• Mikie
    6.7k
    I’m gifting an article from The NY Times about the possibility of getting rid of elections:

    If you think that sounds anti-democratic, think again. The ancient Greeks invented democracy, and in Athens many government officials were selected through sortition — a random lottery from a pool of candidates. In the United States, we already use a version of a lottery to select jurors. What if we did the same with mayors, governors, legislators, justices and even presidents?

    I find this proposal interesting. The idea is that any citizen can participate if they want to, the requirement being they have to pass a civics exam on par with citizenship tests. In our state of elections, polluted by gerrymandering and money, the benefits arguably outweigh the costs.

    Furthermore, this has been tried:

    Other countries have begun to see the promise of sortition. Two decades ago, Canadian provinces and the Dutch government started using sortition to create citizens’ assemblies that generated ideas for improving democracy. In the past few years, the French, British and German governments have run lotteries to select citizens to work on climate change policies. Ireland tried a hybrid model, gathering 33 politicians and 66 randomly chosen citizens for its 2012 constitutional convention. In Bolivia, the nonprofit Democracy in Practice works with schools to replace student council elections with lotteries. Instead of elevating the usual suspects, it welcomes a wider range of students to lead and solve real problems in their schools and their communities.

    I have no illusions this is possible on the federal level, but at the local (and perhaps state) level, it would be an interesting experiment.

    So, is it worth a shot?
  • NotAristotle
    297
    My primary concern is that a non-expert might not make good decisions concerning a policy. My related concern is that an extremist would make decisions inconsistent with the majority.
  • NotAristotle
    297
    And that's not to mention that a lottery-selected candidate is accountable to no one.
  • T Clark
    13.8k
    I have no illusions this is possible on the federal level, but at the local (and perhaps state) level, it would be an interesting experiment.Mikie

    Massachusetts and some of the other New England states have something similar. Towns are governed by a Board of Selectmen and a Town Meeting. The selectmen are elected and the town meeting is open to all registered voters. In some larger towns that becomes unwieldy so they started using representative town meetings with members selected by lottery from a pool of applicants.
  • BC
    13.5k
    So, is it worth a shot?Mikie

    The practical problem of sortition at the federal level is that congress is elected "by the people" so to speak for the purpose of protecting wealthy interests groups. In order to randomly select for congress and the presidency we'd have to neuter the wealthy interest groups. Fine by me, but the wealthy would object strenuously.

    Jury pools are selected sort of randomly, but then are pruned by the two sides of the case during pretrial procedures.

    While the idea of random selection for local civic affairs is attractive from several perspectives, there is the problem of selecting from a pool of citizens, many of whom seem quite ignorant of local, regional or world affairs (or local and world geography), basic science, or are functionally innumerate and illiterate. They may be quite intelligent (giving a generous estimation) but aren't well prepared.

    That said, there is a substantial proportion of the population who are intelligent, literate, reasonably well informed, and generally cognizant of what's going on in the world. So, how does one separate the wheat from the chaff before you do a sortition?
  • Count Timothy von Icarus
    2.7k
    In most cases I think it would be preferable to randomly select a small pool of people who then serve as a committee who hire (and fire) professional managers. Everything I've seen suggests that having professional city/county managers leads to better governance. You need democratic accountability, but it doesn't need to come by having the winner of a popularity contest manage.



    Right, in MA towns below a certain size have to do the town meeting. It works better than you might expect but not great. I was almost the town administrator for a town that had an open meeting and select board. It tends to work fairly well except when you get:

    1. Busy bodies who are extremely opinionated and bot open to compromise who are able to hijack the process. These folks often tend to be fairly idealistic.

    2. Complex decisions have to be made like borrowing money to repair a very expensive water treatment plant or build a new school. Here, the difficulties of issuing debt, long term planning, etc. often get by the Select Board, and if they only have a part time TA, there is no one to really drive the project.

    The other downside is that administrative staff who maybe shouldn't have much influence can end up wielding and ton of unchecked power. If you have a Select Board that is out to lunch you can have their admin staff do quite a bit lol.

    Small towns tend to burn through town administrators because they're expected to manage while not being empowered to do so. In most cases the town manager system tends to work a bit better, although it obviously can fail too.

    Fall River shows that the city administrator appointed by the mayor system can also go off the rails when the two are too tight (and committing crimes together lol)
  • T Clark
    13.8k
    Right, in MA towns below a certain size have to do the town meeting. It works better than you might expect but not great. I was almost the town administrator for a town that had an open meeting and select board.Count Timothy von Icarus

    I have affection for the town meeting in my town, but it can definitely be clunky.
  • Mikie
    6.7k
    My primary concern is that a non-expert might not make good decisions concerning a policy. My related concern is that an extremist would make decisions inconsistent with the majority.NotAristotle

    But that’s happening already. Trump was hardly an expert in anything, and pretty extreme.

    Take a look at the republican candidates. Good lord. Politics is almost like survival of the dumbest.

    Towns are governed by a Board of Selectmen and a Town Meeting.T Clark

    Yeah I know. I’m a Masshole at heart, having lived there most of my life. Similar structures here in NH. But are any of them selected by sortition?

    In some larger towns that becomes unwieldy so they started using representative town meetings with members selected by lottery from a pool of applicants.T Clark

    Interesting. I wasn’t aware of this. Do you happen to know which towns?



    Well the civics exam is supposed to be a kind of filter, I guess. I share your concerns though. Still intriguing.



    But none of this was by sortition, right?
  • BC
    13.5k
    MassholeMikie

    Interesting neologism. Question: Did you make it up (kudos if you did) or is it in common usage? I lived in Massachusetts for 2 years -- 68-70 -- and I thought it a pretty decent place. Of course, things change over time -- it's probably still a pretty decent place.

    I read in today's NYT that Connecticut is having problems with bears. Bears? There?

    @T Clark, have you ever in the past, do you now, and might you in the future think of yourself as a "masshole"?
  • T Clark
    13.8k
    T Clark, have you ever in the past, do you now, and might you in the future think of yourself as a "masshole"?BC

    No one in Massachusetts calls themselves a Masshole. Similarly, no one here ever eats baked beans. Also - you can't park your car in Harvard Yard, there are no parking spaces.
  • T Clark
    13.8k
    Interesting. I wasn’t aware of this. Do you happen to know which towns?Mikie

    I'm guessing Newton and Brookline do. I was just checking and it says that town meeting members in those cases are elected, not chosen by lottery, so I was wrong.
  • Mikie
    6.7k
    Did you make it up (kudos if you did) or is it in common usage?BC

    It’s common usage, at least among people in New Hampshire. I wear it with pride.

    I was just checking and it says that town meeting members in those cases are elected, not chosen by lottery, so I was wrong.T Clark

    Too bad— I’d like to see how/if it works somewhere closer to home.
  • NotAristotle
    297
    But that’s happening already. Trump was hardly an expert in anything, and pretty extreme.

    Take a look at the republican candidates. Good lord. Politics is almost like survival of the dumbest.
    Mikie

    Lack of accountability is still an issue; randomized officials would be insulated from what the majority of citizens deem right. Voting is a virtue of our democracy and randomizing officials rather than electing them would undermine the democratic process, preventing citizens from voting according to what they think is best. If you take away voting, you severely curtail the ability of people to participate in the political process and you disconnect politics from the will of the people.
  • Mikie
    6.7k
    Voting is a virtue of our democracy and randomizing officials rather than electing them would undermine the democratic process, preventing citizens from voting according to what they think is best. If you take away voting, you severely curtail the ability of people to participate in the political process and you disconnect politics from the will of the people.NotAristotle

    The article argues against this point.

    People expect leaders chosen at random to be less effective than those picked systematically. But in multiple experiments led by the psychologist Alexander Haslam, the opposite held true. Groups actually made smarter decisions when leaders were chosen at random than when they were elected by a group or chosen based on leadership skill.

    Why were randomly chosen leaders more effective? They led more democratically. “Systematically selected leaders can undermine group goals,” Dr. Haslam and his colleagues suggest, because they have a tendency to “assert their personal superiority.” When you’re anointed by the group, it can quickly go to your head: I’m the chosen one.
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