... If we had local and state level elections using a ranked voting system like IRV, you could say that you'd really like the Green candidate to win, but if he's not viable, give your vote to the democrat. Your vote for the Green doesn't help the Republican candidate at all.
... Process matters. And the way we do things is not written in stone.
Thanks for that! I like that idea a lot, and I had never heard of it before. (*tagging it on del.icio.us as we speak...)
Not to get all science-fictiony on everyone, but What If...
There were a central database that housed a profile for every voter (Privacy Issue fanatics: you may opt out if you don't want your precious "information" floating around "out there"... just like you can stay in your house if you don't want people to see you. Why do they look, anyway? Spies! They're all spies!!!)
...ahem... central database with a profile that details what each person's opinion of an ideal candidate would be, along with each individual's qualifications. Then, whenever the law requires an election, the computer could run the public's collective wishes against the public's qualifications and provide either a "winner" or a slate for people to vote on.
The beauty is that for the system to work, we would be forced to come up with meaningful qualifications to ask for, and they would have to be verifiable and well-defined for people to satisfy the qualifications. That would take a lot of the meaninglessness out of campaigning. So, instead of candidates blathering on about being "tough on crime", "a person of character", having "strong moral values", or "cutting taxes for the right people", they would have to codify their credentials for the database somehow.
People could specify whether they want an educated person, or not... or select someone from a particular field. Say there's an economic slump, and a lot of people want someone who understands the economy; an actual economist would have an advantage. ..unless people wanted an uneducated businessman who built a huge company out of nothing.
Race, religion, etc. would be irrelevant... of course, people could specify that they want "a religious person" in their qualifications, they just wouldn't be able to attach a particular religion to it. (Evil, but genius, I think.)
Political affiliation could still influence things, but in a more realistic way. If parties have to put their real priorities out there to be matched with voters' priorities, that can only benefit everyone. The Democrats could still pretend to care about the Environment, but if their other qualifications don't match the Green party guy, all the advertising money in the world won't help them.
And maybe we'd finally get a straight answer on what exactly "tax cuts for the middle class" means. (Yeah, I know... it IS science fictiony, isn't it?) As long as I'm dreaming, I might as well ask for the
Fair Tax.

But the best part would be in getting rid of stupid, pointless, pandering, meaningless rhetoric. Who really knows what "moral values" means in a politician, after all?