unibot
TNPer
Hey I got an idea today for a possible system, how'll about a legislature that has an unfixed number of seats, but the proportion of seats is allocated to each political party on the basis of elections (which also decide, inadvertently who is the delegate).
So we'd run elections by running the vote among all region members (they'd vote via a Zetaboards website so they wouldn't have to log-in but to vote their IP would be logged and they'd need to submit an authorization code spit out by an auto-telegrammer (which logs the authorization codes it spits out).
If the Reform party picks up 64% of the vote, New Democratic party picks up 33%, Conservative party picks up 3%.
Reform Party gets to include all the members it wants into the legislature -- let's say they have eight members, then we can calculate the legislature should have 12.5 members, round up to 13. New Democratic party would get four representatives, Conservative party would have one representative.
The beautiful part about this elected legislature is, if you're a new member, you're not completely deterred from getting involved before an election -- if they want to join the Reform party and the Reform party will accept them.. it's as simple as them joining the party and being added to the legislature -- one more seat is added to the Reform party and now, the legislature would be expected to be 14 members large, so New Democratic party would be allowed 5 members and the Conservatives would be unrepresented. If the New Democratic party didn't have another member, the legislature would run 9-4, until a fifth member is found, if ever -- but the incentive to increase the size of the party is there.
If you really want to be a New Democratic party MP or a Conservative MP, you could possibly convince someone to join the region would would join the legislature for the Reform party -- as apart of a deal. But definitely one of the big benefits to being the plurality party is you'd be able to set the size of the legislature for your own end.
Parties would be allowed to accept new MPs (legislators) on whatever basis that want (vote, appointment, torture).
So we'd run elections by running the vote among all region members (they'd vote via a Zetaboards website so they wouldn't have to log-in but to vote their IP would be logged and they'd need to submit an authorization code spit out by an auto-telegrammer (which logs the authorization codes it spits out).
If the Reform party picks up 64% of the vote, New Democratic party picks up 33%, Conservative party picks up 3%.
Reform Party gets to include all the members it wants into the legislature -- let's say they have eight members, then we can calculate the legislature should have 12.5 members, round up to 13. New Democratic party would get four representatives, Conservative party would have one representative.
The beautiful part about this elected legislature is, if you're a new member, you're not completely deterred from getting involved before an election -- if they want to join the Reform party and the Reform party will accept them.. it's as simple as them joining the party and being added to the legislature -- one more seat is added to the Reform party and now, the legislature would be expected to be 14 members large, so New Democratic party would be allowed 5 members and the Conservatives would be unrepresented. If the New Democratic party didn't have another member, the legislature would run 9-4, until a fifth member is found, if ever -- but the incentive to increase the size of the party is there.
If you really want to be a New Democratic party MP or a Conservative MP, you could possibly convince someone to join the region would would join the legislature for the Reform party -- as apart of a deal. But definitely one of the big benefits to being the plurality party is you'd be able to set the size of the legislature for your own end.
Parties would be allowed to accept new MPs (legislators) on whatever basis that want (vote, appointment, torture).