Note for American friends:
Voting independent here in Australia is not useless but rather gets you a representative in Parliament who actually shares *YOUR* views instead of the views that the Murdoch Right or the Labor Party has decided are the views one should have.
I like my independent MP a lot. She rocks.
Yeah, as it stands in the US, you must vote for the lesser of the evils, full stop. Not voting just lets a vote for fascism go un-negated.
@DyDave Yeah...that doesn't work so well here in the States. I mean, you CAN vote independent or register in a party that is not Democrat or Republican and support those candidates. But it is largely a two-party system. It is really hard for independent candidates to win elected offices.
Yes, I know. Hence the explainer.๐
Our system is very different. We don't have a president, so the Prime Minister is the leader of the Parliament, who often needs votes from the independents or other parties to pass laws. The cross-benches, therefore, help hold the government to account.
Also, voting is compulsory and is ranked choice, so we often have 8-10 candidates for lower house seats and independents or minor parties can definitely win.
@DyDave
I'd love to vote for unaffiliated / independent candidates. In some states it is easy to run as an indy but some states make it ridiculously difficult. Legislators here in NC made it so that it's effectively a duopoly D or R. Going independent requires a ridiculous number of verified registered voters signatures on a petition.
I actually penned a legislative bill to reduce the number of signatures needed. Eventually they passed reduced numbers but it is still difficult.