Belz...
Fiend God
The greater the level of consensus, the more democratic a decision is.
Interesting. So, then, "democratic" means "generally agreed" to you?
The greater the level of consensus, the more democratic a decision is.
Clearly. The greater the level of consensus, the more democratic a decision is. Similarly, if everybody votes against a decision and the decision is still made then that is the least democratic result.
These hypothetical extremes don't alter what you quoted.
True. We don't think of unanimous votes in elections because that is extremely unlikely (although candidates sometimes get elected unopposed).But it is unusual to think that democracy at its best consists of total agreement.
Larger states could certainly use PR or MMP for their HoR seats if they wanted each party to be represented in proportion to the votes received. This would tend to give minority parties the balance of power in the HoR which may or may not be a good thing. The Senate and POTUS as you point out, we can do nothing about.We'd have to use a mixture of systems to address the 2-party problem. We would need larger districts which send multi-member delegations chosen through proportional voting. Primaries would be to establish pecking order of who gets any seats allocated to that party. One-per-district legislative representation seems to tend towards binary outcomes.
psionl0, I'd also like to point out that, a party in power from a plurality of votes can reach a majority by making coalitions with other parties, thus solving the problem of being "not democratic". Minority government usually don't govern for long before they're replaced (democratically, I might add).
I'm also waiting for your counter-definitions.
True. We don't think of unanimous votes in elections because that is extremely unlikely (although candidates sometimes get elected unopposed).
The fact remains that within normal ranges, some things can be more democratic than others.
Why would I need to do that when the dictionary definitions you provided in post #277 don't support you?Do you want to retract your accusation that I'm using a personalised definition now, psionl0?
That's a silly distinction. A different process (like distributing preferences) may or may not change the outcome but I am not focusing on the outcome, merely pointing out that FPTP is not as democratic as other processes.Far as I can tell, whether something is more or less democratic has to do with the process, not the outcome.
Why would I need to do that when the dictionary definitions you provided in post #277 don't support you?
The only definition that mentioned "majority" was Merriam-Webster and it certainly didn't include "qualifiers to show that it is not always so". None of the definitions even implied that getting elected on a minority of the vote is democratic.
If you saw my earlier reply then you would know that it didn't happen in Australia and there is no reason to presume it would happen in the US either.PsionIO,
you presume that the major parties would survive the transition.
But if they fracture into, say, 3 parties each, a new incoming 3rd party would be able to compete.
In European countries without FPTP, we've seen many parties come and go.
If you saw my earlier reply then you would know that it didn't happen in Australia and there is no reason to presume it would happen in the US either.
AFAIK the European countries that you mention tend to use some form of MMP in elections which guarantees that each party gets seats in proportion to the votes they got. This can't happen in single member electorates.
I read all your posts: you obviously know your stuff.

I can't speak for most countries but Australia, UK and US are similar in that they have a system dominated by two major parties.I'm just not sure we can generalize from one country where things happened one way to assume that it always will.
This goes far beyond the "fair elections" aspect of this thread. I would say that the "separation of powers" principle serves democracy well in the US but the US is already a strong democracy.But I guess the bigger question is: when does more democracy become a vice? Doesn't a real-life democracy need build-in frictions and disconnections from the voters to function?
How would that have prevented Trump from winning the election?
How would it prevent a new popular Hitler from winning?
Where is the safety catch?
Go back to post #1.300 million votes Hillary would have won by if not for the idiocy of letting midwesters and other punk states get more effect for their votes than the real places that aren't that big on religion and other pointless crap.