If anyone can run - no barriers imposed -, than someone must please your taste, even if it has to be yourself.
I disagree vehemently!
:)
What you are doing is re-stating 'lead, follow or get out of the way'. This is THE enormous flaw we aim to fix!
If you want voters to be more directly involved in governing, then there should be more referendums.
Why should they be forced out of the way? An electoral democracy has been created for the voters, voters don't serve the electoral democracy. The reason why we have an electoral democracy is because we, as voters, don't have the expertise to govern ourselves, so we delegate governing to others.
Our job is to tell those who wish to govern whether the options on the ballot will guarantee the majority adequate representation.
We are not doing our job, if we accept bad representation.
Saying 'No' when you believe an election cannot represent you adequately is a dereliction of your duty as voter, how else can those who wish to govern know whether they are doing a good job or not? This our job as the boss, to give or withhold consent. This is our sole duty as a voter.
To not allow a voter to do so, and then tell him he should run himself is preposterous, its gas-lighting on a massive scale, and for some reason we buy into this nonsense.
Is there any other situation where we will not allow an adult to say 'No'? Should a boss not be able to decide what he wants freely? Its your country, why voluntarily restrict your voting power? This makes everything worse, not better.
I couldn't possibly run a country, so what now, I get out of the way, and pay for people who don't have the consent of the majority to rule me?
If you google the 'iron law of oligarchy' you can see why ruling elites inevitably become self serving cliques that are out of the control of their voters. (This is also in our white paper)
Do you want to be ruled or represented? If the latter, then you have to be able to say 'No' from time to time.
Its a matter of logic that if we allowed voters to say 'No' then they will, over time, choose candidates and policies that maximise the common good, and discard those that have a bad effect as it is them (by that I mean all of us) who live with the consequences of the decisions made by those who are elected.
Not allowing us to say 'No' can send a country into a never ending series of disasters, or allow a situation where voters turn to an extremist candidate or party.
Perhaps on a theoretical level anyone can run, but its easy enough for the unscrupulous to make politics a gutter that puts off, or destroys, good people who could have done a better job.
In a real democracy, almost by definition, those who are elected would be the most respected members of society, not the least respected. There is a good reason why politicians are generally despised, and that reason is because we don't have a binding NOTA on the ballot.
If we could run the country ourselves then we wouldn't need an electoral system in the first place.
In Brasil, my country
Our white paper includes Brazil as a case study. As I understand it you have a non-binding NOTA option, and in a recent election this option was widely used, even though it had no effect.
It would be very interesting for me to send you what we have written and get your feedback, on whether we have reported accurately on it or not. And you could tell me more about NOTA and politics in your country.