• bobburger@fedia.io
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    8 months ago

    Okay, how many election cycles of Republican majorities in the house and senate along with a Republican president will it take before the major parties change their platform to suit your needs? Or how long until a 3rd party candidate can garner enough votes to get elected?

    What percentage will be needed? Do all of us that are involved with your scheme have to vote for the same 3rd party candidate, or can we each vote for the one we like best?

    I’d love to break the two party dichotomy, so let’s figure out how all of voting party will actually make that happen.

    • seatwiggy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 months ago

      Going by the numbers in the article, ~48% of all voters don’t like either candidate. That puts the ratio of people who like their candidate to the people who don’t like either at about the same as the Republican/Democrat split. If everyone voted for a candidate they actually like right now (assuming they find a third party they like), there’s a chance it could happen this year. Even if it doesn’t, 48% of people voting for a third party would show everyone else that it’s a viable option.

      • bobburger@fedia.io
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        8 months ago

        I think that’s a pretty big assumption, but okay.

        I’m not sure how 48% of voters voting for n number of different 3rd party candidates shows that 3rd party candidates are a viable option. That’s kind of what we have now. Two main party candidates getting enough voter share to win the election, followed by a lot of 3rd party candidates getting an insignificant number of votes.

        Maybe voting for 3rd party candidates will encourage main party candidates to adopt watered down versions of the 3rd party platforms in an attempt to lure their voters. They probably couldn’t adopt their full platforms because it would alienate other voters that don’t share the 3rd parties extreme views.