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Latest Post: March 11, 2010 at 6:39 PM
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Why has a viable third or fourth party never emerged in American politics?

Whenever there is a major election, I feel like the fiscal axis and the social axis of issues get conflated. It's surprising that we don't have four parties, so people can choose to be fiscally conservative or liberal independently of their feelings on social issues. (Some things will be linked, you want a big social program, you probably should support the taxes to pay for it. But others aren't.) Can anyone explain why two is the magic number?


There should either be no limits to how many viable political parties there can be, or none at all


Rick Murphy says: (Follow this user)            In response to Joe Anthony DePino

When you write "should" are you making a statement about an ideal world ("we should have separation of church and state"), or a scientific claim? Please clarify.


@ Mr. Murphy

It's a pretty straightforward consequence of the American election structure: the winner-take-all electoral vote and district system basically guarantee a two party system at the national level. Or, at the very least, seem to guarantee its perpetuation once established. I posted something about this in the Tea Party discussion. In European&other parlimentary systems, you often get proportional representation (Wikipedia has a good article here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportional_representation#Methods_of_proportional_representation) with the consequence that minority votes end up resulting in a few political seats at the national level. Once a smaller party gets a little power and influence it can then keep its issues and views in the conversation. Third parties in the U.S. don't get to take this step...

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