Really you don’t need to read more than one chart:

If you vote for anyone other than Harris, you’re voting for Trump:

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      A similar article will be posted every time Monk posts one supporting a 3rd party spoiler from now on.

      • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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        Genuine question: why has he not been banned? To me he seems to repeatedly violate the rule about arguing in good faith, and - to be honest - his passive aggressive civility feels at times more hostile than straight up attacks.

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          We’ve talked about it amongst ourselves with the mods and admins and have concluded that having a shitty opinion is not infringing.

          They do post legitimate sources with legitimate opinions. They’re BAD opinions, but you aren’t going to get banned for having a bad opinion.

          • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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            I don’t much have an issue with the material they chose to post - the nature of a link aggregator will sort them to the bottom regardless due how how voting works and as you say, they’re legitimate sources.

            My issue is more regarding their conduct in the comment sections.

              • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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                Have ya ever heard of Southern politeness? Cause ya can technically be cordial while being a complete shitbag, a good example being “bless your heart” more or less meaning go die in a hole.

              • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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                It looks that way but is not. It’s purposefully shaped to be divisive.

          • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            It’s not the opinion, it’s the JAQ energy and baiting.

            If they just posted articles, that’s one thing.

            They legitimately try to bait people into being heated about things. Afterwhich, they cry victim

            • Breezy@lemmy.world
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              Yeah but is it against the rules to be an asshole or a crybaby ? I tend to say stupid shit when drinking and have gotten a ban and a few comments and posts deleted, but it would be a shame for something minor to get me a bigger ban or what not.

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                I’m not going to directly link the user because that’s bad behavior but they have a very clear routine they follow on every post. Having an opinion is fine, acting like you are following a script is eventually really lame. Especially when the end of the script usually is calling people out for victimizing them

                This user often posts about Jill Stein, and is exclusively critical of democrats.

      • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        so you’re gonna have to find like 20 articles a day… also don’t forget to copy paste a 6 paragraph defense of “I swear I’m not Russian I just post the articles” in the comments of every post

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        Spoiler implies we would vote for a Democrat if there were no 3rd party options. We would not. There’s a larger chance you would vote for a republican than us voting Democrat

      • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        Oh God I didn’t even realize how badly proportioned the pie charts were. They didn’t even generate new ones they just copy pasted an image and changed the percentage number. Aghhhhhhhh I hate this I hate this I hate this

        • vaultdweller013@sh.itjust.works
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          And now you will see it everywhere and it will annoy you ever more.

          Also I at first though that your profile pick was that of Darth Vitiate since it fits your user name. But its actually soldier with twin tails and I hate it.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      The argument is always that “A vote for Not X is a vote for Y”, forgetting how many third party voters would simply skip the ballot line or refuse to vote at all if these options weren’t available.

      Calling Jill Stein and Chase Oliver “fascist enablers” for appearing on the ballot misses the entire reason they have a vote base at all.

      • lennybird@lemmy.world
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        The entire reason they have a vote base at all is not dissimilar to Trump: civic illiteracy. Unfortunately she appeals greatly to these newcomers to politics or those who care not about watching the other side literally take a sledgehammer to the country but rather point to the other side for not fixing the damage quickly enough. There was a brief moment in time when I was a new voter and at a very shallow level liked the Green Party platform and Stein…

        … But it didn’t take long for me to realize that was utterly self-defeatist. And if Stein actually cared about the issues she pretends to care about, then she would simply run for Congress as AOC or Sanders have done and influence change in the Democratic party. Changing the party from the inside is far easier than going against the mathematically-impossible 3rd-party vote that ultimately results in a proven Spoiler Vote. So you’re right… Some naive folks do support Stein; and those naive folks absolutely have more in common with the Democratic coalition than the Republican ones. So why would they ever want to support Republicans via Spoiler vote?

        Anyways, we should all be advocating for Campaign Finance & Election Reform so we can truly vote for who we most ideally want without risk to supporting the person or party furthest from our views.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          Anyways, we should all be advocating for Campaign Finance & Election Reform

          You’re not going to get that with an incumbent party. How do you abolish FPTP inside an organization that won’t give DC it’s statehood?

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            https://oversightdemocrats.house.gov/news/press-releases/committee-democrats-demand-statehood-for-dc-defend-district-s-right-to-home-rule

            An Incumbent party already supports DC statehood and it would benefit their party greatly no less. It is completely possible to transform a party (e.g., how Democrats used to be what Republicans are now) and also push another party out (e.g., the Whigs) from within. We do that one Representative at a time, such as how Bernie Sanders and AOC have transformed the Democrat party.

            I’ve written extensively elsewhere on the topic of abolishing & replacing FPTP and more, and ultimately, I believe it’s going to require a groundswell bipartisan effort state-by-state on a scale as big as the civil rights movement to pressure for a new Constitutional Amendment, along with an accompanying state-level Constitutional amendment in each state. To me it’s the only way to truly fix all the core problems while also making it immune to the corrupt Supreme Court.

            • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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              An Incumbent party already supports DC statehood

              They failed to pass a statehood bill in 2009 and again in 2017. That would suggest the party does not, in fact, support the change.

              • lennybird@lemmy.world
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                In both cases the outcome was overwhelmingly a result of Republican obstructionism with the vast majority who voted to support DC Statehood being Democrat. There is no reason Democrats wouldn’t want another state that would be the bluest in the country to statehood lol. Democrats had a filibuster-proof super-majority for like, two months, and if you recall that kind of had other things going on at the time in 2009—including but not limited to health care reform and recession recovery.

                In 2017… You know who was President and who controlled the Senate, right…?

                • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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                  In both cases the outcome was overwhelmingly a result of Republican obstructionism

                  Democrats claiming they need 60 votes to do anything are as big a pack of liars as Republicans claiming Unitary Executive is a thing.

                  These are institutions that are hostile to a majority black state.

      • barsquid@lemmy.world
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        If you were sincerely never going to vote for either I honestly don’t care. Throw your ballot in the garbage physically or technically, I do not give a shit.

        But MAGA propagandists are also on here campaigning for Donald every day by trying to turn voters against the only reasonable viable candidate.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          If your primary strategy for winning elections is diverting people into third parties, your election prospects are bleak.

          A big part of Trump’s problem is that he’s glued to his base. He can’t say anything appealing to a general audience without pissing off the anti-government haters at his flank.

          I don’t see anyone on this site trying to argue for Trump. They’re all closeted in other communities, where any criticism of the GOP is forbidden.

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            Their primary strategy is using propaganda on fear-addicted racists to bring their voters to the polls, along with gerrymandering to maximize the effects of vote suppression strategies.

            Vote suppression strategies includes not only closing polls and other bullshit, but also MAGA propagandists cosplaying as third party voters and attempting to deter votes that would otherwise go Dem.

      • 14th_cylon@lemm.ee
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        When your strategy clearly cannot lead to your stated goal given the circumstances, you are either not smart enough to recognize that, or you are lying about your goal.

        That doesn’t change even if someone agrees with your stated goal. Ignoring the circumstances doesn’t make them go away.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          If people can tolerate Trump being on the Epstein flight logs and Harris taking enormous sums from the Crypto-Bros, I don’t think Stein’s dinner with the Russians is going to phase them.

          But I guess you can always default to the Libertarians. Can’t think of anything problematic about a bunch of Americans that idolize Milei.

          • EmpireInDecay@lemmy.ml
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            And the enormous sums she taken from AIPAC, and refusing to prosecute one of the architects of the 2008 housing crisis, opposing body cams on cops, locking up parents of truant children, etc. etc.

              • EmpireInDecay@lemmy.ml
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                Facts are not propaganda, you may believe that everything you disagree with is propaganda. She has a well-documented history of an being authoritarian right-wing cop

                • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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                  Facts are not propaganda

                  Ben Shapiro ass response.

                  Selective release of and focus on information is a classic propaganda technique.

                • meowMix2525@lemm.ee
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                  also I believe that was sarcasm and they were agreeing with you.

                  edit: unless they weren’t. I honestly don’t know anymore lmao. cause they’re right about propaganda but that doesn’t mean it’s cool to just disregard facts that make you feel less good about doing something. One should take in the whole picture.

    • Sop@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      Not really. The point has always been that the dems need pressure to change their genocidal policies. If you vote blue unconditionally then it won’t take long until the next blue candidate will be on the same level as trump. Show these graphs to the democratic party and tell them to listen to 3rd party voters.

    • HasturInYellow@lemmy.world
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      I’m frothing at the mouth because it’s distorted, making an easy comparison by visuals impossible. The numbers don’t match the size of the pies

      • Bertuccio@lemmy.world
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        Someone fucked these up badly and there’s no way to tell from this how.

        Are the numbers swapped between candidates but the sizes correct? Are the sizes swapped between candidates and the numbers correct?

        As an aside, this is why serious data people don’t use pie charts. They’re terrible for lots of reasons, one being it’s very hard to compare areas instead of lengths, like a bar chart, as demonstrated by how many people didn’t notice these were so bad at first.

        If you see data presented in a pie chart you should immediately be suspicious that it’s dishonest or incompetent.

        None of that is to take away that voting for third parties this election is a terrible move - just saying this chart is useless.

  • Ekybio@lemmy.world
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    Im glad you posted this, but no both-sides smoothbrain will be convinced by it, since they are either lost on the plot, a bad faith actor, or unable to engage in real world politics.

    Still saving it, just to have one more post to bash them over the head with.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      It’s not about convincing a both-sidser.

      It’s about convincing someone who reads an article posted by a both-sidser and goes “Hmmm… maybe they’re on to something…”

      They aren’t, they really, really aren’t.

      Another good one here:

      https://web.archive.org/web/20240122162245/https://theintercept.com/2024/01/22/biden-trump-president-election-third-party/

      "Don’t Fall for the Third-Party Trick

      A progressive who stays home on Election Day — or backs Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Cornel West, or No Labels — is voting for Donald Trump."

      "Progressives should not make the same mistake that Ernst Thälmann made in 1932. The leader of the German Communist Party, Thälmann saw mainstream liberals as his enemies, and so the center and left never joined forces against the Nazis. Thälmann famously said that “some Nazi trees must not be allowed to overshadow a forest” of social democrats, whom he sneeringly called “social fascists.”

      After Adolf Hitler gained power in 1933, Thälmann was arrested. He was shot on Hitler’s orders in Buchenwald concentration camp in 1944."

      • Oxymoron@lemmy.world
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        I thought Kennedy dropped out to support Trump? Maybe I’m wrong I’m not American, but thought I heard that.

        But yeah I agree. It’s just splitting the vote, the same thing happens in the UK. For a long time until this most recent election we only had the Conservatives on the right, whereas on the left you had Labour, Lib Dem’s and Greens, yet the Conservatives kept getting back in because the left wing vote was split, they wouldn’t work together to step down in certain seats to let the party most likely to be beat the Conservatives stand.

        Thank god, in a weird way, for Reform UK, massively splitting the right wing vote this time around. Allowing Labour to win. If Labour don’t change the voting system to proportional representation now that they’ve finally got the chance after a 15 year wait, then they are truly mugs. They won’t though I’m sure. They are hopefully supposed to be letting 16 year olds vote which should help.

        But yeah, that Hitler story gave me the shivers lol. Apparently we aren’t allowed to call Trump a fascist because it pisses off Republican voters and caused that assassination attempt (even though I swear the guy was a republican voter??)

        But like; he is literally a fascist. For me personally, if someone said, “we can stop Trump from ever being elected, but the price is you have to cancel the election and just say that George Bush won and let him have another term”. I’d take that deal. I genuinely think Trump is so dangerous, it shouldn’t be a republican vs democrats thing, it should be an Americans for Democracy thing.

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          Article is from before Kennedy dropped out, but he’s still on the ballot in key states so it still applies.

          • Oxymoron@lemmy.world
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            Oh really? I don’t really get how your system works I guess lol. Cos I thought if he drops out he’s out. So he’s still running against Trump in some states basically? I would have thought he’d be taking votes from the right rather than the left though. But I probably just don’t understand your system properly tbf.

            • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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              He tried to remove himself from the ballot in multiple states and was told “LOL - yeah, no.”

              There are deadlines due to having to print the ballots, once you’re past a certain point, there’s no going back.

              https://thehill.com/homenews/4872514-states-where-robert-f-kennedy-jr-still-on-ballot/

              He’s currently on the ballot in nearly half the country:

              Alaska

              California

              Colorado

              Delaware

              Hawaii

              Indiana

              Iowa

              Kentucky

              Louisiana

              Michigan

              Minnesota

              Nebraska

              New Mexico

              Oklahoma

              Oregon

              Tennessee

              Utah

              Vermont

              Washington

              West Virginia

              Wisconsin

              • Oxymoron@lemmy.world
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                Ahh ok haha well that’s good at least. I can’t see any left leaning would-be democrat voters voting for the guy who dumped the carcass of a bear in… I wanna say… Central Park?

                I love that they’re like “paper doesn’t grow on trees dude, we ain’t wasting anymore”.

                I don’t really understand why these independents bother. Do they really think they’re gonna turn 3% (being generous) into 51%?? I don’t think so. I wonder if there’s some ulterior motive in play, like to just get their name out there and then with that name recognition, get elected into a much lower down position at state level.

    • TheHiddenCatboy@lemmy.world
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      I have given up talking to these people. I really can’t with Rule 3 because I do not believe they deserve any form of civility, and since I can’t call them out directly, I’ll ignore them while destroying their points.

      The targets of my takedowns of the ‘Imma Vote Jill Stein!111one!1one!!’'s articles are the undecided and wavering voters who REALLY aren’t sold on Harris/Walz, but really don’t like Donald Trump. That’s where the ‘a vote for anyone but Harris/Walz just makes it easier for Donald Trump to steal the election’ line comes in. The ‘lost the plot/bad faith actor/naive poster’ people can’t be convinced, but we don’t have to, fortunately.

  • ThePowerOfGeek@lemmy.world
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    I know of a couple of Lemmy users who frequently hype third party candidates, and who will not like this analysis at all, lol.

    • EmpireInDecay@lemmy.ml
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      We discount this analysis because it’s self serving. Third Way as other orgs that diminish 3rd party candidates do so in an attempt to protect their own positions of power. Voters continuing to elect neo fascists from the duopoly vote against their own interests to do the bidding of the neo fascists

      • Todd Bonzalez@lemm.ee
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        And your hopeless manifestation approach to breaking the two-party duopoly isn’t entirely self-serving?

        It won’t accomplish anything. You will never win any election against the two-party behemoths without Democratic reform.

        But you folks don’t ever advocate for that, just unqualified spoiler candidates, and never in local elections where independents have more of a chance.

        Even if your heart is in the right place, you’re a liability to progress because you care more about Democrats being imperfect than you do about Republicans being fascist.

        • EmpireInDecay@lemmy.ml
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          You say spoiler as if we would ever vote for your candidates. Anyway. There could be no third party candidates on the ballot and we would not vote for your appointed candidates

          I see both of them as being fascist, the Democrat ratchet effect enables right-wing fascism to take hold.

          • CoggyMcFee@lemmy.world
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            I don’t think anybody is hoping to convince you True Believers who have fully incorporated this into your personality. The spoiler effect is more about other people who maybe haven’t thought about it so much and don’t realize the mistake they are making.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    The underlying fallacy, IMO, is that people think the purpose of elections is to send a message to the government, instead of choosing the government (and that all political problems can be solved by sending the right message).

    The best way to approach an election is to determine the most likely scenario in which your vote would actually decide the outcome (which in practice means a choice between the two frontrunners in a FPTP system), and then consider what difference that would make in terms of actual policy (rather than symbolism).

    And recognize that this alone won’t fix all the problems with government—that will require other types of involvement beyond voting.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      Unfortunately, too many radicals on both sides have over-inflated senses of their own self importance. “We’re sending a message!” Yeah, no, no you aren’t. You’re actively doing nothing in order to make yourself feel good. That’s it.

      • Eldritch@lemmy.world
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        On the nose. The ones screaming the loudest about Democrats supporting genocide. Or saying something stupid like blue Maga, trying to deflect from the fact that they themselves are the most maga like of any on the left. Culturally slave to Virtue signaling no matter how much it hurts them. Get an instant down vote.

        If we’re going to send them a message. We should be running against them at the local level across the nation. Or better yet, coopting the party and make our candidate theirs. 3rd party presidential candidates are an exercise in pyrrhic self flagellation.

        • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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          With the exception of Donald Trump, every single US President previously served as a Senator, or Governor, or a Major General, or Secretary of State, or Director of the CIA, or something. Some kind of higher office to prove their fitness in a political administrative role.

          If we want a progressive president, we need progressive members of Congress and State Governors. Not only so we have an experienced candidates to put forward, but by having a significant representation people will just psychologically consider a progressive candidate to actually be viable.

          And if we want progressive Governors and Congresspeople, we need progressive mayors and County Commissioners and Attorneys General to pull from. And if we want those, we need progressive City Council members and School Board members and all the other local elected offices.

          These third party candidates with no real political experience shooting straight for President are so counterproductive, it’s difficult to imagine they’re anything but bad faith, intentional spoilers.

  • taiyang@lemmy.world
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    I feel like the most viable path to a third party at this point:

    1. Ranked choice somehow becomes national law (and while we’re at it, other election reform) — yes, already very unlikely here, although it’d help Dems with reelection so under them it’s possible if they get rid of the filibuster. Gop would never.
    2. Splinters make a better third party, I’m thinking the "RINO"s or MAGA folk. Maybe the progressive wing of Democrars. The current third parties are pretty bad as they are given they don’t seem to target places they could actually win.
    3. Said faction gets more traction and the model gets tested for a few elections until it’s more normal. New paries emerge, etc.

    It ain’t happening mostly cause of 1, either because the political capital would be too expensive or because it’s not ultimately in their interest. The only way 1 can happen is if it becomes a major issue and they’ve got much more lower hanging fruit, even in election rules (I’d be happy just having electrical college changed to popular vote).

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      National Election Reform would be great, but that would require we actually have national elections, which we don’t. :)

      It’s not even a matter of 50 state elections… each election precinct is essentially it’s own little fiefdom at this point, with officials who BELIEVE they’re free to say “I aint gonna certify!” even if the State Secretary of State will put the screws to them if they do.

      • Breezy@lemmy.world
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        Holy shit you’re so right on all the districts being treated like a fiefdom. I like to think i keep up with politics but this idea has never crossed my mind. Im going to be looking at my local elections closer now.

  • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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    Funny how third parties always rear their heads at election time but remain almost entirely quiet the rest of the term. Where does the money come from?

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      Yup, at least outside Alaska we are…

      Who would have thought ALASKA would have the most progressive statewide voting system?

      Can we get that going elsewhere?

      https://www.elections.alaska.gov/election-information/#RankedChoice

      “In accordance with Alaska law, all general elections will be conducted by Ranked Choice Voting (RCV). RCV allows voters to rank candidates in order of preference. Only the top four candidates who received the greatest number of votes for any office in the primary will appear on the general election ballot. There will still be a space for write-in candidates except for Presidential races. For a candidate to win, they must receive a majority (50% + 1) of total votes cast. If no candidate receives a majority of 1st choice votes in the 1st round of counting, more rounds of counting continue until a candidate reaches a majority.”

      • TheHiddenCatboy@lemmy.world
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        We’re working on it here in Colorado, but the two entrenched parties are fighting us tooth and nail. and don’t forget, Alaska has a measure on the ballot to repeal that this election.

        • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          Were working on it in Oregon too, ballot measure in November. Our democrats are partially on board with it but all the conservative counties are fighting it for obvious reasons. I’m optimistic though. Oregon has a good track record on average of being forward looking.

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        It could well be a consequence of how recently it became a state. There’s a similar situation in the UK where elections for the entire country use FPTP but elections for the devolved parliaments (Northern Ireland in 1973, Scotland in 1999, and Wales also in 1999) use other better options . Maybe seeing FPTP in action for a long time just turns you against it.

        • SomeoneSomewhere@lemmy.nz
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          NZ’s Parliament was regularly described as “more Westminster than Westminster” until we moved to MMP in the 90s.

          It has its bugs but it’s far better than FPP and many alternatives.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      One exception proves the rule. :) But Florida is gonna Florida. There’s no question who they’re voting for.

      It everyone else we need to worry about.

      • 14th_cylon@lemm.ee
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        One exception proves the rule. :)

        No, it doesn’t. Also my point is not “how Florida voted”

        It is that the blue part of the right graph is clearly bigger than half, yet the text description says 48%.

        So the whole graph set is not really worth drawing any conclusion from, because you can’t trust the data.

  • bloodfart@lemmy.ml
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    Oh wow, thirdway.org says you can’t have an alternative to two candidates who don’t represent you and have to choose between the candidates offered to you no matter your politics!

    You don’t say!

    In case any reader of this post isn’t aware: thirdway.org is the website for people associated with the Third Way which is described as a triangulation between communism and capitalism but ends up still being capitalism somehow.

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      Triangulation was a middle ground between Democrat and Republican ideology developed by Bill Clinton, Third Way, and the DLC. And has helped shift the entire party to the right. It has nothing to do with communism.

      Garbage like this article and Third Way is self serving

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        Third way politics were common in Europe and there they were explicitly anticommunist. I think they were even promoted by state department cutouts. I didn’t want to make it solely about the us third way even though that website is the us third way clintonite psychos.

        Whomst are absolutely anticommunist as well.

        I’m just astounded that a person would post an article from the third way to make the case against third parties.

            • anticolonialist@lemmy.world
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              Third way is essentially a rightwing capitalist think tank posing as progressive. They, along with Bill Clinton and his DLC started the party shift to the right to in order to appeal to big money that had normally been flowing to republicans. They are opposed to third parties because it would harm capital.

              Their name Third Way doesnt imply an an alternative approach to government, but representative of triangulation, the centrist approach to government, a little leftish a little rightish

  • anticolonialist@lemmy.world
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    Using Third Way as a source? The same organization that helped push the entire party and country to the right? Bill Clinton and Third Way started the shift to the right and Harris finalized that transition to become the dominant conservative party.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      I have other sites with the same stats, but this article makes the dangers of third paries easiest to understand.

      • Zaktor@sopuli.xyz
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        Use those other sites. Third Way is a large contributor to why the Democrats are continually threatened by third parties. Their whole idea is that Democrats can and should go as hard toward the right as possible because the left flank of the party is (a) bad for their financial backers and (b) has to vote Democratic. You can’t promote that position and then act like a shocked Pikachu when your own philosophy ends up creating the problem you now want to warn against.

        Plus all those godforsaken inaccurate pie charts other people pointed out.

  • jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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    Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election was not due to any erosion in support for Donald Trump. Rather, not only did Trump’s raw vote total increase, but in the key states of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan, Trump’s share of the vote actually increased.

    Still mind-boggling and a source of great personal disgust while being a national disgrace. One can only hope that enough people have soured on him since then, after countless displays of racism, xenophobia, sexism, authoritarianism, bigotry, and incompetence. A twice impeached loser felon grifter that’s clearly a russian asset should not stand a chance, yet here we are. Makes me sad.

    Between the people trying to give you healthcare and secure your job, and the people trying to let your miscarrying wife bleed out in the parking lot of a for-profit hospital, some morons prefer the latter. Why? “because he’s racist like me!” seems to be the deciding factor. Yes, that is why my parents are voting for him. and my mom is a poll-worker 🤦‍♂️

  • nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    I don’t live in a swing state, I get to vote for whoever I want. Lets not pretend like the election doesnt boil down to half a million voters in like 4 or 5 different states. This is as much a reality as anything you’ve said, probably more.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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      Outside of a swing state, you’re right… right up until the National Popular Vote movement is in effect in enough states to get 270 Electoral College votes:

      https://www.nationalpopularvote.com/state-status

      "&As of April 15, 2024, the National Popular Vote bill has been enacted into law in 18 jurisdictions possessing 209 electoral votes, including

      6 small jurisdictions (District of Columbia, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Rhode Island, Vermont),

      9 medium-sized states (Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Washington), and

      3 big states (California, Illinois, New York).

      The National Popular Vote bill will take effect when enacted into law by states possessing 270 electoral votes (a majority of the 538 electoral votes). The bill will take effect when enacted by states possessing an additional 61 electoral votes."

    • Rolder@reddthat.com
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      I dunno, I saw some stats the other day indicating that if all the non-voters in supposedly solid red states actually went and voted, then they might be able to swing the state.

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          Why should it? Why should anyone vote for a candidate with no political administration experience? Regardless of their stated positions, what evidence do voters have that any of the third party candidates have the skills necessary to execute the duties of the office effectively? Without progressives in Congress, how exactly is a progressive administration supposed to navigate gridlock better than the neo liberals?

            • capital@lemmy.world
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              The next president will be either the Dem or Rep nominee.

              If you believe otherwise I would like to wager a large sum of money.

              • blazera@lemmy.world
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                Yeah and America will continue to be exceptionally bad amongst developed countries

                • capital@lemmy.world
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                  This is a pivot and Lemmy will eat it up because “USA BAD” but is not a response to the topic in the thread which is that third party votes are meaningless.

                  Let’s see if I can get a direct answer: Do you know that the next president of the US will be the Dem or Rep nominee?

      • Billiam@lemmy.world
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        TIL that “scientifically being able to prove the FPTP system the US uses will always devolve into a two-party system and make third-party candidates nothing more than spoilers” is “gaslighting” and “third-parties who do fuck-all for four years and curiously only show up to run for president instead of GOTV pushes and trying to win elections at local levels to build support for their party” is propaganda.

        Who knew? Well, aside from everyone who knows how the US system is set up and isn’t arguing in bad faith, that is.

    • nondescripthandle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      Because many poeple have decided to uphold the notion America is somehow more complex than other first world nations that magically figured out things like multiple parties, universal healthcare, automatic tax forms, minimum wage that is enough to live on, and state protected maternity leave.

      • blazera@lemmy.world
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        No most of them started out as monarchies so they cant have parliaments. That would be a change in how the government functions, and that’s impossible.

        • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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          Constitutional Monarchies are still a parliamentary form of government. See England as a prime example.

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            Theyre just figurehead monarchies, they have a prime minister chosen by parliament. The point i was making was that they are not now how they were then. They and many other countries changed into a form of government that offers several party choices for voters. But any effort to that effect here is met with immediate dismissal as being impossible.

        • Billiam@lemmy.world
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          No most of them started out as monarchies so they cant have parliaments. That would be a change in how the government functions, and that’s impossible

          Well that’s not true at all. Parliamentary monarchies are absolutely a thing, the UK being one.

          • blazera@lemmy.world
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            Awesome, that means how our government functions can be changed to accommodate several parties.

            • Billiam@lemmy.world
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              Nobody is saying the US system can’t be changed to accommodate third-parties.

              What they are saying is that third-parties aren’t viable the way things are now.

              You can’t elect third parties to change the system; the system has to be changed to elect third parties. Until then, voting for a third party is wasting a vote and advocating for others to do so is telling them to vote against the major party that is both more likely to win and also the one that more closely represents their values.

              The exception, of course, is if one of the major parties suffers an implosion like the Whigs did in the mid-1800s. But the Dems are more unified than ever and the Republicans are brainwashed by right-wing media, so I don’t see that happening any time soon.

              • blazera@lemmy.world
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                You’re saying the only way to get rid of the two party system is to continue to exclusively support the two parties

                • Billiam@lemmy.world
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                  And the sooner you swallow that pill, the sooner you’ll realize that politics is not about emotions, it about strategy, and voting for third-parties isn’t a winning one.

      • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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        That is just bullshit. While your president is powerful, a lot of the power of government resides within the parliament itself.

        As long as US media calls candidates of other parties as “independents” your political system stais a fucked up mono party system.

        To change the Satus quo, laws must put in place, like in other countries that force media to represent all parties.

        In addition you have to stop with this excessive money dependent political campaigns.

        Those are gatekeeping tactics designed to keep the power in the hands of the two major parties.

        There is no reason why your system could not work with more competitors.

        edit: also, using a voting mechanism that was good in times before telegraph, telephone and internet makes it nearly impossible for smaller parties to get anything out of an election.

        There is no reason not to use the popular vote. None!

        • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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          The Electoral College system blocks using the popular vote. Changing that means changing the Constitution.

          • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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            And that is an issue how? Are you trying to say that the USA will be stuck with a legal framework from the 1800? For all eternity?

            EDIT I like that. Downvoting is fine, but maybe explain why? Srsly I am very invested in politics, doesn’t matter if European or US. So, if I am wrong on a factual basis, tell me.

            • jordanlund@lemmy.worldOPM
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              Pretty much. There is a process to change the Constitution, here’s how it works:

              1. First you get a 290 vote super majority in the House. These are the people who took 15 tries to get a simple 218 vote majority to decide who their own leader would be.

              2. Then you need a 67 vote super majority in the Senate, the people continually blocked by needing 60 votes to overturn a filibuster.

              If somehow you meet those two hurdles, then it goes to the states for ratification and you need 38 statehouses to pass the Amendment.

              By point of comparison, in 2020, Biden got 25 states + Washington D.C. so you’d need ALL 25 Biden states +13 Trump states.

              BUT - Of those 25 states, only 19 have Democratically controlled statehouses, so you could end up needing as many as 19 Trump states.

              • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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                Thanks. That was my rough assumption. And that worries me. While I am not a US citizen, the USA have such immense power that yout politics affect people around the world. From privacy and data protection to the simple fact if we leave in peace or in war.

                I understand it is a big issue. And I hope you find a way to change that.

        • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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          There are lots of competitors in US elections, but most are eliminated during the primaries.

          When you have more than two candidates in the final round, the winner may not represent the will of the people. You can end up with a majority preferring A to B, a majority preferring B to C, and a majority preferring C to A. No matter who wins, the majority can identify a preferable candidate.

          In fact, Kenneth Arrow mathematically proved that multiparty elections will always produce paradoxical results like that. That’s why the winners of multiparty elections are often decided by elite kingmakers, eg Macron.

          • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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            I see the issue with a president. But most legislation comes out of the Senate. Having more then two parties represented there forces compromises. And the wishes of more people have to be considered the get the required majority.

            And if the congress is more diverse, the president looses some powers, as he can not rely on having the majority at least for two years of his presidency. He also would have to compromise all the time.

            Just admit it, your system is broken.

            • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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              First of all, in a presidential democracy the president keeps their powers regardless of the composition of Congress (not just the Senate).

              It’s true that in order to pass legislation, the President has to cooperate with Congress. But I’m not sure why you think that a more diverse Congress would “force” anyone to compromise. What actually happens is that nothing gets done.

              In fact, this is why the purest multiparty democracies, like Italy and Israel, constantly fail. Multiple parties are “forced” to compromise. They can’t or won’t, blaming their opponents. The government is paralyzed and falls. New elections are held. The composition of the legislature changes (or not). Multiple parties are “forced” to compromise. They can’t or won’t, blaming their opponents. The government is paralyzed and falls. New elections are held. Repeat ad infinitum.

              • vapeloki@lemmy.world
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                I am living in a multi party country. I am experiencing the hurdles and the benefits of it every single day. Coalitions have to be formed to get the majority, smaller parties getting influence because of it.

                We are getting stuff like increased minimum wage, social benefits, legalizing cannabis, and more. And not because the senior partner in the coalition wants it. Because of the junior partners. They are required to form a majority, so they can state their terms also.

                And yes, some countries with more then two parties in the parliament are failing. What about the US?

                Got some universal Healthcare yet? A livable minimum wage for everyone including waiters?

                Effective countermeasures to climate change?

                No? See, also failing. And that lies in the nature of countries. Sometimes they fail.

                • FlowVoid@lemmy.world
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                  You assume that US democracy is failing because it hasn’t delivered progressive goals. But the reason it hasn’t delivered progressive goals is that it’s a democracy, about half the country is not progressive, and there is no national consensus on those goals.

                  It’s true that in multi-party democracies, it is easier for a progressive minority to make its voice heard and achieve its goals. But it’s also easier for a right-wing minority to make its voice heard and achieve its goals. For example, in both Italy and Israel.

  • Professorozone@lemmy.world
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    That’s such a messed up pie chart. It shows numerically 51% but the pie wedge is smaller than 48%. Man, I can only handle SO much in a day!!!