the victims of the so-called spoiler effect due to the
popularity of a conservative third party in
Alaska.)
It
appears the only policy solution the Democrats have to the
Florida debacle has
been to rev up their rhetoric against the Green Party. The argument
goes like this: "Bush is a terrible President, he's killing innocent
people around the world and is threatening global stability. We must
get him out of office at all costs. Now is not the time to be
building a third party in a national election. Vote
Democrat."
What is missing from this argument is that the
Democrats want the Greens to vote for their candidate now, though we
may disagree with him on fundamental matters like the death penalty
and gay marriage, to avert greater harm. But there is no concomitant
promise from the Democratic Party to push for majority elections so
that the spoiler problem goes away in the future. Greens are left to
postpone their efforts to build the party that truly reflects their
beliefs in order to avoid "spoiling" the election. But delay for how
long? The Democrats set no deadline for themselves in terms of how
long Greens will be asked to renounce their true first choice to
avert this greater
evil.
When, exactly, will
Green voters be entitled, in the eyes of the Democratic leadership
to vote for the candidate they want to be elected? In 2008? 2012?
One explanation for the Democrats' unwillingness to address the need
for majority vote elections is that as often as not, it works in
Democrats favor: Not so long ago, the Democrats were the
beneficiaries of the presence of a strong third party candidate in
the presidential election. Remember Ross Perot? Perot won 19% of the
vote in the 1992 election, most of it believed to be from George
Bush Sr. Perot was subsequently criticized by Republicans for having
enabled Clinton to win
the Presidency by a non-majority (43% of the vote). Not
surprisingly, Democrats were more welcoming to Perot's candidacy
than they were of
Nader’s.
How do we
reconcile this? After all, no one is entitled to my vote. Sure, Bush
is terrible, but lets not forget that Bill Clinton wasn’t averse to
some violence for political gain. He bombed the
Sudan
and killed many innocent people to get the media attention away from
his impending impeachment crisis. And in the precedingeight years,
we’ve seen the Democratic Party become increasingly conservative;
abandoning many of the democratic values it once stood for. The most
egregious offenses of the Bush Presidency, the Patriot Act and the
War in
Iraq,
carried overwhelming Democratic support. Progressives justly feel
abandoned. For them, Republican or Republican Lite is a dismal
choice to make.
Greens
want something different. And while I believe there is a difference
between the two major parties, the Democrats can't get me to keep
postponing the society I want to live in without offering an end to
this 18th century voting practice. They need to step up and commit
to fundamental voting reform that will make the whole concept of
spoiling obsolete and they need to make this promise knowing that
they get four years to deliver change, otherwise they shouldn’t come
back telling me how terrible the Republican candidate
is.
So, to the Democrats
out there: do you really want to end the spoiler problem in American
democracy? Do you have a solution other than telling me I can’t vote
for my favorite
candidate?