Now
is the time for us to consider scrapping the two-party system of
government. Now is about the best time to reflect on how our politics
has failed to serve the public, and to begin to replace it.
The
U.S. Constitution does not mention political parties, much less
require two of them. On the surface, there is nothing inherently
wrong with political parties. The problem is when these parties
assume too much power and suck all the air out of the room that is
American democracy. With a Democratic-Republican duopoly controlling
the levers of government, we can hardly say this is a democratic
system of government.
Entrenched
power has resulted in the corrupting influence of money in politics,
something which has impacted both major parties. The U.S. Supreme
Court’s
Citizens
United
decision
ushered in the era of unlimited corporate money in political
campaigns — anonymous, unaccountable, and overwhelming in
influence. With corporations acting as citizens, and campaign
donations as a form of free speech, what chance can ordinary citizens
have to make their voices heard?
When
the elected officials and their parties receive their funding from
one source and their votes from another, the funders will win. And
the result is a system of legalized bribery in which politicians are
beholden to financial interests — so-called dark money —
perhaps even flowing from foreign nations.
The
partisan and racial
gerrymandering
of districts
— which currrently disproportionately
benefits the Republican Party
— has created one-party rule in some parts of the country,
allowing politicians to select their own constituents, rather than
the other way around. Redistricting does not encourage moderate,
heterogeneous districts, but rather can provide a particular
political party with a majority of seats in a state legislature or a
state congressional delegation, a potentially insurmountable
advantage for the opposing party to overcome. Racial gerrymandering
also
dilutes
the power of voters of color
and
renders them invisible.
The
Republicans have enacted voter suppression measures in the state
houses they control throughout the country. Such laws, which include
voter
ID
(34
states in all), are designed to disenfranchise blacks, Latinos, and
other traditionally non-Republican constituencies. Now, Republicans
in at least 10 states have proposed
legislation
to criminalize peaceful political protest.
On
the national level, the two major parties are at risk of imploding or
atrophying. Due to their dysfunction, the government is ill-equipped
to solve America’s myriad problems — climate change,
poverty, gun violence, unemployment, and student loans. Democrats
spent
over
$1 billion in the 2016 election
with
little to show for it, a culmination of years of tone deafness, and
eschewing their labor union base in favor of neoliberal policies
promoted by their corporate donors.
Under
President Donald Trump, the Republicans have become a party of
extremism, of unabashed white nationalism, Muslim bans, and border
walls. Both Congress and the president have low approval ratings, and
the executive branch is in a crisis that screams for substantive
reform. The Trump administration is engaged in the wholesale
dismantling of government agencies. A kleptocratic cabinet of
billionaires has a combined net worth greater than one-third of the
U.S. population. The president hires his family like a banana
republic dictator, and he uses his position to profit from his
businesses. Allegations of Russian collusion in the 2016 election
notwithstanding, these are all symptoms of a larger disease plaguing
the American body politic.
American
politics discourages the development of viable third parties, a
rigged system that renders these independent efforts little more than
a protest vote. If democracy is to thrive in the U.S., we need new
voices and a range of points of view to flourish. More democratic
participation and civic engagement is the antidote. This includes
replacing our winner-take-all electoral scheme with
multi-seat
congressional districts
or
a parliamentary-type system of proportional representation in which
political parties would receive seats in the legislature in
proportion to the votes they receive.
A
multi-party arrangement would
encourage
coalition-building
and
compromise, rather than the pathological gridlock that characterizes
American government. This will only work by lifting of all barriers
to voting, removing big money from elections, and encouraging more
people to go to the polls and run for office. There’s nothing
to lose, and the only alternative is to continue to suffer through
the national embarrassment that passes for the U.S. political system.
This
commentary was originally published by NewsWorks.org
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