google
yahoo
bing

THE CORE

This is the Web-log of Professor Matthew Shugart ("MSS"); however, other "planters" have been invited to contribute. Please check the "Planted by" line to see the author of the post you are reading.

The Mission of F&V

About the banner

Core principles:

Henry Droop on the "moderate non-partisan section"

Madison on "dangers from abroad" and "the fetters... on liberty"

FRUITS: Support your local, organic growers; and, plant vines and fig trees and pomegranates for the generations to come...

VOTES: For democratization and full representation, for environmental sustainability, social justice, and peace, always sincerely...

The Head Orchardist's other sites:
PRESERVED FRUIT
orchard blocks
  • All
  • FRUITS
  • VOTES
  • wide open spaces
  • 21 September 2005

    There has been a lot of hand-wringing about the prospect of a grand coalition after Germany’s “inconclusive” election. There has even been some borderline alarmism from some of the “risk” analysts and words like “political chaos” from the business pages.

    OK, can everyone just calm down a bit? A grand coalition is not such a bad thing. It reflects the probable consensus in Germany that something needs to be done, but nothing too drastic. It may be just what the country needs, and could even be what it wants.

    I myself have expressed the view that a grand coalition is nobody’s first choice (and polls seem to back it up)–expect perhaps the extremes. However, there is one question on which I have not seen any polling (but then again, I do not read German, so I would be dependent on English-speaking sources having picked it up): What if a grand coalition is everyone’s second choice?

    Some have made the comparison with Westminster-type systems, including rather implicitly, Chris Lawrence, who has a nifty headline from last night that reads, “There but for the grace of Duverger.” This is, of course, a reference to the famous Duverger’s law that says the first-past-the-post (plurality) electoral system leads to a two-party system, in contrast to proportional representation such as in Germany, which implies a multiparty system.

    (Chris actually compares Germany to the USA, but the comparison is less relevant than to other parliamentary systems; presidentialism is an additional factor besides those Chris lists that explain why the USA is the world’s purest example of a two-party system, while Canada and the UK have multiparty systems despite FPTP.)

    Suppose Germany had FPTP. The conventional wisdom is that such an electoral system would have delivered a more decisive result, allowing one or the other major party to win the majority of seats necessary to form a government on its own and push economic policy reforms through.

    But decisiveness, in the German context, would come at a cost: consensus-building would be the first casualty. Given Germany’s recent reunification, it is beyond belief that there would not be a post-communist “spoiler” party under FPTP. It would win some seats—probably more than it did under the actual MMP system before this year, because in a 598-seat parliament with only single-seat districts, there would be more seats elected from its strongholds in the East. (The post-Communist left never before had crossed the 5% PR threshold when applied nationally in 1994, 1998, and 2002.) The existence of such a party in all probability would have still meant the breakaway of some elements of the SPD to join up with the left in digust with their own party pushing liberalizing reforms.

    In other words, as far as the left-right divide is concerned, not a lot would be different about the party system, except for two significant things:

    (1) One of these two large parties probably would have won a majority of seats; but that majority would have been based on around 40-45% of the vote; and

    (2) The party most consistently in favor of the market reforms would not be in parliament. The FDP has seldom been able to win single-seat districts and has not won one since early in the history of postwar Germany. (Greens would be out of parliament, too.)

    A majority party government might be more decisive, but there would be no societal consensus for the reforms it would push. The government would probably be CDU, as I doubt a divided SPD would have won an election under FPTP.

    If there is no societal consensus, is it not better to have an “indecisive” government that reflects the indecisiveness of society at large? That’s democracy.

    As for the hand-wringing and alarmism, it is misplaced. In fact, the whole notion of this political situation as “indecisive” is beside the point. If the result is SPD+CDU (and CSU) sharing power in a grand coalition, that is a government more favorable to Schroeder’s reforms than the incumbent SPD+Green coalition. At the same time, it would reflect the apparent consensus within Germany that the reforms advocated by the right–particularly by Merkel’s disastrous shadow finance minister, Professor Kirchhof–not be allowed to go too fast.

    A grand coalition would probably last two or three years, and then there would be a new election. There could even be a new election much sooner—within a few months—though that’s not likely, in my view. Schroeder might see it as beneficial, given his late surge and momentum in the campaign, to hold out and try to force an early election. However, there would a real risk of a backlash against the party if it were seen as opportunistically forcing a second vote.

    Propagation:


    CALIFORNIA YANKEE grafted Merkel To Be German Chancellor
    Fruits and Votes » Blog Archive » Germany: Merkel’s first 100 days grafted [...] Remember all that hand-wringing about the terrible ‘crisis’ supposedly resulting from the ‘inconclusive‘ election in Germany and the grand coalition that resulted? [...]

    3 ideas sprouting »

    1. One notes that US state governments have had its share of “grand coalition governments,” or at least, legislatures, in Washington, Michigan, and New Jersey, among other places.

      Seed planted by kao_hsien_chih — 22 September 2005 @ 20:58

    2. Merkel To Be German Chancellor

      Three weeks after Germany’s election, conservative leader Angela Merkel is set to become Germany’s first female chancellor. Under the power-sharing agreement, Schroeder’s Social Democrats would get eight seats in the Cabinet, compared with six for…

      Scion grafted by CALIFORNIA YANKEE — 10 October 2005 @ 05:51

    3. [...] Remember all that hand-wringing about the terrible ‘crisis’ supposedly resulting from the ‘inconclusive‘ election in Germany and the grand coalition that resulted? [...]

      Scion grafted by Fruits and Votes » Blog Archive » Germany: Merkel’s first 100 days — 01 March 2006 @ 14:24

    RSS feed for comments on this post.

    TrackBacks

    To graft a scion to this planting, please use the following URL:
    http://fruitsandvotes.com/blog/wp-trackback.php?p=118
    (Non-MT bloggers click here to send pings.)

    Grafted scions that are not compatible with this planting's stock will die or be pruned out by the Orchardist.

    About the comment form

    Please note that the name you enter below and the first several words of your comment will appear on the right sidebar of the blog's front page, under "Propagation." New propagators might want to look at the comment policy.

    Please do not enter long URLs into the seedbed. Either mark them up using html hyperlinks or convert them to a "tiny URL." Thank you!

    Seedbed

    The soil is ready for planting:

    `

    FRUIT FEEDS
    PROPAGATION
    Recent comments.

  • Labor-Green agreement (14)
    • Tom Round: [Note for the record that I spotted the India/ UK/ Canada/ Aust/ NZ hung parliaments before reading Dunleavy's post a few days back......
    • Ed: Actually, the sudden rash of uncontrolled (or hung, or balanced) parliaments elected single member districts cuts against both sides of the...
    • Wilf Day: Duverger’s Law is clearly dead, and the idea of using a voting system to artificially create Parliamentary majorities is on its...
    • Ed: My reading of Australian poltics is probably flawed, since I am not Australian, plus the situation now is unusually fluid. That said is the...
    • Ed: In the following situation: 1) a government determining House has an even number of deputies, 2) the government party or parties have exact...
    • Tom Round: From Wilkie to Franklin… No, not the 1940 US presidential election, but the Tasmanian House of Assembly. Looks like the 1998...
    • Alan: It’s no defence of a silly rule, but Australia did not have a party system when the constitution was written. In my view the rule in...
    • Bancki: The Speaker does not vote in the House except in the event of a tied vote. I’ve always found this to be a strange rule: - when a...
    • Alan: 74 Labor 3 independents 73 Coalition.
    • Tom Round: Alan, the Senate ruled early in its history (this is mentioned somewhere in Quick & Garran) that sec 17’s “the Senate...
    • Alan: @Tom s57 and s128 apply to very specific situations and are therefore exceptions to a general rule. I suggest the relevant provision is s40:...
    • Tom Round: [What Alan said, +] … or if a non-Govt MP is elected Speaker, and thus can vote only to break a tie, which won’t arise in a...
    • Vasi: Is there any recent precedent for such an agreement in Australia? If Labor and the Greens are committing to reliably vote together until the...
    • Alan: The Labor-Green alignment actually falls 2, not 3, short of a majority. People have tended to assume an absolute majority of 76 is required....
  • CROSS-POLLINATION

    FRUITS

    morn_blms_corralito.jpg

    The Fruit Blog (Fruit & fruit breeding)
    Daley's Fruit Tree Blog
    Orchards Forever
    The Orchard Keeper
    The Ethicurean
    The Jew and the Carrot
    Small farms ("real people & real food")
    Life begins at 30 (Farmers markets, etc.)
    Banana
    Festival of Trees
    Rare Fruit News Online
    Cloudforest Cafe


    VOTES

    bulgaria_protest copy

    Comparative democracy

    Psephos (Adam Carr's data archive)
    Electoral Panorama
    World Elections
    African Elections Database
    M. Herrera's Electoral Calendar
    Electoral Geography (Data archive)
    Michael Gallagher's data archive
    Election Finance (Blog, data archive)
    IFES
    Election Law (Rick Hasen)
    VoteLaw (Edward Still)
    Ballot Access News

    Electoral and Political Reform

    The FairVote Blog (US)
    Make my vote count (UK)
    Wilf Day (Canada)
    democraticSPACE (Canada)
    Citizens Assembly Blog (dormant)


    POLITOLOGY

    Blogs of political analysis

    PoliBlog
    Arms and Influence (dormant?)
    Outside the Beltway
    Political Science Weblog (abstracts)
    Frontloading HQ (Josh Putnam)
    FiveThirtyEight
    Vote View (Keith Poole)
    The Monkey Cage
    Political Arithmetik (dormant)
    Pollster.com
    Polysigh
    Reflective Pundit
    Rustbelt Intellectual
    Simon Jackman
    The semi-presidential one
    Josep Colomer
    Chapel Hill Treehouse (dormant)
    Political Behavior (dormant)
    The Democratic Piece
    Countries at the Crossroads (Freedom House blog)
    Jacob T. Levy

    REGIONAL ANALYSIS

    Canada

    Crawl Across the Ocean
    Idealistic Pragmatist
    Paulitics
    Pith and Substance

    Europe

    Centre for European Politics
    Dr Sean's Diary
    Euro Trib
    A Fistful of Euros

    Latin America

    Bloggings by boz
    Colombia: A PoliBlog Sideblog
    El Criador de Gorilas
    Pronto!
    Two Weeks Notice
    Central American Politics

    S.W. Asia & E. Mediterranean

    Informed Comment Global Affairs
    Prospects for Peace
    Lisa Goldman
    Michael J. Totten

    Africa

    La Constitution en Afrique

    E. Asia

    Frozen Garlic (Taiwan elections)

    New Zealand

    Kiwiblog
    No Right Turn

    OTHER SOCIAL SCIENCE BLOGS

    Crooked Timber
    Statistical Modeling
    Social Science Statistics
    Cold Spring Shops
    Marginal Revolution
    Brad DeLong
    Greg Mankiw

    SUN & MOON

    CURRENT MOON

    NEWS

    ABC

    BBC

    CBC

    Democracy Now!

    Deutsche Welle

    El Tiempo

    Guardian

    Haaretz

    Hindustan Times

    The Independent

    Irish Times

    NZ Stuff

    RFE/RL

    ORGANIZATIONS

    About/disclaimer

    California Rare Fruit Growers

    Center for Voting and Democracy

    Californians for Electoral Reform

    Society for American Baseball Research

    Link TV

    SCION EXCHANGE

    HARVESTS
    ORCHARD SERVICES

    F&V time: This blog's date function is so set as to start a new day at approximately local sunset. (Why, if we have "day" and "night," should a new "day" start in the middle of the night?)

    F&V Coordinates: A compass may be helpful for navigating the orchard--a Political Compass, that is.

    Your Orchardist's coordinates:

    • –3.88 Economic left
    • –6.26 Social libertarian
    ...approximately the location of The Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand and close to the ideological positions of Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, and Ralph Nader.

    Fruits & Votes encourages the flourishing of all democratic political viewpoints, respectfully presented.

    outlook repair software wordpress stats

    Powered by WordPress