BigBallinStalin wrote:Mets, that kind of democracy is not ideal. Plenty of the old guys (Tocqueville, for one) were concerned about the dangers of majority rule. Having one party dominate the legislative and executive branch nullifies the whole point about having checks and balances. One dominant party would essentially render the 'democracy' into a one-party state, which you know isn't democracy--it's rule by one party (short as it may be).
That description does not apply here, because the Republicans have a majority in the House. The majority that was gathered together to vote on a 'clean' bill was a combination of the minority party and enough votes from the majority party to get to 218 votes. I said nothing specifically about one party having control -- I said that if there is a majority on any issue, however that majority was composed, it should have its will.
If you want something resembling a democracy, then you'd want the desires of all constituents represented at all stages of public policy. This implies that you can't have one party dominating public policy.
And yes, the policymaking process should be designed so that everyone has a contribution to the discussion. And again, this happened in the case of the ACA -- there were months of discussions in the Senate and the House, and then the House held 40-odd votes to roll it back. The process by which the law made it into effect wasn't perfect -- but it would be obviously false to suggest that the minority did not have its viewpoint heard.
Other than the issue of an ideal democracy, would you be complaining this much if a Democrat held control over the ending of a shutdown?
Yes, all other things being equal.
And shouldn't the Democrats be trying to compromise with the Republicans in order to end the 'shutdown'? Why are they so unwilling to compromise?
Because that would set the worst kind of precedent for the democratic process. It would suggest that it is legitimate to destroy the normal functioning of the government because of a dispute over legislation which was previously passed in the standard manner. It is perfectly reasonable to request that if a party does not get what it wants on a particular piece of legislation, because it cannot coalesce a majority in both houses to vote a particular way, that it does not derail the workings of a substantial fraction of the government to get its way.
In general, to anyone who suggests that the Democrats are not compromising:
