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Talbott Quadrant government and parliament...

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Re: Talbott Quadrant government and parliament...
Post by hanuman   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 7:57 am

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runsforcelery wrote:
hanuman wrote:
I think the four planets have a combined population of 6 billion - but that doesn't take into account Lynx, which also belongs to the Star Kingdom.

Still, the reason I think the number of peerages is low, is that ALL the families that survived the Plague were granted Deeds of Nobility. I assume that'd have been one title per family. Now, if 30% of the original 50 000 colonists survived, there'd have been 15 000 survivors. If we go by an average of two parents and a generous three children per family, there would have been 3 000 surviving families. If we go by the second number of 100 000 original colonists that I've seen mentioned, then the number of newly-noble families double to 6 000. That is just if we take original colonists into account. The Plague happened 50 years after landing, so what kind of numbers are we talking about then?



Hanuman, since you haven't read House of Steel, here's what I think is probably the most relevant section to the point you've raised in this post.
HOS, page 253 wrote: when the Constitution was adopted, converting shareholders into peers of the realm, the membership of the House of Lords was fixed at fifty, with seats granted based on the order in which the original colonists had invested in the expedition. That is, a "baron" who had been among the very early investors (or whose parent or grandparent had been) would be seated in the Lords in preference to a "duke" whose investment had come later. This rule of seniority within the Lords continues to this day, which helps to explain the influence of Michael Janvier, who was "merely" Baron of High Ridge but whose direct ancestor had been only the sixth individual to invest in the colony expedition. In the years since the founding, the number of seats in both the Lords and the Commons have been adjusted several times to reflect the SKM's growing population base, but even today, not all peers hold seats in the House of Lords, by any means.

The old colonial territorial and administrative districts were also transformed at the time the Constitution was ratified. The existing geographically defined units were retained, but they became duchies, rather than the previous "districts" and the senior noble in each duchy became its hereditary governor. This created some problems, since the senior peer in one existing "duchy" might be an earl or even a baron, rather than a duke. The constitutional solution adopted was to create the title of "magister," which applies to the senior peer (and governor) of any duchy, regardless of his hereditary rank. Although one magister may take precedence over another when seated in the House of Lords, all magisters are equal before the law when acting as the administrators of their duchies.


Certain later peerages, at the time of their creation, are specifically created as voting members of the House of Lords, and exactly who is seated and how the rules are adjusted as population grows and shifts has been the have been the subject bitter political confrontation. In that regard, High Ridge's fight to prevent the San Martin peers from being seated can be seen as another chapter in an ongoing continuum of "resizings" of the Lords. It doesn't happen on the same basis that the House of Commons is reapportioned, and it doesn't happen on the basis of regular censuses, but it does happen.

Whether a peer is seated in the House of Lords as a voting member doesn't mean (1) that an unseated peer doesn't have an important political job to do (one of the "magisters" mentioned above, for example) or (2) that even an "unseated" peer doesn't have the right to come before the House of Lords and speak to a particular issue. (see below) The distinction between "seated" and "unseated" peers is really a matter of whether or not the peer in question has (A) a vote in the House of Lords and (B) the right to introduce or sponsor legislation in the House of Lords.

The Constitution was set up this way in order to prevent the House of Lords from growing into a huge and unwieldy monstrosity. And the reason it was seen as important to prevent that was that the drafters of the Constitution wanted to ensure that the House of Lords remained a viable political entity, since it was supposed to be the conservator of the original colonists' political power. That is, the House of Lords was intended — and designed — from the beginning to be and remain a small enough body that it would remain capable of exercising effective legislative power.

As I say, certain peerages — like Honor's original title as Countess Harrington – specifically carry a seat in the House of Lords with them when they are created. Depending on the nature of the peerage, that guarantee of a seat in the Lords may be restricted only to the first holder of the title. That is, the original peer's heirs would not be seated in the House of Lords. Other peerages (and Honor's was an example of this) do carry an hereditary seat in the Lords, which is why her cousin Devon was still seated in the Lords after her official death. Such peerages are rare, however, and the right to a seat in the Lords is normally attached to a newly created peerage only when the peerage is a reward for substantial military and/or political service to the realm. (That is, new peers don't get seats just because they were granted a title for political contributions or ambassadorships.) Moreover, the right to a seat in the Lords attached to one of these peerages does not supersede the Lords' collective right to decide who or who is not seated there. That is, Honor, despite the fact that she was granted a seat along with her initial peerage, could be denied her seat following her duel with Pavel Young.

Note that in the case of the San Martin peers, the House of Lords was specifically denied the right to refuse to seat the initial San Martinos. That's because one of the conditions of San Martin/Trevor's Star's joining the Star Kingdom was that San Martin would be granted a certain number of seats in the Lords and that the first "flight" of San Martin peers would be seated. Now, the House of Lords could refuse to seat a future San Martino, but they couldn't refuse to seat any of the first group. That's the real reason why the Lords were so resistant to allowing the general election after which the new peers could be appointed. They couldn't use their "refuse to seat" power to prevent the new peers from destabilizing the existing cozy political arrangements within the Lords' membership.

Peers cannot be confirmed, whether they will be seated in the Lords or not, until after a general election. That's because each Parliament's House of Commons gets to create only a single slate of peers immediately after the MPs have taken their own seats, and they cannot create more than a certain percentage of the current Lords in a single Parliament. Neither the Crown nor the Commons has the power ever to decrease the number of peers seated in the Lords, and the decision to adjust the number of seated peers upward requires the consent of both houses of Parliament and the Crown. Obviously, there's usually quite a bit of political horsetrading involved whenever the size of the Lords is adjusted.

Any new peer is expected to appear before the Lords to make his or her “maiden speech.” In the case of inherited or newly created peerages which carry a seat in the Lords, this is regarded as the first step in assuming the peer’s share of the Lords’ corporate legislative power. In the case of peerages which do not carry a seat in the Lords, this is regarded more as a formal introduction of the new peer to the legislative body which represents his/her “interest” in the Star Kingdom’s governance. Remember that I said above that only seated peers can vote on legislation and that only seated peers can introduce legislation, but any peer has the right to appear before the Lords during the debate over any action to be taken by or legislation before the Lords. This does not constitute an unlimited right to filibuster or to gas away on every single decision of the House of Lords, and it can be curtailed. A simple majority of the Lords can deny an unseated peer’s right to appear before it if that decision is concurred in by the Crown. Without the Crown’s concurrence, it requires a two thirds majority of the seated peers to deny an unseated peer the right to appear on the floor of the Lords during a debate. However, time allocations in debates do not grant unseated peers the same amount of time as a seated peer. That is, the total amount of debate time allocated to the (collective) unseated peers is only about one quarter of the total amount of debate time allocated to the (collective) seated peers. So if there are 587 seated peers and 1,500 unseated peers (I’m simply pulling a number out of thin air for the unseated peers in this instance), and if the total time allocated/available for debate is say 200 hours (twenty 10-hour days), the seated peers would be allocated 150 of those hours (15 minutes each) whereas the unseated peers would be allocated 50 hours (2 minutes each).

Now, minutes of debate time are routinely traded back and forth. That is, let’s say that of the 587 seated peers, 115 of them belong to the Conservative Association, 156 of them are currently Centrists, 141 of them are Crown Loyalists, 7 of them are New Men, 124 of them are Catherine Montaigne’s “New Liberals,” 26 of them are “Old Liberals” (who wouldn’t give Cathy the time of day), and 18 are genuine Independents. Each of these parties would be allocated 15 minutes per seated peer, so the Conservative Association would have 1,725 minutes (28.75 hours); the Centrists would have 2,340 minutes (39 hours); the Crown Loyalists would have 2,115 minutes (35.25 hours); the New Men would have 105 minutes (1.75 hours); the New Liberals would have 1,860 minutes (31 hours), the Old Liberals would have 390 minutes (6.5 hours); and the Independents would have 270 minutes (4.5 hours). Within those totals, individual peers — usually those who are regarded as the leaders of their party in the Lords — are assigned time out of the party’s total allocation. So if the Centrists have 11 peers who their party leadership believes should present the Centrist’ position in the debate, each of them might be assigned 3 hours of the total allocation, with the remaining 6 hours being held in reserve or made available to other members of the party who want to address the issue under debate. Minutes can be yielded to another speaker, and can even be yielded to speakers of other parties at the discretion of the individual to whom they have been initially assigned. By the same token, if all of the unseated peers could agree to assign every one of their collective minutes of debate to a single spokesman, in which case that individual would have 50 hours of time on the floor.

Note that in the assignment of time for debate, the time is not automatically used in 10-hour blocks. What happens is a certain number of notional 10-hour days are allocated to the debate. The total number of hours, however, may be broken up into smaller blocks spread over many more days in order to give the House the flexibility to deal with other issues as they come along.

The amount of time allocated for debate can always be extended by a simple majority vote of the seated peers. That is, if the House discovers that it underestimated the degree of debate which is going to be required — or if one party to the debate can convince a majority of their colleagues that additional time is needed or that some individual or group of individuals has demonstrated the value of their contribution to the debate in such wise that a majority of their colleagues wishes to give that individual or group of individuals additional time on the floor of the Lords, those adjustments can also be made.

There’s a lot more involved in the mechanics of the House of Lords, and the House of Commons has its own rules and procedures. One significant difference from present day American practice is that the existing rules and procedures of either house are binding unless they are changed by a two thirds majority of the house where the change is to take effect. That is, a narrow majority in either house does not have the legal power to change the house’s rules for taking up debate, offering legislation, offering amendments, etc., without the concurrence of at least two thirds of its membership. To return to our hypothetical allocation of power in the Lords, the Centrists and Crown Loyalists have a combined total of 297 seats, which is a simple majority. However, they would not have a sufficient majority to change the rules of the House of Lords. If the New Liberals joined them, on the other hand, they would have 421 seats, 29 more than the 392 votes required to change the rules.

Like I say, there’s a lot more involved than I have time to get into at this point. And I won’t claim that I have all of this worked out in excruciating detail. It’s entirely possible that I have transgressed some of the above description in the books simply because I didn’t worry about checking my fundamental assumptions about how the system works while I was writing the passage in which the transgression occurs. For the most part, though, I don’t think we’ve ever seen the internal workings of the Star Kingdom’s legislature in sufficient detail for this to have really become germane to the story in any way.

The imperial Parliament will adopt similar rules/procedures, but the provision of seats in the Imperial House of Lords will be arranged on an individual basis. That is, if the Star Kingdom chooses to select its seated imperial peers on the same basis of seniority used in the Star Kingdom, it can do so. If it chooses a different basis, then it may do that. Let’s say that Montana is assigned seven peers in the new Imperial Parliament (that is, the Talbott Quadrant is assigned a total number of peers much higher than that and on the basis of population, 7 of that total are assigned by the Talbott Quadrant’s Parliament to Montana) then Montana (which has no overt aristocracy) would probably hold an election, with the understanding that appointment to the Imperial House of Lords is a lifetime appointment, from which an individual may be removed only by death, resignation, or impeachment. Members of the Imperial House of Commons allocated to Montana (again by the Talbott Quadrant’s Parliament from the total number of seats allocated to the Quadrant) would stand for office in each imperial general election.

I hope that helps. Now I need to go get some sleep. By the way, at this hour I claim the excuse of exhaustion if anything I’ve said above makes no sense at all the way I’ve said it. :lol: :lol:


Mr Weber, that truly does help. Thank you for taking the time to write that explanation - I appreciate it. It makes much more sense than having ALL peers seated - I knew that there had to be many more peerages than the 587 mentioned, but having all of them seated truly would have made the Lords irrelevant. Difficult enough to get several hundred individuals to work together, but several thousand? Nigh impossible...they would have spent ALL of their time horse-trading instead of doing any work (although I suppose that, in politics, horse-trading IS part of the job). Thank you once again...
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by hanuman   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 8:27 am

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kzt wrote:Trying to campaign for reelection when you have a several month round trip would seem "interesting".


I think it's safe to assume that the Imperial Parliament will be seated in Landing. Given what Mr Weber wrote about how each local unit will have the right to decide for itself how to appoint their representatives in the Lords, I think the same will be true of the Commons?

In this instance, with many weeks' travel time between Manticore and the more distant of the Talbott Quadrant worlds, I think it'd probably be more effective to adopt a party-list electoral system for the Commons (for the Talbott Quadrant's worlds, at least) - by that I mean a system in which political parties draw up lists of parliamentary candidates, but voters cast their ballots not for the individual candidates but rather for a specific party, and then each party is awarded a number of seats on a proportional basis.

In other words, let's say - to take Mr Weber's example - Montana is allocated 20 of the Talbott Quadrant's 200 Commons seats (just a number). During an election, the Montana Radical Ranchers receive 40% of the total ballots cast, the Montana Libertarian Union receives 37% and the Montana First! party receives 23%, then those parties will be awarded that percentages of Montana's Commons delegation - the MRR will get 8 seats, the MLU gets 7 and the MF! gets 5. The PARTIES will then determine which of their candidates are appointed to fill those seats - probably but not necessarily the first 8 candidates on the MRR's list, etc.

The REASON I think this will be a better system than a system of electoral districts, is because of the distances and travel time involved. Instead of having to travel for months at end towards the end of each term to get back home to campaign for re-election, an MIP can remain in Landing whilst his/her party back home does the electioneering on his/her behalf.

On the other hand, if elections for the Commons take place every four or five years only, then it's not such a big deal for the Commons to retire for, say, six months during an election year - with, say, three of those months allocated for travel, and three allocated for campaigning.

That will make a first-past-the-post electoral district system possible - and much more preferable, because there are some distinct disadvantages to a party-list system (for example, if a MIP knows that his/her position depends on the favour of his/her party's power brokers' back home, he/she will be far less inclined to go against the party bosses' wishes, and instead of representing the interests of the citizenry will likely opt to act in the interests of those party bosses).

The real problem with the distances involved is exactly that, namely that it'll be difficult (almost impossible, really) for MIPs to perform one of their most important duties - to act as the citizenry's direct intermediaries with the Imperial Government.
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by George J. Smith   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 2:13 pm

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hanuman wrote:
Snip...
I think it'd probably be more effective to adopt a party-list electoral system for the Commons (for the Talbott Quadrant's worlds, at least) - by that I mean a system in which political parties draw up lists of parliamentary candidates, but voters cast their ballots not for the individual candidates but rather for a specific party, and then each party is awarded a number of seats on a proportional basis.

In other words, let's say - to take Mr Weber's example - Montana is allocated 20 of the Talbott Quadrant's 200 Commons seats (just a number). During an election, the Montana Radical Ranchers receive 40% of the total ballots cast, the Montana Libertarian Union receives 37% and the Montana First! party receives 23%, then those parties will be awarded that percentages of Montana's Commons delegation - the MRR will get 8 seats, the MLU gets 7 and the MF! gets 5. The PARTIES will then determine which of their candidates are appointed to fill those seats - probably but not necessarily the first 8 candidates on the MRR's list, etc.




Somewhat similar to the election of MEPs to the European Parliament.


T&R
GJS
.
T&R
GJS

A man should live forever, or die in the attempt
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by hanuman   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 3:44 pm

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George J. Smith wrote:
hanuman wrote:
Snip...
I think it'd probably be more effective to adopt a party-list electoral system for the Commons (for the Talbott Quadrant's worlds, at least) - by that I mean a system in which political parties draw up lists of parliamentary candidates, but voters cast their ballots not for the individual candidates but rather for a specific party, and then each party is awarded a number of seats on a proportional basis.

In other words, let's say - to take Mr Weber's example - Montana is allocated 20 of the Talbott Quadrant's 200 Commons seats (just a number). During an election, the Montana Radical Ranchers receive 40% of the total ballots cast, the Montana Libertarian Union receives 37% and the Montana First! party receives 23%, then those parties will be awarded that percentages of Montana's Commons delegation - the MRR will get 8 seats, the MLU gets 7 and the MF! gets 5. The PARTIES will then determine which of their candidates are appointed to fill those seats - probably but not necessarily the first 8 candidates on the MRR's list, etc.




Somewhat similar to the election of MEPs to the European Parliament.


T&R
GJS


There's any number of countries that hold elections on a party-list basis, with representation allocated proportionally to the parties' votes.

The system's major advantage is that political parties are awarded exactly the number of parliamentary seats they're entitled to by their share of the vote. This ensures that smaller parties are not swamped under by larger parties with better financing and organisation, and that the entire range of political positions among the voting public is represented in parliament.

In my opinion, the disadvantages far outweigh the advantages, however. I've mentioned some of them - parliamentarians being dependent on party bosses for their positions in a kind of patronage network, instead of being accountable to the voting public; or the man or woman on the street not knowing WHO their particular representative is. Another major disadvantage is that proportional representation systems almost always lead to a situation where coalitions are necessary for a working majority in parliament, which is always an unstable scenario. (Although coalitions are also much more inclined to reach workable compromises).
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by saber964   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 6:15 pm

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hanuman wrote:
kzt wrote:Trying to campaign for reelection when you have a several month round trip would seem "interesting".


I think it's safe to assume that the Imperial Parliament will be seated in Landing. Given what Mr Weber wrote about how each local unit will have the right to decide for itself how to appoint their representatives in the Lords, I think the same will be true of the Commons?

In this instance, with many weeks' travel time between Manticore and the more distant of the Talbott Quadrant worlds, I think it'd probably be more effective to adopt a party-list electoral system for the Commons (for the Talbott Quadrant's worlds, at least) - by that I mean a system in which political parties draw up lists of parliamentary candidates, but voters cast their ballots not for the individual candidates but rather for a specific party, and then each party is awarded a number of seats on a proportional basis.

In other words, let's say - to take Mr Weber's example - Montana is allocated 20 of the Talbott Quadrant's 200 Commons seats (just a number). During an election, the Montana Radical Ranchers receive 40% of the total ballots cast, the Montana Libertarian Union receives 37% and the Montana First! party receives 23%, then those parties will be awarded that percentages of Montana's Commons delegation - the MRR will get 8 seats, the MLU gets 7 and the MF! gets 5. The PARTIES will then determine which of their candidates are appointed to fill those seats - probably but not necessarily the first 8 candidates on the MRR's list, etc.

The REASON I think this will be a better system than a system of electoral districts, is because of the distances and travel time involved. Instead of having to travel for months at end towards the end of each term to get back home to campaign for re-election, an MIP can remain in Landing whilst his/her party back home does the electioneering on his/her behalf.

On the other hand, if elections for the Commons take place every four or five years only, then it's not such a big deal for the Commons to retire for, say, six months during an election year - with, say, three of those months allocated for travel, and three allocated for campaigning.

That will make a first-past-the-post electoral district system possible - and much more preferable, because there are some distinct disadvantages to a party-list system (for example, if a MIP knows that his/her position depends on the favour of his/her party's power brokers' back home, he/she will be far less inclined to go against the party bosses' wishes, and instead of representing the interests of the citizenry will likely opt to act in the interests of those party bosses).

The real problem with the distances involved is exactly that, namely that it'll be difficult (almost impossible, really) for MIPs to perform one of their most important duties - to act as the citizenry's direct intermediaries with the Imperial Government.



Or they could use Parliamentary sessions like several US state legislatures due. In Washington state they have IIRC a legislative session of 105 days in odd number years and 60 days in even years. The longer session is for the biannual budget. The governor can also call a 30 day special session or the legislator can also with a 2/3 vote.

The Imperial Parliament could meet for 2 6 T-months session 6 T-months apart during a Manticoran year (21 T- months IIRC). During an election year they switch the break around or shorten it to 1 T-month so that they MP's have plenty of time to campaign.
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by JohnS   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 7:06 pm

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runsforcelery wrote:That is, the House of Lords was intended — and designed — from the beginning to be and remain a small enough body that it would remain capable of exercising effective legislative power.

As opposed to the Solarian League government which was designed to be incapable of exercising effective legislative power. And we've seen how it's worked out for each side!
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by TheMonster   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 8:07 pm

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hanuman wrote:That will make a first-past-the-post electoral district system possible - and much more preferable, because there are some distinct disadvantages to a party-list system (for example, if a MIP knows that his/her position depends on the favour of his/her party's power brokers' back home, he/she will be far less inclined to go against the party bosses' wishes, and instead of representing the interests of the citizenry will likely opt to act in the interests of those party bosses).
It's possible to do proportional representation via party list without that problem: In addition to voting for a list, the voter votes for a particular name on the list. Within the list, the names are ranked in descending order of votes received, and the seats are awarded in that order.

The party leadership will tend to put their people at the top of the list, which will undoubtedly lead some voters to just automatically vote for them, but someone who makes a name for himself as standing on principle might well command more votes than the nominal top of the ticket.
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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by runsforcelery   » Mon Jul 28, 2014 11:27 pm

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TheMonster wrote:
hanuman wrote:That will make a first-past-the-post electoral district system possible - and much more preferable, because there are some distinct disadvantages to a party-list system (for example, if a MIP knows that his/her position depends on the favour of his/her party's power brokers' back home, he/she will be far less inclined to go against the party bosses' wishes, and instead of representing the interests of the citizenry will likely opt to act in the interests of those party bosses).
It's possible to do proportional representation via party list without that problem: In addition to voting for a list, the voter votes for a particular name on the list. Within the list, the names are ranked in descending order of votes received, and the seats are awarded in that order.

The party leadership will tend to put their people at the top of the list, which will undoubtedly lead some voters to just automatically vote for them, but someone who makes a name for himself as standing on principle might well command more votes than the nominal top of the ticket.



Not saying this is the way it will happen, or that I have any intention of using the party list method, but another approach is to hold primaries for each party before the general election. If you select your candidates in rank order of votes received during the primary, then fight the general election, you simply go down your list until you've filled all the seats allocated to you. So lets say that your Talbott Unity Front Federation holds a primary in which a total of 20 candidates (because there are 20 seats up for election this cycle) will be selected from a field of sixty. The votes are tallied, and anyone who didn't make the top 20 is dropped from consideration. The party then fights the general election with everyone in the electorate knowing who the TUFF's candidates are, rather than simply what the party platform is. The votes are tallied and it's discovered that the TUFF's scored a landside victory with 75% of the vote, enough to seat the first 15 of its 20 candidates.

Under this system, you have proportional allocation of the seats by party, you know what the party's platform is, and you know which candidates will receive seats in the event of a win (and what those candidates' actual records are). The party leadership can certainly attempt to influence the primary, probably with a fair degree of success, given the reality of party-based politics, but the actual candidates are beholding to the entire party membership, not just the leaders, and members of other parties (or who are unaffiliated with any party) have specific faces (and records) in front of them for the general election.

I will just add that the travel times involved in reaching the Imperial Parliament are unlikely to preclude more traditional forms of elections and electoral campaigns at the local level. They will preclude the sort of 24-hour news cycle, intensive, sound bite campaigning with which we are currently familiar in developed countries. They won't preclude the sort of elections (with electronic message recording capability added in) which characterized 19th and early 20th century elections in, for example, the US. And because this is a parliamentary form of government, there will be no equivalent of a presidential election in which all citizens of the SEM are voting for the same office holder. That is, there really won't be any "national level" elections for the SEM as such; there will be scores of local elections which will select the members of a national government. Obviously the local candidates won't be running in complete isolation from the Empire-wide issues of the day, but the entire "flavor" of the process will be different from anything in the experience of most present day electorates.


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Re: Honorverse series, the future..?
Post by hanuman   » Tue Jul 29, 2014 5:08 am

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runsforcelery wrote:
TheMonster wrote:It's possible to do proportional representation via party list without that problem: In addition to voting for a list, the voter votes for a particular name on the list. Within the list, the names are ranked in descending order of votes received, and the seats are awarded in that order.

The party leadership will tend to put their people at the top of the list, which will undoubtedly lead some voters to just automatically vote for them, but someone who makes a name for himself as standing on principle might well command more votes than the nominal top of the ticket.



Not saying this is the way it will happen, or that I have any intention of using the party list method, but another approach is to hold primaries for each party before the general election. If you select your candidates in rank order of votes received during the primary, then fight the general election, you simply go down your list until you've filled all the seats allocated to you. So lets say that your Talbott Unity Front Federation holds a primary in which a total of 20 candidates (because there are 20 seats up for election this cycle) will be selected from a field of sixty. The votes are tallied, and anyone who didn't make the top 20 is dropped from consideration. The party then fights the general election with everyone in the electorate knowing who the TUFF's candidates are, rather than simply what the party platform is. The votes are tallied and it's discovered that the TUFF's scored a landside victory with 75% of the vote, enough to seat the first 15 of its 20 candidates.

Under this system, you have proportional allocation of the seats by party, you know what the party's platform is, and you know which candidates will receive seats in the event of a win (and what those candidates' actual records are). The party leadership can certainly attempt to influence the primary, probably with a fair degree of success, given the reality of party-based politics, but the actual candidates are beholding to the entire party membership, not just the leaders, and members of other parties (or who are unaffiliated with any party) have specific faces (and records) in front of them for the general election.

I will just add that the travel times involved in reaching the Imperial Parliament are unlikely to preclude more traditional forms of elections and electoral campaigns at the local level. They will preclude the sort of 24-hour news cycle, intensive, sound bite campaigning with which we are currently familiar in developed countries. They won't preclude the sort of elections (with electronic message recording capability added in) which characterized 19th and early 20th century elections in, for example, the US. And because this is a parliamentary form of government, there will be no equivalent of a presidential election in which all citizens of the SEM are voting for the same office holder. That is, there really won't be any "national level" elections for the SEM as such; there will be scores of local elections which will select the members of a national government. Obviously the local candidates won't be running in complete isolation from the Empire-wide issues of the day, but the entire "flavor" of the process will be different from anything in the experience of most present day electorates.


Come to think of it, travel times aren't THAT bad, are they? I mean, with the Talbott Quadrant government essentially acting independently from the Imperial government (according to its general directives, of course), the immediate off-world focus of the Quadrant's population will be on Spindle, not Manticore. After all, except for those general directives from the Imperial government, it is the Quadrant government that serves as the Queen's government in the Quadrant, not the government in Landing.
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Re: Talbott Quadrant government and parliament...
Post by Hornblower   » Tue Jul 29, 2014 6:01 am

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Location: Germany

The problems with party lists are
1. The decision on who can be elected is decided by the party leadership.
2. If you want to candidate for parliament and want changes which are outside of the partyline you have to found a new party, which is quite complicated.
3. In Germany for example the new party has to be admitted. The decision makers for this are members of the existing parties.
4. If you want a policy that is popular with the voters, you are a "populist", which is a REAL BAD THING.
5. There is no chance for independents.
6. If you manage to overcome these hurdles, you can be certain that the old parties will do everything to treat you as a pariah (there are some interesting examples of that in the new European parliament).
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