this post was submitted on 14 Sep 2024
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Congressman Jamie Raskin (MD-08) and Congressman Don Beyer (VA-08) renewed their efforts to bring ranked choice voting to U.S. congressional elections, reintroducing their *Ranked Choice Voting Act *. Senator Peter Welch (D-VT) is introducing companion legislation in the Senate. 

The legislation would require ranked choice voting (RCV) in all congressional primary and general elections starting in 2028, allowing voters to express support for multiple candidates for public office, with the candidate receiving the most votes declared the winner.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Whereas if republicans win this election, the US has a very dark future that may unite extremists and the death of the party would be less of a mess and more of an uphill battle for the entire country. At that point a third party would almost be irrelevant under the threat of a fall of democracy.

yeah, idk what would happen under a republican win, either this is going to be the most lame boring term ever, and then trump gets kicked out, cant do it ever again (according to ben shapiro of course) and the republican part has to figure out what to do after this. Or the entire governmental institution literally gets over thrown. And we end up in a civil war type scenario, in which case we probably know what to do lol.

You see this when Kamala is supporting fracking live on stage despite the ecological impacts that most of her party claims to be worried about.

i'm not sure honestly, i think something like fracking, while there would be a difference in opinion over it, i think federal legislation of fracking is bad, unless it's done under something like the EPA, assuming they have any power anymore lol. Aside from that i think you would want to leave it to a state/city/county basis, since that's going to be where the localized impacts are going to be at. I.E. Probably where the most effective legislation is going to happen.

oil is also one of those things that's going to be consumed regardless of whether or not it's good for the planet, so if we don't frack, someone else is likely to frack anyway. Shit's going to happen one way or another, but i guess in this case it's probably just NIMBYism.

Obviously there's going to be a difference, but i don't think like we see with the political right that it's going to heavily fracture the political party, both of those people are probably going to vote for kamala at the end of the day.