I am the author of a new blog called "A New Kind of Third Party" and I am a single-issue activist with the issue being strategic state-level election reform. My writing on election reform has convinced me that a major obstacle to such reform in our system is the desires of third parties to rival the main parties. I see that as counterproductive and am trying to persuade them to affirm the use of the First Past the Post(or current election system) for Presidential/Gubernatorial/Senatorial elections. This essentially entails a submission to our political system remaining a two-party dominated system and yet, if this commitment were made, it wd open the door to the introduction of proportional representation in state legislative elections and this would allow local state third parties to gain seats and influence policy.
So the idea is to have two main parties who are ideologically more dynamic and better safeguards against either one of them getting a "permanent majority" and a whole host of small state-local third parties, like Progressive Dane in Wisconsin, bringing up new issues, increasing voter turnout and education.
This is the sort of decentralization of authority that is feasible in our world and, as a Christian, I believe that the early Christians were political outsiders, not unlike how third parties in a two-party dominated system are outsiders and so that should be our preferred location for political activism as a critical but not central part of our holistic witness to others.
dlw
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