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Discussion and Debate
Discussion and Debate
Politics
American Politics
How Michigan Turned Blue in '22--by ending gerrymandering
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<blockquote data-quote="Ana the Ist" data-source="post: 76996897" data-attributes="member: 302807"><p>Well in fairness, I was thinking more along the lines of eliminating primaries entirely (don't need em...since your party is guaranteed a number of seats) and then each party might have a field of 10+ candidates to choose from and if your party gets 4 seats...the candidates with the most votes get those seats. Districts are divided by the party with the most seats, or alternating choices, after the election.</p><p></p><p>The upside is representation is full, votes matter, big money is diluted because of the number of candidates, and a more diverse set of views are represented inside the parties.</p><p></p><p>Downsides....interparty coalitions will likely fragment the two parties until they break.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ana the Ist, post: 76996897, member: 302807"] Well in fairness, I was thinking more along the lines of eliminating primaries entirely (don't need em...since your party is guaranteed a number of seats) and then each party might have a field of 10+ candidates to choose from and if your party gets 4 seats...the candidates with the most votes get those seats. Districts are divided by the party with the most seats, or alternating choices, after the election. The upside is representation is full, votes matter, big money is diluted because of the number of candidates, and a more diverse set of views are represented inside the parties. Downsides....interparty coalitions will likely fragment the two parties until they break. [/QUOTE]
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How Michigan Turned Blue in '22--by ending gerrymandering
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