Don't Look At Me, I Voted For The Other Guy
Have you ever noticed, when things are going wrong, that no one
ever actually voted for those in power?
It's amazing. Six months after a unanimous internal election (in
which I was the scrutineer) I had at least six people assure me
that the candidate's later defection wasn't their fault. They'd
seen his faults from the start and voted for the other guy. Was
the election a fix? Should I demand an enquiry? No. I dealt with
every ballot paper myself. The actual result wasn't announced,
just the winner, to avoid embarrassment but every ballot paper
is kept for evidence if needed at a later date. The successful
candidate won fair and square and, what's more, the people
assuring me they didn't vote for him knew it.
Selective amnesia is bad enough but what I've also noticed is
people using voting for the opposition as a perfect excuse to
knock democracy. When we don't like a result we work to change
it next time: that's the joy of fixed terms. This is
particularly dangerous in internal elections, such as for the
leadership of a political party. By fighting each other and not
accepting the majority vote we lose sight of the real opposition
out there. And the media love it.
Accept what you've got and work to change it next time around.
That's democracy.