> One "intelligent and fair" chamber should be able > to pass only good laws without any strategical > additional component. The goal of a chamber is to > identify and respond to new problems by adapted new > laws. Not to maintain statu quo when some minority > (geographical or other) wants to preserve its advantage > at the expense of the new needs for the majority.
And in principle a single ruler elected by a majority of the people should possess the wisdom and intelligence to make good decisions. In principle the legislature should know better than to enact laws that violate the Constitutional liberties of the people, so judicial review should be unnecessary. In practice, this isn't the way it works out. Checks and balances are necessary. On the positive side, if a problem is identified, usually both chambers agree that it needs to be solved. In the US, both houses of Congress routinely put forward bill relating to health care, pollution, social security, national defense, privacy, etc. Everybody agrees on what the problems are. They often have different visions of how to solve it, and the fact that there are so many competing opinions on the major issues of the day means that we should take time before making laws. As for whether there should be a minority veto, I have to argue in favor of that for certain things. While I don't like the notion of geographic minority vetos (it makes no sense that a person in California gets no minority veto while a person in Wyoming does), a supermajority requirement in a democratically apportioned legislature enables a minority veto where any person (or a representative thereof) can be part of that minority. If everything required only a simple majority, including Constitutions, then the Constitution would lose all meaning. Amending the Constitution would be as simple as making any other law, so there would be no meaningful limits on lawmakers. We might disagree over which particular matters should be subject to minority vetos, and what the supermajority threshold should be, but the notion that a simple majority should not suffice in all cases is a sound one. Alex ---- Election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
