Originally posted by Ara
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That said, your post is typical of a criticism of the Presidential system coming from a person living in a Parliamentary style government. Politics isn't all that different at the party-level than you'd think. Instead of having 8-10 parties, many of whom make their bread on a single issue, our system takes care of that before elections and at an individual level. The criticism of Parliamentary systems is that it takes forever and is oftentimes very difficult to achieve a consensus. Consensuses are made in the Presidential system within the parties, instead of among them. Voters who only care about a single issue can either vote for a 3rd party that has no chance of winning (see Reform Party in the 1990s), effectively putting their voting bloc out there for the taking in the future if a party chooses to take hold of their policy beliefs, or voters can vote for the candidates that represent them on an individual level. Bush's campaign was brilliant because Karl Rove cobbled together social conservatives, libertarians, and moderates in order to get them behind his neo-conservative ideology. It's not just that people think they only have 2 choices on any issue - it's that those choices are subsumed in the parties rather than fracturing them, as in the Parliamentary system, and this is because of the structure of the Presidential system.
Structurally, America was never meant to be a direct democracy. The founding fathers of the United States were as terrified of direct democracy was they were monarchies. I can't think of a worse way to direct policy than to ask the citizenry in a plebiscite what their ideas are and run with it. The United States was very deliberately made a representative democracy, and while that irks people sometimes the idea was and has always been that a group of policy-making elite are much better at making decisions for the country than the average man or the pandering populist.
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