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I think our system in the US is as perfect as it can get.... if only one change were made:
(1) any law must be passed by 2/3 vote of each house, not 50%+1 and (2) if vetoed, must be overridden by 75% vote. If we had a higher majority requirement, only *really* sensible laws that everyone agreed on would pass. |
America is fine as it is, they just need better beerbrewers, that's all.
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I find that odd. Australia has a westminster system, and only elected parliamentary members may serve in cabinet. |
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Actually the smaller breweries are not bad. Magic Hat and a few others. All the major stuff is awful!! (budwieser, rolling rock, millers, coors, etc etc) Although at $1 per bottle of bud how can you complain! Cheaper than water. |
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Actually the smaller breweries are not bad. Magic Hat and a few others. All the major stuff is awful!! (budwieser, rolling rock, millers, coors, etc etc) Although at $1 per bottle of bud how can you complain! Cheaper than water. </font>[/QUOTE]1$ as in the bars downtown ? Are you serious ? Maybe i really should move to the US then. |
Here's the issue I have (short version... just had a long convo about it)
The secretaries/ministers are in effect running the country, but under the US system are not elected representatives of the people, so their first loyalty is to the president who hires them, not the people, who hire them. That said, in the US's favour judges and attorney generals are elcted, unlike Australia, where they are appointed.... No perfect system. I just wonder if systems need to be reformed regularly to root out corruption. Certainly making the president only choose a cabinet from congressmen would get rid of the boys club in DC. But then you're possibly not having the best men for the job doing the job. But at least they're answerable to their constituency. Additionally the advantage in westminster systems is that accountability is two-way. If the P.M. is an arse, the cabinet could effectively "fire" him by staging a leadership challenge. The P.M. can also fire a cabinet member of course. I like that accountability. I guess congress can always impeach a president.... but that seems a much harder circumstance to bring about. The thing I like about westminster (at least Aussie) is that we say "these are the people we want running the country" and then they work out amongst them who's the boss, who's the treasurer, who's defense minister, foreign affairs etc. Under the US system, what do congressmen actually do? How do they "run the country"? Seems like they don't. President and cabinet do that. So how does it work? Help! I'm not a yank!!! [ 11-10-2006, 12:22 AM: Message edited by: Yorick ] |
A minor piece of discussion... only the President and VP are elected by the electoral college. Everyone else (senators and representatives) is elected by straight vote, so the masses do decide who gets those positions. Cabinet members and supreme court justices are appointed by the President, and approved by the Congress.
The US system is set so that no one person or branch is running the country. The other two of the three (legislative, judicial, and executive) can override the actions of the third. President and cabinet can set directions, but Congress can override those. Congress can pass laws, but President can veto (which Congress can try to override). And the judicial branch can strike down laws as being unconstitutional, in case something gets too far. *edit* Correcting just who "everyone else" is... [img]smile.gif[/img] [ 11-10-2006, 09:31 AM: Message edited by: Bungleau ] |
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