Comment by the_duke

1 day ago

The tactic here is sneaking legislation through the system by bringing it up again and again, hoping for the public to eventually lose interest, or to catch a time with a lot of other drama going on so they can avoid the public attention/backlash.

I do think there are procedural ways to support this, like: proposed bills that are very similar to previous rejected ones need a preemptive vote with 60%+ support to be considered - if brought again with a certain time frame.

I do see your point though, there can be unforeseen consequences.

Good thing we have paid professionals whose job it is to vote on these things.

  • But the whole premise is that those paid professionals have gone rogue?

    • There's really no fixing that kind of failure state with a bandage solution. The whole idea of a representative democracy is premised on citizens being able to elect representatives who represent their interests. If that's not holding then that's the part that needs to be fixed.

      2 replies →

    • A political party can table any motion they want and other political parties will vote against it. That is not going rogue it is doing your job.