Hi Sean

> On 23 Aug 2019, at 21:20, Sean Cubitt <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> 
> I've no idea why the system works in Switzerland.

there are many reasons why it works (differently) in Switzerland — for me 
(being Swiss and knowing the system since I can think) — the main reasons are:

- you get referenda on city (municipality) level, on district/province level 
(kanton), and on national level
- it’s done regularly and on a broad range of issues (as one poster pointed 
out: building regulations regarding minarets, or national provision of bike 
paths)
- it has been there as an instrument of democracy since the early days of 
Switzerland (when the men used to congregate and vote by raising their hands

So firstly, in my opinion, it is this “normality” of a referendum (often four 
times a year, see 
https://www.bk.admin.ch/ch/f/pore/va/vab_2_2_4_1_2011_2020.html 
<https://www.bk.admin.ch/ch/f/pore/va/vab_2_2_4_1_2011_2020.html>) and that 
people are used to the discussions and speculations around those decisions that 
make the referenda in Switzerland less prone to been overloaded with all sorts 
of issues.

Second, one might also argue, that to influence a referendum, you would have to 
work hard in minimum three languages (French, German, Italian) to influence 
voters via social media (not that this is impossible, but unfortunately, for 
example AI language processing is more advanced in English than in other 
languages).

Third, the national and provincial governments who have to implement the 
results of a referendum are different: they are separate from the parliaments 
that have to approve that implementation.  This is something that always 
surprised me in the UK, that ministers are MPs, this would be impossible in 
Switzerland (and most other democracies in Europe).

Lastly, parliaments (national an provincial) are more mixed — more parties 
involved, a culture and neet to compromise.

So it is not just the referendum, it is how the referendum is used in a rather 
different system of implementing democracy (oh, and did I mention that the 
“constitution” is actually a written document in Switzerland, not an assemblage 
of Acts of Parliament, court judgments and conventions).

Peter   


#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to