John --
Happy New Year, Forwardists! Welcome to
2023. While the calendar may have turned, by the looks of things in
the new Congress, not much has changed. Gridlock—albeit a slightly
different kind—remains its default mode.
For the first time in a century, a Speaker
of the House was not elected on the first ballot yesterday. Or the
second. Or the third. Or
the fourth or fifth (as of this writing)
today. Republican Rep.
Kevin McCarthy, who has long aspired to the House speakership, has
thus far failed to earn enough votes to secure the gavel, having been
blocked by 20 members of the far-right, MAGA-aligned wing of his own
party.
Not only is it
humiliating for McCarthy personally, but it speaks to the continuing
identity crisis the GOP faces post-Trump. After the “red wave” that
never materialized, the party is scrambling to figure itself out—Who
are its leaders? What principles does it stand for? What are its
legislative priorities? The Speaker battle points to a difficult road ahead for Republicans, as they take their slim
majority in the House.
So why should we care about the Republican Party’s internal
disarray? Simple—because it’s preventing Congress from conducting the
people’s business. Without a Speaker, nothing happens. Representatives
can’t be sworn in, committee chairs can’t be named, legislation can’t
proceed. In short, Congress can’t get sh*t done. As usual.
OTHER NEWS &
VIEWS
Yang to support RCV in South
Carolina Andrew Yang,
founder and co-chair of the Forward Party, will join 11 organizations
in South Carolina later this month to support overhauling the U.S.
electoral process by moving to ranked-choice voting. Yang will rally
at the Statehouse steps in Columbia on Jan. 23 to support the system,
which allows voters to rank their first, second, and third choice of
candidates in elections. Yang is a vocal supporter of RCV as a way to
temper polarization in American politics. Other participating
organizations include nonpartisan groups, minor political parties, and
grassroots groups on the left, right, and center of the political
spectrum. —The Post and
Courier
Allen & Montejano: Can STAR and
approval voting fix our elections? “Approval voting and STAR voting offer more
representative methods that amplify our voices and ensure our votes
matter. Both methods effectively do so by simply counting all of the
voter-marked preferences. Knowing their vote will be counted, will
make a difference, and will help to elect a winner who will best
represent them, voters can feel safe to list their honest preferences
under these systems.” —Nate Allen and Ruben Michael Montejano on
Divided We
Fall
This week in ranked-choice
voting Pennsylvania: “New York City is not the only place to use
ranked-choice voting. Maine and Alaska do, too, and Nevada adopted a
similar system by referendum last month. It makes especially good
sense in primaries: In a general election, many partisans would not
even give a last place vote to a member of the opposing party, but in
a primary, voters often would be happy with any one of a number of
candidates from the same party. No process is perfect, but a consensus
choice would ensure that Philadelphia has a mayor who represents more
of the people.” —Kyle Sammin in The Philadelphia
Inquirer
Maine: “Republicans are blocking the expansion of
ranked-choice voting, while Democrats are blocking popular elections
for secretary of state, attorney general, and treasurer. The reasoning
behind each is simple political benefit—Republicans think
ranked-choice voting will hurt them, while Democrats believe that
allowing Mainers to pick their own constitutional officers means
voters might pick someone legislative Democrats don’t like. In each
case, the partisan position is tactically understandable but morally
indefensible.” —Kiernan Majerus-Collins in Portland Press
Herald
Let’s close
today with these hopeful words from Forward Party co-chair Christine Todd Whitman: “Republican and Democratic party leaders
would like you to think that there is no better way than the status
quo. But America is waking up from that deterministic thinking. Many
things define a Forward Party member, but perhaps the most fundamental
trait is that we won’t stop looking for a better way to get things
done.”
All the
best, The Forward Party Team
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