Posted by Jacob T. Levy:
Minor parties:

   This [1]John Quiggin post at CT revisits the perennial question of why
   minor parties fare so poorly in the U.S.

   I can't model this in a convincing way, but looking at the comparative
   cases-- much stronger two-party dominance in the US than in federal
   Australia or Canada or Germany, unitary France or (until recently)
   Britain, to say nothing of PR systems, it has always seemed to me that
   analyses in terms of either first-past-the-post voting or federalism/
   centralism failed the at-first-blush test.

   What marks the US as really distinctive in its political structures is
   complete presidentialism. The US has a separately elected unitary
   executive at both the federal and each state level; no other major
   developed liberal democracy does. The rest have prime ministers or
   their equivalents, or in France a pres-PM hybrid. And minor parties
   can credibly aspire to balance-tipping control of the determining
   house of the legislature, and hence to inclusion in coalition
   governments and a share of executive power, in a prime-ministerial
   system, even one elected on FPP. In the U.S., a share of executive
   power is effectively out of reach, and a share of federal executive
   power is completely out of reach.

   And therefore the U.S., which seems like it should be a natural
   candidate for at least regional parties given its size and federal
   structure, doesn't do what's done in Canada or the UK and send
   regional parties to the national legislature. One occasionally gets a
   third-party governor, but never a Senator and effectively never a
   Representative, even from the states with third-party governors.
   That's anomalous, and I suspect has something to do with the strong
   executive-legislative separation and the impossibility of coalition
   governments.

   (By the way: as far as I'm concerned an answer like "ballot access
   laws" is probably question-begging. Why do the two major parties have
   such overwhelming control that they can get away with cartelizing
   behavior and suffer no electoral consequences? It's not as though
   parties elsewhere wouldn't like to eliminate competitors.)

References

   1. http://www.crookedtimber.org/archives/002344.html

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