thepossum, on 2020-October-18, 00:46, said:
Thinking of democracy, as a Labor person in AUstralia, Professor, with obvious high opinions of the UK, what did you think of the recent process to select the leader of the (British, UK?? just the capital T The) Labour Party. I found it a remarkable process myself. I must admit I have some serious trust problems with a labour organisation that spells itself Labor
EDIT I hope you don't mind me asking the question. You only refused (so far) to discuss one other specific issue with me as far as I know, but if its across the board and this is an unwelcome question I apologise sincerely. And I apologise if my address was too informal or inappropriate
You ask an interesting question.
What is good governance is a problem that has really been taxing me lately.
I think that if we are to have a government it should be there to manage (meaning care for people) and administer (meaning look after rules and regulations). But this is a relatively easy task when everything is running smoothly.
In medicine, there is a saying that in anaesthetics, things go wrong in seconds, in surgery things go wrong in minutes but for physicians they can wait for a few days.
What COVID and the Bushfires and climate change show are that one in hundred-year events only happen once in a hundred years, but there are hundreds of them!
Surely it would be a good idea if government whatever type it was, had some sort of system in place to prepare for them along the lines of the National Transportation Safety Bureau?
But no (he said wearily), instead, conservative governments say we'll let the market do it.
My biggest gripe about so-called leaders is when they say haplessly: "well it's a 1/100 year event who would have thunk it" - do nothing and nothing happens.
Bridge is the same. If you only play for the common events you never get better.
To get back to your original question.
To be a satisfactory democracy, there should be:
- an independent electoral commission
- preferential voting
- compulsory voting
- universal suffrage
Australia has all of these, the USA seems to have none - the USA IMO is a failed state - more akin to the lord of the flies or a primary School playground than a functional democracy.
The UK (I am a dual citizen) is not much better. It has voluntary voting and a first past the post system. Together this is easy to cause a rigging of the ballot.
Perhaps that's enough for now.
PS, Australia does have like the USA what Keating calls undemocratic swill - the Senate. At least the Brits fixed that.
Also Brenda Hale is a Bridge Player so there's that too.