People's Choice Party - Feedback
This page contains feedback that people have provided via e-mail
in response to the People's Choice Party. They have been modified
so that they are more structured.
People have said that the policy is good because: - The randomness avoids potential political influence creeping
in.
People have said that the policy is bad because: - The budgeted amount (9 million dollars per year) won't be
enough to fund the project.
- Three, 90-second speeches does not represent enough time for
people to express their views.
- Three weeks is not long enough for jury members to understand
all the issues.
- The salary offered won't be enough to compensate people for
the disruption to their lives.
- All political parties are bad.
- It's better to improve the current system than build another
one.
People have said that the idea is not necessary because: - People can already send letters to members of parliament or
to newspaper editors.
- People already feel like they're part of the political system.
- The media perform adequately as the people's representatives.
Our responses to positive comments The randomness avoids potential political influence creeping
in.
One of our main aims was to ensure that the jury's opinions were
not influence by unseen loyalties.
Our responses to negative comments The budgeted amount (9 million dollars per year) won't be
enough to fund the project.
9 million dollars divided by 6 jury positions is 1.5 million for
each position per year.
1.5 million divided by 50 weeks is $30,000.
So for each person, here is a sample weekly budget: | Salary: | $2,000 | | Accommodation: | $1,000 | | Meals: | $500 | | Travel expenses: | $1,500 | | Insurance: | $100 | | Misc expenses: | $400 | | 90 seconds of TV air-time: | $10,000 ??? (Perhaps the ABC would host it and this would cost nothing.)
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That leaves between $15,000 and $25,000 dollars to coordinate
and facilitate the activities of each person. Three, 90-second speeches does not represent enough time for
people to express their views.
We need to make a trade-off. If the speeches are allowed to go
on for too long, viewers will get bored and change channels. The
short time allows people to focus on the question: What is the
single most important idea that they can contribute? Three weeks is not long enough for jury members to understand
all the issues.
If they had their whole lives, they would not have enough time.
Jury members should focus on what they think is most important. The salary offered won't be enough to compensate people for
the disruption to their lives.
Most people would regard $2,000 + free meals & board to be
adequate compensation for a job that has no performance criteria.
It is three times the national average weekly wage. All political parties are bad.
So why not reduce their influence? It's better to improve the current system than build another
one.
In our experience it is extremely difficult to change a system
from within. Institutions seem to change according to internal
and external pressures. When these pressures balance themselves
out, the institutions stop changing. To start the process moving
again, it is necessary to create some more pressures. One of the
most effective pressures is a by-pass mechanism. We certainly
do not want to wreck the existing system of government. But at
the same time any review of government operations would be pointless
unless: - The people conducting the review are independent of the government.
- These people are seen to be independent of the government.
"This new party is a waste of time!" People can already send letters to members of parliament or
to newspaper editors.
But they can't be sure that they'll be printed or read. Most people
do not read all the letters to the editor. If you got one letter
printed you would be lucky if 2% of the population actually read
it.
People already feel like they're part of the political system.
Our experience is that people do not feel that way. The media perform adequately as the people's representatives
(they are people too).
The media spend a lot of time hanging around politicians and the
remoteness that comes with that. Some of them are clever but they
do not seem to be representative of the community at large.
A journalist wants to write something that people will find interesting.
A jury member will talk about what is important to them.
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