If the lower house is elected democratically then a large majority means a large majority of voters selected them, and they should be able to vote things through.
An upper house only seems useful if you've got a fundamentally undemocratic election system, as we currently do.
Speaking, again, from a country with several dozen legislatures of two democratically elected houses, this doesn't mean they work in lockstep or that they do what their voters want.
If you've been following our recent federal midterm election, that gave a fine illustration of that.
I'm very sorry: I did not mean to be insulting. I couldn't initially think of anything to say except to lay down a marker of disagreement, and I accept that I phrased this badly.
That's fine, I appreciate the differences of opinion, and will work on a proper reply. Probably tomorrow though, as I'm bathing a child at the moment, and by the time I've then got her to bed my brain will be entirely made of goo.
1. There would still be massive pressure on parliamentary time. A second chamber relieves that.
2. A proportionally elected house would not be less contentious and argumentative, in fact more so, because in your present system the government can almost always get what it wants. That would be a lot dicier in a proportionate house.
I'm not sure how (1) isn't solved by just having more committees, and plausibly more representatives to staff them. Why you would need to split the committees into two whole houses and elect them separately makes no sense to me.
I'm not sure how argumentativeness is a factor here? What's the issue with people arguing?
Committees are very useful, but they're still taking up the time of the same people whose time is already packed with the functional chamber. More representatives wouldn't help: the Commons is already awkwardly overpopulated as it is. A second chamber is different people with a separate agenda.
I'm not sure how argumentativeness is a factor either, but I couldn't figure out why you said "I do not see what a second house would add to a proportionally elected house." What would make it less needed then than it is now?
What makes them a different group of people? That they are different people. The one house's members are the people whose agenda is to be members of the House of Commons, which is the governing body of the country. The other house's members do not have that responsibility, and have the ability to undertake duties that the first house's members don't have time for, as described earlier. That's the main point of having a second chamber under the current UK system, however its membership is determined.
As for their political-issue agenda, we don't in any case want these to be too different, or debilitating conflict will occur even if one house holds the political power and the other does not. But differences will naturally arise in the course of things, if only because the members are human beings and not party automatons. That's true even under the present situations of party discipline and three-line whips.
And they will especially arise if the two houses are elected at different times, and consequently the PR allocations are likely to differ.
What MTBC and Rhythmaning wrote is also applicable here.
But a second house, providing reflective scrutiny, would still improve legislation. Even if a lot of people vote for them, idiots writing laws would still be idiots!
Why does it need to be a separately elected group of representatives to do this, and assuming PR, what would lead them to come to different conclusions?
I'm not certain that it does need to be a separate chamber. I accept the point (I think you made it!) earlier that a committee system, properly constituted, should be able to apply sufficient scrutiny.
But - and this is just a feeling! - having a second house on a different political cycle may remove poitical pressure from the legislative scrutiny. I'm not sure that a committee system would be seen as sufficiently independent.
I like the idea of a second house with long terms and no reelection, as moderator/advisor on shorter-term populist fads or government turning delusional mid-term. Second chamber can have those properties while still be democratically elected somehow.
(The restoring trust sounds hiliarious, as if it's the Commons that's the paragon of integrity.)
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An upper house only seems useful if you've got a fundamentally undemocratic election system, as we currently do.
So if you're fixing something, fix *that*.
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If you've been following our recent federal midterm election, that gave a fine illustration of that.
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I do not see what a second house would add to a proportionally elected house.
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If you're just going to insult people then feel free to leave.
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1. There would still be massive pressure on parliamentary time. A second chamber relieves that.
2. A proportionally elected house would not be less contentious and argumentative, in fact more so, because in your present system the government can almost always get what it wants. That would be a lot dicier in a proportionate house.
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I'm not sure how argumentativeness is a factor here? What's the issue with people arguing?
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I'm not sure how argumentativeness is a factor either, but I couldn't figure out why you said "I do not see what a second house would add to a proportionally elected house." What would make it less needed then than it is now?
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As for their political-issue agenda, we don't in any case want these to be too different, or debilitating conflict will occur even if one house holds the political power and the other does not. But differences will naturally arise in the course of things, if only because the members are human beings and not party automatons. That's true even under the present situations of party discipline and three-line whips.
And they will especially arise if the two houses are elected at different times, and consequently the PR allocations are likely to differ.
What MTBC and Rhythmaning wrote is also applicable here.
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But a second house, providing reflective scrutiny, would still improve legislation. Even if a lot of people vote for them, idiots writing laws would still be idiots!
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But - and this is just a feeling! - having a second house on a different political cycle may remove poitical pressure from the legislative scrutiny. I'm not sure that a committee system would be seen as sufficiently independent.
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(The sounds hiliarious, as if it's the Commons that's the paragon of integrity.)
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