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10 Steps to Repair American Democracy by Steven Hill
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10 Steps to Repair American Democracy

by Steven Hill

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A brief introduction: I heard Steven Hill give a talk about his new book, "10 Steps to Repair American Democracy", in Cambridge recently. In his book and in his talk, Hill promotes reforms such as instant runoff voting, proportional representation, direct election of the President, public campaign financing, free media time for candidates, and so on. His "ten steps" are:
1. Secure the Vote
2. Expand Voter Participation
3. Increase Voter Choice with Instant Runoff Voting
4. Scrap Winner-Take-All Elections
5. Direct Election of the President
6. Overhaul the U.S. Senate
7. Reclaim the Airwaves
8. Minimize Money's Role
9. Reform the Supreme Court
10. Restore Faith in Government

Obviously, each of these slogans really involves multiple steps. For example, "Secure the Vote" includes establishing voter-verified recountable paper trails; impartial and professional election officials; and open-source software for electronic voting machines. "Expand Voter Participation" includes universal voter registration; making election day a holiday; and enfranchising prisoners and ex-cons. And so on down the list.

Hill puts the most emphasis on scrapping winner-take-all elections in favor of moderate proportional representation, of the type formerly used in the Illinois state legislature. In moderate proportional representation, three to five legislators are elected from geographical districts three to five times the size of those that currently exist. Since candidates in such districts would need only 17% to 25% of the vote to win a seat, Hill argues that minorities (political and ethnic) would gain representation proportional to their numbers, and polarization between "red" and "blue" areas would be dramatically reduced. At the same time, since these 17%-25% thresholds are much higher than those formerly used in Italy and Israel, moderate proportional representation isn't vulnerable to the sort of instability that troubled systems in which candidates could be elected with as little as 1% of the vote.

Hill's talk was held in a church, and I felt a bit like the choir, since I am familiar with most of these proposals and have supported many of them for years, to the point of writing articles and collecting signatures for instant runoff voting and proportional representation. "10 Steps to Repair American Democracy" is directed primarily toward those unfamiliar with these proposals, and seeing them for the first time.

Though Hill gives decent summaries of many of the issues and options, I personally would have liked more detailed discussions of the arguments for (and against) the various reforms proposed. I also would have appreciated more discussion on ways to work to enact these reforms -- all Hill does is suggest contacting the relevant organizations, which are listed at the end of each chapter. The writing was also tiresome on occasion, as several factoids, phrases, sentences and even a paragraph were repeated verbatim two or three times in less than 200 pages.

So although "10 Steps to Repair American Democracy" wasn't all I was looking for, it can still serve as a brief introduction to reforms whose time has come, especially valuable for people who are fed up with business as usual but don't have any idea what to do about it. I already have a lengthy list of friends and relatives to loan it to. ( )
daschaich | Oct 16, 2006 |  
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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0976062151, Paperback)

Unresponsive government. Suspicious voting equipment. Uninspiring candidates. Mindless political debate. Noncompetitive elections. American democracy is suffering through its worst crisis in years, and while many Americans recognize it, they just don't know what to do about it. In his new book, "10 Steps to Repair American Democracy," political analyst Steven Hill says that American democracy has been working about as well as the levees around New Orleans. Hill, who is director of the New America Foundation's political reform program, establishes that the American republic is rooted in outdated methods and practices, from poorly functioning voting equipment to the way we elect the president, and presents an inspiring blueprint for political reform.

The Introduction presents an overview of American democracy, followed by 10 chapters (each chapter being a "step"/solution) covering the voting equipment/election administration issue; Electoral College/direct election of the president; instant runoff voting; campaign finance reform; media reform; universal voter registration; term limits for Supreme Court justices; overhaul of the U.S. Senate; redistricting abuses; proportional representation and the end of winner-take-all elections; and more. Instead of reading four or five or six different books -- one on the Electoral College, another on voting equipment, yet another on campaign finance reform, media reform, redistricting or instant runoff voting -- who has time for so much reading -- "10 Steps" gives you a brief overview of all of these, plus practical, solution-oriented steps so that even a person with minimal time can participate in transforming American democracy.

"10 Steps to Repair American Democracy," with a foreword by the New Yorker's Hendrik Hertzberg, is a "one-stop" shopping guide to what's broken about democracy in the USA, and what Americans can do to repair it. Drawing on the author's 20 years of scholarship, journalism and advocacy, this book will change the way you think about American politics.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400)

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