(Political theory) Voters should understand why third parties can’t succeed in the US. We vote using one of the many voting systems found across the world call first-past-the-post (FPTP). This means that we vote for someone within a designated geographic area, and whichever candidate has the most votes in the area takes all (note: they do not need a majority, just the most.) Political science has very few laws, but one is that a FPTP system will ALMOST ALWAYS favor a two party system. I understand why our strong two-party system is frustrating, but consider that our electoral system’s design strongly encourages this status quo and attempting to break that by voting for a third candidate can hurt the chances of the mainstream candidate who more closely aligns with your views.
Recent Posts
My Series on AllSides.com
Interview About My New Book
Fishkin and National Plebiscites
Hassling Google’s Gemini
A Different Strategy for Climate Action
Eyeballs Über Alles
Grass Roots Depolarization
Literary Intellectuals and Wokeism
Free Speech Absurdity in the 21st Century
Classic Conservative Arguments Taken Apart