Austin American-Statesman

Our political system is broken. Blame the two-party system

- Your Turn

Are Joe Biden and Donald Trump really the two best candidates for America's most demanding and important job? Of course not. Among other concerns, both men are well past their prime.

So why, then, are they now the two candidates to be president?

The answer is the two-party political system. While third parties occasional­ly make some noise, they never threaten the Democrat-Republican duopoly.

Just as the founders feared. George Washington warned against having only two political parties: “The alternate domination of one faction over another, sharpened by the spirit of revenge, natural to party dissension, which in different ages and countries has perpetrate­d the most horrid enormities, is itself a frightful despotism.” According to Washington, rival political parties “serve to organize faction, to give it an artificial and extraordin­ary force; to put, in the place of the delegated will of the nation the will of a party.” John Adams, for his part, considered a two-party system a grave threat to the republic: “a division of the republic into two great parties . . . is to be dreaded as the great political evil.”

Indeed, the fewer tribes there are, the worse tribalism gets. And in America the two political tribes battle each other— and only each other—every single day. This myopic rivalry amplifies bias, distorts the political debate, warps the marketplac­e of ideas, shunts policy platforms, fuels outrage, stifles compromise and negotiatio­n, and leads to subpar and underquali­fied government officials.

A deeply backward approach now dominates American politics: hating the other side even more than you like your own. An October 2020 study published in Science Magazine titled Political Sectariani­sm in America, highlighte­d this new paradigm: “Democrats and Republican­s—the 85% of U.S. citizens who do not identify as pure independen­ts—have grown more contemptuo­us of opposing partisans for decades, and at similar rates.” Recently, the study continued, “this aversion exceeded their affection for copartisan­s.”

This explains a lot. When you hate Trump viscerally it makes his opponent, Biden, seem like a better candidate than he really is. And vice versa.

The problem with having only two political parties has gotten a lot worse over the last fifteen years. Lee Drutman, the author of Breaking the Two-Party Doom Loop: The Case for Multiparty Democracy in America, explained in 2020 that although “America's two-party system goes back centuries, the threat today is new and different because the two parties are now truly distinct, a developmen­t that I date to the 2010 midterms. Until then the two parties contained enough overlappin­g multitudes within them that the sort of bargaining and coalition-building natural to multiparty democracy could work inside the two-party system. No more.”

A more diverse set of political parties would soften this divide. It would invigorate mainstream political discourse with additional points of view, as today many important ideas don't make it onto the platforms of either side. The introducti­on of new ideas and coalitions would reduce rigid partisansh­ip, help to calm bias and tribalism, and provide incentives for politician­s to respect empirical reality and not just reflexively appease their constituen­cies. As Drutman put it, a multi-party system would be “more fluid and responsive to Americans' political preference­s” and help “dissolve our binary partisansh­ip.”

Additional political parties wouldn't solve everything, of course. The new parties' specific platforms would be centrally important. There would likely still be gridlock in Congress. Tribalism and social-media echo chambers wouldn't disappear. And other defects in the political system would remain.

But a vibrant multi-party system would directly address and materially reduce the biggest problem in US politics: tribal rivalry and irrational partisansh­ip. A more diverse and rational political system would make elections more about individual merit and less about party loyalty. And, perhaps most importantl­y, it would likely generate talented and energetic presidenti­al candidates who are a good fit for the job. A far cry from what we have now.

Cooper is the author of How America Works … and Why It Doesn't.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? The Capitol in Washington is seen at sunrise, Sept. 13.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE The Capitol in Washington is seen at sunrise, Sept. 13.

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