As of the current writing, these are the leading candidates
for president of the United States. And
by the way, if you use the word “polemicist” in public, you will have no chance
in this race whatsoever.
“Four syllables?
Forget about it!”
My first question – although in is not the first question on
cable news programs; their first
question is, “Who’s ahead? Who’s
behind? Who’s on first? What’s on second?” (“I don’t know.” “Third base.”)
This is my first
question because it seems like the question we should be asking first; like when you step into a leaky rowboat, you first
question is not “What kind of wood is
this made out of?” but “Are we going to sink?”
Since the preeminent issue is staring us in the face, my first
question concerning our presidential candidates is…
“Is this the really best we can do?”
A striver, a polemicist and a jerk?
(Self-Awareness Acknowledgment: This question, as with a preponderance of my questions, is not asked – not only first but
ever at all – because it is a “dead-end” proposition, the realistic approach
being, these are the candidates – deal with it!
“Hypotheticals” are irrelevant, not to mention an annoying
pain in the ass.
You will not be surprised to hear that I do not personally agree with this perception, believing instead
that asking dead-end-appearing questions will attract attention to the issue,
eventually ultimately generating a solution.
“Dreamer!”
Guilty as charged. Making
me an unelectable candidate for president, “dreamer” being a more determinative
disqualifier than striver, polemicist or jerk.
Plus, like Mr. Cruz, I was born in Canada. Although my mother was, in fact, born in New
York.
I have to look into that.
Maybe I could run. If I wanted to. But I don’t.
So never mind.
As I mentioned not long ago – and I am known to repeat
myself but who has original thoughts every day?
– more than anything in my view, a
presidential election is a popularity contest.
I shall revisit that assertion momentarily. First, however, some historical underpinning,
suggesting how the election of president became
a popularity contest.
(And believe me – as one of the candidates is habitually
braying – it is. There was a survey once revealing that the candidate
capturing the presidency is invariably the taller
one. Makes sense, doesn’t it? Think about it. Where in this country are short people more
popular than tall people? There’s a
well-known songwriter who believes that short people have no a reason to live!)
Okay. What I am about
you explain to you, you either already know, you don’t know but you don’t care,
or you don’t know but you’d like to
know, giving me a one in three chance of mentioning something worthwhile.
That’s better than
my usual odds. I’m goin’ for it!
In the “Parliamentary System of Democracy” – e.g. England
and Canada – the Prime Minister is the leader of the party that, in the most
recent election, won the most seats in the governing legislature.
Do you see what that means? It means there is “Majority Government.” Always.
(There are occasionally “Minority Governments”, but I am “this
close” to boring you to tears already,
so we shall leave it at that, though
you can look that up if you’re interested.)
The consequence of “Majority Government” is obvious. For the length of its tenure in power, the
majority party gets to implement the policies that got them elected the majority party in the first
place. Though they can vigorously
protest, the minority party cannot stop them, lacking the requisite votes to
keep the majority party’s legislative bills from being enacted.
There’s a lyric in “The Bum Won” from the musical Fiorello!
“People can do what
they want to but I got a feeling it ain’t democratic.”
The people elect their representatives, whose party’s leader
– after an assiduous vetting process to insure the party’s rank-and-file and
its leader’s sentiments are in sync – becomes Prime Minister. The winners then control the legislative
agenda. If the people dislike the
subsequent outcome, they can throw majority party out in the next election, electing
the opposition party instead.
What do American’s think about that process?
“People can do what
they want to but I got a feeling it ain’t democratic.”
Americans – in their wisdom, based on the Republican System of Government – elect
their president separately from their legislators – one vote for their local
representative, a distinct second
vote for president, inviting “Divided Government” and consequent gridlock, plus
an electoral process turning the presidential election into a popularity
contest. (Where the tallest candidate wins! As if “Here, let me get that for you” foretells
a superior leader for the Free World.)
A lot of people want no part of popularity contests, either
because they are aware they are unpopular – mentioning no names here – or
because they believe that the idea of deciding who will hold the most important
job in the country on the basis of popularity is stupid. (Or they did a terrible thing before running
for president and they are afraid it’ll come out. Seen anything of John Edwards lately?)
In the current arrangement, the election of president comes
down, as the cliché goes, to
“Who would you rather have a beer with?”
The “Striver”?
“Two beers. Make mine
a little heartier. I want to prove to
‘the people’ that I’m a ‘Regular Joe’.
Or in this case, ‘Joann’. Hah-hah-hah.”
The “Polemicist”?
“Beer is fine, I have nothing against beer. But let me tell you. I am very concerned that alcohol is a tool of
the “Powerful” in this country to cloud the minds of the proletariat.”
Or the “Jerk”.
“I know a lot of losers who drink beer – I hate to say it,
but it’s true. I’m going to order for
you, okay? Don’t worry about it. It’s going to be great.”
I’ll tell ya. If this
were a poker game, I would happily throw in my cards and take my chances on
better ones.
Sad to say, this is not
a poker game.
So we are required to play these ones.
OK. Here's my question: which candidate is which?
ReplyDeletewg
Uh oh, they had CNN on at the dentist again, didn’t they?
ReplyDeleteIf you’ve Canadian readers they did a spit take of their double-doubles when they read “…whose party’s leader – after an assiduous vetting process to insure the party’s rank-and-file and its leader’s sentiments are in sync – becomes Prime Minister.” The last Prime Minister, a Conservative, was elected and promptly dropped his entire “reform” (or should that be Reform) platform. Anyone one objecting, either in Parliament or in the country, was treated with truly Canadian ruthlessness.
CBC: The PM’s office today announce that, after his criticisms of Harper last night, Smith has been transferred from his job as Minister of Defense to Director of Toronto Maple Leaf Victory Celebrations.
The head of the opposition wasn’t much better; he was a guy who had forgotten he was Canadian. He was so well loved by the rank-and-file that his party dropped to third at the next election behind a group that makes Sanders look like a plutocrat. For his replacement, given a choice between an intelligent, accomplished ex-astronaut and someone with a famous name and once won a boxing match the Canadians of course picked…well…lets just say don't challenge the new Canadian premier to a fight sponsored by People Magazine.
I’m optimistic. That’s saying something – I’m optimistic as often as Earl is self-confident. But one funny thing about Americans: when the politicians don't listen to them they listen to the noisiest politicians. Most of the other candidates are smart, experienced people – they will come up with the right mix of “angry” and “smart” and start winning. There are still a few left in the running. There’s that bright, energetic up-beat guy who’s needle got stuck. There’s also (my favorite) the Midwest banker who reminds us to be polite and eat our vegetables. He looks pretty good next to the “Jerk”. There’s another guy too but I’ll let others comment on him. So we’re not stuck with the three you mentioned; not yet, anyway.
But maybe this was a secret, coded announcement; part of a master plan to be the American Beppo Grillo. Sorry if I blew your cover.
P.S. Was binge reading your posts and saw you were really sick. I’m glad to see that you are feeling better. Stay well.
And with three major parties, a "majority" government can rule with 60% of the popular vote going against them.
ReplyDeleteIn a local provincial by-election there was a candidate whose name was "Above Znoneofthe". He changed his name legally and added the "z" so he could be last on the ballot. He received 0.43% of the votes and was going to change his name back after the election.
ReplyDelete