An election reminder. If you can't vote for the candidate you want because they won't get enough support to win then vote against the one you don't want by voting for the candidate best placed to beat them. You don't have to like them personally, just want to take a step along the road.
#GE24 #GE2024 #VoteTactically

If we take it as read that for someone to want to be in a position of power over others (ie a 'politician') is a form of mental abberation then maybe parliaments should be more like jury duty.

Random selection, serve for five years, no extended terms.

Countries are run by civil servants anyway, politicians just set the direction. Power to the people!

@AlisonW While I like the idea in principle, a five year term limit may be too short for the legislators to understand what they're doing. (The California lege ran into this as a problem with an 8-year term limit: legislators hit the buffers within 1-3 years of figuring out what they were doing—the learning curve was protracted.)

Also, random selection places a large proportion of utter dipshits in a complex situation where they can fuck things up horrifically for everyone else.

/1

@AlisonW Consider the havoc a conspiracy-theory-addicted anti-vaxxer could cause if they're given legislative input on public healthcare. Or just a typical twitter troll, fucking around for shits and giggles.

You'd also get some useful people deliberately avoiding service. Five year time-outs are a career-killer for professionals (pilots? surgeons? anyone with ongoing professional requalification requirements), never mind artists or authors. *I'd* run a mile.

And finally: corruption problems!

@cstross
Quite. Every option has problems, so maybe a level of pre-qualification to weed out those who would do damage? But we don't do that currently and it could be seen as censorship, so debatable.

Prime example of the S&G problem was, of course, Truss.

@cstross
Whether five years or some other figure is an argument for once you decide voting doesn't work. And there are/were surgeons doctors lawyers etc in the last UK parliament. Not sure about pilots though (military ones?)
@AlisonW A point about pilots and surgeons is that they take intense training and then updates and ongoing safety certification during their careers, and their career duration is limited—commercial pilots retire at 60, no exceptions (or earlier, for failing a medical) and surgeons are usually out by 50 (hand/eye coordination goes downhill). And a parliamentary career today is usually something MPs start at in their 30s or older (Mhari Black is the exception).
@cstross
We're definitely going to miss Mhari. 😢
@AlisonW I'm hoping she runs for Holyrood. She'd be a shoo-in for the SNP front bench, and a credible party leader by 2030 if she wants to walk that path. (Swinney is solid but aging, the other SNP front bench incumbents do not impress, but Black was blooded in Westminster and performed startlingly well.)