The closely contested presidential election of 2000, which many
analysts felt was decided by voters for the Green Party, cast a
spotlight on a structural contradiction of American politics.
Critics charged that Green Party voters inadvertently contributed
to the election of a conservative Republican president because they
chose to "vote their conscience" rather than "choose between two
evils." But why this choice of two? Is the two-party system of
Democrats and Republicans an immutable and indispensable aspect of
our democracy? Lisa Disch maintains that it is not. There is no
constitutional warrant for two parties, and winner-take-all
elections need not set third parties up to fail. She argues that
the two-party system as we know it dates only to the twentieth
century and that it thwarts democracy by wasting the votes and
silencing the voices of dissenters.
The Tyranny of the Two-Party System reexamines a once popular
nineteenth-century strategy called fusion, in which a
dominant-party candidate ran on the ballots of both the established
party and a third party. In the nineteenth century fusion made
possible something that many citizens wish were possible today: to
register a protest vote that counts and that will not throw the
election to the establishment candidate they least prefer. The book
concludes by analyzing the 2000 presidential election as an object
lesson in the tyranny of the two-party system and with suggestions
for voting experiments to stimulate participation and make American
democracy responsive to a broader range of citizens.
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