Voting in the US primaries
In the United States
for the most part there are two prevailing political parties one of them being
the Republican party (which I mention first because I am one) and the
Democratic party. This holding true even though there are several other parties
as the United States
is a democracy that allows other parties though it does not really do much to
encourage them. These other parties being the Libertarians, Communists,
Socialists, Independents and others.
As for the primaries they are basically
what could be classified as an internal election within the Republican and
Democratic parties (among those voters who are registered in the party) to
chose which of their candidates will represent the party in the “General
Election” which is the one that actually determines who will occupy the “White
House” for the four years to follow.
This for
the most part is a great thing about the American system that it actually allows
the people or in this case the registered voters of each party to vote for the
candidate they feel they want to represent their party in the general election
as opposed to having the candidate picked out for them by a small group of
people within the party.
This system in a way even guarantees that the person
chosen to represent either the Republican or Democratic party will at least
enjoy the support of most of his or her party and therefore stand a better
chance of winning in the general election then a candidate who is chosen by the
party leaders. However I always ask myself can there be a downside to this
system?
I believe
there to be one flaw in all this and that not being so much in the system
itself but in the way in which Americans tend to vote. If people vote for a
candidate who has the same political views as they do or the one whose views
come the closest out of all the candidates to their own then an errant choice
can never be made. This if what I have stated happens. unfortunately however in
many occasions this does not because party rivalry in America is so strong that it often occurs
that when choosing a candidate to represent their party many an American will
chose someone more for the reason that they stand a better chance of winning in
the general election then any other reason. Meaning to them it is better to
chose someone who will win for their party then someone who upholds their
political ideology.
Of coarse I
am not claiming that there is no importance in having ones party win the
election but does this line of thinking not defeat the basic principle of
voting for a candidate in the first place. To my way of seeing things the best
and only logical reason to vote for a candidate is because the person whom we
are voting for represents our political ideas or at least comes the closest
from all the candidates to doing so for what is the rationale of voting for
someone simply because he or she stands a better chance of winning? When
thinking in this manner we should also not rule out the idea that if enough people
refrain from voting for a candidate because that person might not necessarily win
then it is almost certain that he or she will not as he or she will have lost
perhaps millions of possible votes just because of this philosophy.
However it
is unfortunate and sad that in the United States of America the
country which in its relatively young history has had more leaders
democratically elected then any other country on earth that many people do not
vote for someone simply because they do not approve of that person’s chances of
winning. There is even a sense some people get that they are throwing away
their vote if they give it to someone who has “no chance of winning”. This as
if casting a vote were like betting on a horse at the track where the object is
just that, to pick a winner.
I even
remember back in 1992 when my fellow Republicans (like Democrats alike in 2000
apropos Ralph Nadar) were telling some not to vote for Ross Perot not because
he would not be a good man to lead the nation but because he stood no chance of
winning. The arguments always returning to the same “why vote for someone who
has no chance of winning?” or “don’t throw away your vote”. I however ask isn’t
the whole point of voting to do so for the man or woman whom we think is the
best qualified to run the country rather then to just to have ended up on the
winning side?
When it
comes to this issue I have even noticed that in America, it is even a matter of
shame at least for some to have voted for someone who did not win as if the
point had been to pick a winner which obviously they did not. I for my part do
not wish to tell people for whom to vote for or for whom not to vote for but to
tell them that we should vote for the candidate and not for his or her chances
after all we are casting a vote not laying down a bet.