http://greenpages.wordpress.com/2008/10/08/exploding-the-myth-of-the-‘two-party-system’/

By Mike Feinstein, Green Party of California
Special to Green Pages, the newspaper of the Green Party of the United
States www.gp.org

In this country we do no justice to our cause by accepting and
internalizing the language of our electoral opponents and oppressors.

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Sometimes expressions become so much a part of our every day vernacular
that we fail to even question their subtle biases, let alone their
accuracy, and then we may internalize those biases and inaccuracies.
When that happens with expressions that define how we relate to each
other as individuals, or how we are organized as a society, whole
movements often rise up to challenge their use. That is why we often
challenge certain expressions as ‘racist’, ‘sexist’ or ‘homophobic’ for
example, and why there are even overt workshops to ‘unlearn’ racism,
sexism and/or homophobia.

But what about ‘winner-take-all-ism’? Never heard of it? It happens
every time someone says we live under a ‘two-party’ system. In the
United States, we do NOT live under a ‘two-party’ system. But each time
we fail to challenge that terminology — let alone if we use it in our
own speech — we effectively internalize the language of our electoral
oppressors. This is functionally no different than when racist, sexist
or homophobic epitaphs go unchallenged. And just like with those
epitaphs, it should be no surprise that winner-take-all-ism is used
intentionally by many in power to marginalize the full participation in
society of various types and groups of people with which they do not
agree or support.

By law, there is no such thing in the United States as a two-party
system — i.e. the law does not state, “There shall only be two parties.”

Rather, we live in a mostly private/largedonor/corporate-funded
winner-take-all electoral system, with mostly gerrymandered districts
and with media that are mostly owned by increasingly fewer and larger
corporations. It is that cumulative dynamic that has tended to produce
only two ‘major’ parties in the American context; and it is that dynamic
that in turn leads to the collusion by those two parties to enact laws
to make it even harder for other parties to compete, and to appoint
judges who would not overturn those laws upon legal challenge.

Therefore if there is a legal system to be changed, it is the
winner-take-all system, not the two-party system. The former is a system
and the latter is a dynamic resulting from that system.

Every time we identify the problem as the dynamic instead of the system
(or the ‘symptom’ rather than the ‘disease’), we voluntarily give away
our argument and energy to those who want to deny us our proportional
place at the governing table, because it simply makes us sound like
electoral ‘losers’ who are on the outside because we can’t compete with
our ideas, which then just feeds into their desire to further
marginalize us. Instead, we should be calling attention to the
structural problems within the electoral system that is already in place.

And this structural problem is not limited to the American experience.
In the U.K. where there are two major parties (Conservative, Labour) and
one almost major party (Liberal Democrat) and in Canada where there are
also two major parties (Conservative, Liberal) one almost major (New
Democratic) as well as the special case in Quebec of the Bloc Quebecois,
the unrepresentative defect of winner-take-all-ism still exists.
Therefore it is not only erroneous but also self-defeating to start from
the premise that ‘the system’ is either a ‘two-party’ (or ‘three-party’
or ‘four-party’) system and then argue it is that two-party system which
should be changed.

The kind of reforms Greens advocate — public financing and inclusion in
debates for all ballot-qualified candidates, instant runoff voting for
our executive offices and proportional representation for how we elect
our legislative representatives — would be fairer to all candidates and
parties. Yes this is more nuanced than simply railing against a
'two-party' system, but it is also far more accurate and actually gets
to the root of the structural problem that we are confronting.

Under such a fairer electoral system, it will be up to the public how
many parties are viable. We Greens have no absolute right to be
represented in the system just because we think we have good ideas. That
is up to the voters to decide (however it should not go without
mentioning under such systems voters have elected Greens in dozens of
countries around the world.)

But in this country we do no justice to our cause by accepting and
internalizing the language of our electoral opponents and oppressors. If
we want electoral system reform that gives fair representation to the
diverse perspectives held in our society, including those we hold as
Greens, we must begin by reforming ourselves.

Green philosophy is all about seeing the big, interconnected picture and
confronting the social ‘isms’ that diminish who we really are. If we
want to succeed electorally, we have to do the same thing with the
biased and intentionally limited ‘winner-take-all-ism’ that the myth of
the two-party system portends.

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Mike Feinstein is a former Mayor and City Councilmember in Santa Monica,
California and can be reached via his website www.feinstein.org and
email [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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