Is candidate anonymity at all practical?
We are all aware voting is largely biased. Of course, it would be attractive to reduce that bias as much as possible because greater policy-based voting allows laws and regulations to better reflect the interests of society.
So is it potentially practical to make the identity of political candidates completely anonymous? In such a way that, we would not know their gender, race, age, religious affiliation, and other physical characteristics or irrelevant characteristics. Hell, part of hiding some of these characteristics require cloaking their voice, their name (because most names are gendered and have some racial/ethnic connotation), et cetera.
I understand this doesn't prevent much party-voting (voting purely for party and not for the stature of a candidates policies), and I am aware one can guess ones race/gender based on their platform - but it would be silly to expect any deterrent to be 100% effective. It seems the only question here is practicality, and that includes the legality of this.
edit: This does not mean we hide the political history of candidates, or any other genuinely relevant piece of information for that matter
voting political-system
New contributor
add a comment |
We are all aware voting is largely biased. Of course, it would be attractive to reduce that bias as much as possible because greater policy-based voting allows laws and regulations to better reflect the interests of society.
So is it potentially practical to make the identity of political candidates completely anonymous? In such a way that, we would not know their gender, race, age, religious affiliation, and other physical characteristics or irrelevant characteristics. Hell, part of hiding some of these characteristics require cloaking their voice, their name (because most names are gendered and have some racial/ethnic connotation), et cetera.
I understand this doesn't prevent much party-voting (voting purely for party and not for the stature of a candidates policies), and I am aware one can guess ones race/gender based on their platform - but it would be silly to expect any deterrent to be 100% effective. It seems the only question here is practicality, and that includes the legality of this.
edit: This does not mean we hide the political history of candidates, or any other genuinely relevant piece of information for that matter
voting political-system
New contributor
1
I'm sure most politicians would love to say they support whatever the most popular thing is, knowing that during the next election nobody would be able to hold their actions and policy work accountable. Would really lower their PR costs.
– Giter
7 hours ago
I've always wondered what would happen if L became a politician...
– ahiijny
4 hours ago
I do not know if anonymity is practical or even desirable. However, this seems like a (non) problem that the electoral college was meant to solve.
– emory
4 secs ago
add a comment |
We are all aware voting is largely biased. Of course, it would be attractive to reduce that bias as much as possible because greater policy-based voting allows laws and regulations to better reflect the interests of society.
So is it potentially practical to make the identity of political candidates completely anonymous? In such a way that, we would not know their gender, race, age, religious affiliation, and other physical characteristics or irrelevant characteristics. Hell, part of hiding some of these characteristics require cloaking their voice, their name (because most names are gendered and have some racial/ethnic connotation), et cetera.
I understand this doesn't prevent much party-voting (voting purely for party and not for the stature of a candidates policies), and I am aware one can guess ones race/gender based on their platform - but it would be silly to expect any deterrent to be 100% effective. It seems the only question here is practicality, and that includes the legality of this.
edit: This does not mean we hide the political history of candidates, or any other genuinely relevant piece of information for that matter
voting political-system
New contributor
We are all aware voting is largely biased. Of course, it would be attractive to reduce that bias as much as possible because greater policy-based voting allows laws and regulations to better reflect the interests of society.
So is it potentially practical to make the identity of political candidates completely anonymous? In such a way that, we would not know their gender, race, age, religious affiliation, and other physical characteristics or irrelevant characteristics. Hell, part of hiding some of these characteristics require cloaking their voice, their name (because most names are gendered and have some racial/ethnic connotation), et cetera.
I understand this doesn't prevent much party-voting (voting purely for party and not for the stature of a candidates policies), and I am aware one can guess ones race/gender based on their platform - but it would be silly to expect any deterrent to be 100% effective. It seems the only question here is practicality, and that includes the legality of this.
edit: This does not mean we hide the political history of candidates, or any other genuinely relevant piece of information for that matter
voting political-system
voting political-system
New contributor
New contributor
edited 7 hours ago
user581844
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asked 8 hours ago
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262
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New contributor
1
I'm sure most politicians would love to say they support whatever the most popular thing is, knowing that during the next election nobody would be able to hold their actions and policy work accountable. Would really lower their PR costs.
– Giter
7 hours ago
I've always wondered what would happen if L became a politician...
– ahiijny
4 hours ago
I do not know if anonymity is practical or even desirable. However, this seems like a (non) problem that the electoral college was meant to solve.
– emory
4 secs ago
add a comment |
1
I'm sure most politicians would love to say they support whatever the most popular thing is, knowing that during the next election nobody would be able to hold their actions and policy work accountable. Would really lower their PR costs.
– Giter
7 hours ago
I've always wondered what would happen if L became a politician...
– ahiijny
4 hours ago
I do not know if anonymity is practical or even desirable. However, this seems like a (non) problem that the electoral college was meant to solve.
– emory
4 secs ago
1
1
I'm sure most politicians would love to say they support whatever the most popular thing is, knowing that during the next election nobody would be able to hold their actions and policy work accountable. Would really lower their PR costs.
– Giter
7 hours ago
I'm sure most politicians would love to say they support whatever the most popular thing is, knowing that during the next election nobody would be able to hold their actions and policy work accountable. Would really lower their PR costs.
– Giter
7 hours ago
I've always wondered what would happen if L became a politician...
– ahiijny
4 hours ago
I've always wondered what would happen if L became a politician...
– ahiijny
4 hours ago
I do not know if anonymity is practical or even desirable. However, this seems like a (non) problem that the electoral college was meant to solve.
– emory
4 secs ago
I do not know if anonymity is practical or even desirable. However, this seems like a (non) problem that the electoral college was meant to solve.
– emory
4 secs ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
No, this isn't at all practical. You're removing virtually everything a voter could possibly use to decide who to support. If you don't know a candidate's identity, all you're left with is what policies they claim to support. But you can't even trust those, because you don't have any way to compare it with things they've previously done. There'd be no reason to even attempt to do what your constituents wanted, because it's not like anyone could hold it against you in a future election.
6
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
5
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
4
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
1
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
5
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
|
show 9 more comments
Candidates partially compete through their networks. Hillary Clinton spent years developing the support that carried her past Bernie Sanders. Donald Trump's path was different, but he too relied on his established brand. It seems unlikely that the existing candidates, who are accustomed to competing in this way, will give way to this new system that works differently. And by definition, these are the candidates with established networks.
Another issue is whether it is practical to hide identity this way. Look at the show The Masked Singer. In that show, contestants hide their identity, as you suggest. But people speculate, often correctly, on who they are. For example, I know that the Alien was correctly identified before her identity was revealed. As was the Raven before her. How do I know? I read those predictions before the shows and saw them proved right in the after-show reports. Why would it be more successful in politics than in a reality show?
What happens if someone simply reveals that they are running? What happens if a supporter does? An opponent? I can easily see a court case that establishes that it is a candidate's right to reveal identity, overturning any rule against it.
How would this work with the existing ballot system? Currently candidates ask to be on the ballot (in the United States). But under this system, you couldn't ask that. You couldn't go to voters and tell them who they are and ask for signatures.
What happens to experience? Successful presidents were often successful governors or senators or generals. But under this system, we wouldn't know the candidate's experience. And we can't check the candidate's past positions or truthfulness or, well, anything. You aren't just hiding gender and race. You're hiding their past identity.
If you don't hide that identity, then you're not hiding their race or gender either. E.g. in 1980, a retired actor who was formerly the head of the screen actors guild is running for president after almost winning the nomination in 1976 and being governor of California for eight years. How would people not recognize Ronald Reagan? And of course, he was known to be a white male.
More examples:
In 2016, a billionaire businessperson who has also appeared on reality television is running. Against a former first spouse.
In 2012, a multi-millionaire financier who had been governor of Massachusetts is running.
In 2008, a former community organizer from Chicago who is now Senator from Illinois. Is running against a former Marine famous for being tortured while held as a prisoner of war, who is also a current Senator.
In 2004, a Senator from Massachusetts who had previously been a decorated military officer is running.
Does anyone seriously think that these people would win their first office without these aspects of their biography? Not to mention that politicians have been known to exaggerate their biographies. How would you check?
If it worked, it might remove bias. But it would also remove discernment. Unless everyone did this, all the time, candidates couldn't give enough of their background to be considered. And I don't think it is really feasible for everyone to do this to eliminate bias. How would people date?
An easier way to achieve the same objective would be sortition. Just draft the right proportions of each group. It's a mechanical process, so it can only be biased if the process is. And it would save the problem of anonymity. You still lose discernment, but you gain representativeness.
add a comment |
Its possible when the basis of approval is something that can be demonstrated separately from personal information.
For example, some orchestras interview candidates who are behind a curtain, to judge them only by their musical competence. They found that without it, unconscious bias does happen a lot.
Similar might work for objects or documents people create, or problems they solve,or factual data that doesn't identify them.
If probably doesn't work in politics generally, because the skill you want include .matters that are inherently unable to be tested other than by linking with the person and their history - how honest they've been, how well they executed past roles, positive and negative features in their background, possible past controversies, personality, and so on.
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
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No, this isn't at all practical. You're removing virtually everything a voter could possibly use to decide who to support. If you don't know a candidate's identity, all you're left with is what policies they claim to support. But you can't even trust those, because you don't have any way to compare it with things they've previously done. There'd be no reason to even attempt to do what your constituents wanted, because it's not like anyone could hold it against you in a future election.
6
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
5
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
4
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
1
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
5
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
|
show 9 more comments
No, this isn't at all practical. You're removing virtually everything a voter could possibly use to decide who to support. If you don't know a candidate's identity, all you're left with is what policies they claim to support. But you can't even trust those, because you don't have any way to compare it with things they've previously done. There'd be no reason to even attempt to do what your constituents wanted, because it's not like anyone could hold it against you in a future election.
6
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
5
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
4
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
1
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
5
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
|
show 9 more comments
No, this isn't at all practical. You're removing virtually everything a voter could possibly use to decide who to support. If you don't know a candidate's identity, all you're left with is what policies they claim to support. But you can't even trust those, because you don't have any way to compare it with things they've previously done. There'd be no reason to even attempt to do what your constituents wanted, because it's not like anyone could hold it against you in a future election.
No, this isn't at all practical. You're removing virtually everything a voter could possibly use to decide who to support. If you don't know a candidate's identity, all you're left with is what policies they claim to support. But you can't even trust those, because you don't have any way to compare it with things they've previously done. There'd be no reason to even attempt to do what your constituents wanted, because it's not like anyone could hold it against you in a future election.
answered 7 hours ago
cpastcpast
8,34013151
8,34013151
6
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
5
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
4
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
1
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
5
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
|
show 9 more comments
6
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
5
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
4
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
1
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
5
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
6
6
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
@user581844 You didn't say "race-blind gender-blind." You said anonymous. If you include political history, it rapidly becomes not at all anonymous (you get stuff like "an unnamed current President of the United States").
– cpast
7 hours ago
5
5
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
@user581844, Imagine "in his campaign speech in Town 1, Candidate 42 said that he would support the budget proposal. When elected, Representative 42 voted against it." Finding out who 42 should be trivial. And it is important to watch people talk. Are they calm? Upset? Reading from a teleprompter or speaking freely? All that matters.
– o.m.
7 hours ago
4
4
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
@user581844, when I vote for representatives, I trust them to handle questions not yet known. Possibly emergencies. If the phone rings at 0-dark-30 and says that the missiles seem to be flying, will the candidate keep calm or will he or she panic?
– o.m.
7 hours ago
1
1
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
@user581844, imagine a defendant says he is innocent. There is one witness who says he did it. How to judge? By deciding if the witness is credible enough to overcome the presumption of innocence. That requires looking at them under cross-examination.
– o.m.
6 hours ago
5
5
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
@user581844 How would you handle re-elections with this system? You either know which candidate is the current officeholder (in which case no form of anonymizing will hide who they are and what they look like), or all candidates- including the officeholder - are anonymous, which means they can say whatever they want. “Vote for me and I’ll give everyone tax breaks”; taxes go up; “vote the current officeholder out and get tax breaks”; same candidate wins again.
– Bobson
4 hours ago
|
show 9 more comments
Candidates partially compete through their networks. Hillary Clinton spent years developing the support that carried her past Bernie Sanders. Donald Trump's path was different, but he too relied on his established brand. It seems unlikely that the existing candidates, who are accustomed to competing in this way, will give way to this new system that works differently. And by definition, these are the candidates with established networks.
Another issue is whether it is practical to hide identity this way. Look at the show The Masked Singer. In that show, contestants hide their identity, as you suggest. But people speculate, often correctly, on who they are. For example, I know that the Alien was correctly identified before her identity was revealed. As was the Raven before her. How do I know? I read those predictions before the shows and saw them proved right in the after-show reports. Why would it be more successful in politics than in a reality show?
What happens if someone simply reveals that they are running? What happens if a supporter does? An opponent? I can easily see a court case that establishes that it is a candidate's right to reveal identity, overturning any rule against it.
How would this work with the existing ballot system? Currently candidates ask to be on the ballot (in the United States). But under this system, you couldn't ask that. You couldn't go to voters and tell them who they are and ask for signatures.
What happens to experience? Successful presidents were often successful governors or senators or generals. But under this system, we wouldn't know the candidate's experience. And we can't check the candidate's past positions or truthfulness or, well, anything. You aren't just hiding gender and race. You're hiding their past identity.
If you don't hide that identity, then you're not hiding their race or gender either. E.g. in 1980, a retired actor who was formerly the head of the screen actors guild is running for president after almost winning the nomination in 1976 and being governor of California for eight years. How would people not recognize Ronald Reagan? And of course, he was known to be a white male.
More examples:
In 2016, a billionaire businessperson who has also appeared on reality television is running. Against a former first spouse.
In 2012, a multi-millionaire financier who had been governor of Massachusetts is running.
In 2008, a former community organizer from Chicago who is now Senator from Illinois. Is running against a former Marine famous for being tortured while held as a prisoner of war, who is also a current Senator.
In 2004, a Senator from Massachusetts who had previously been a decorated military officer is running.
Does anyone seriously think that these people would win their first office without these aspects of their biography? Not to mention that politicians have been known to exaggerate their biographies. How would you check?
If it worked, it might remove bias. But it would also remove discernment. Unless everyone did this, all the time, candidates couldn't give enough of their background to be considered. And I don't think it is really feasible for everyone to do this to eliminate bias. How would people date?
An easier way to achieve the same objective would be sortition. Just draft the right proportions of each group. It's a mechanical process, so it can only be biased if the process is. And it would save the problem of anonymity. You still lose discernment, but you gain representativeness.
add a comment |
Candidates partially compete through their networks. Hillary Clinton spent years developing the support that carried her past Bernie Sanders. Donald Trump's path was different, but he too relied on his established brand. It seems unlikely that the existing candidates, who are accustomed to competing in this way, will give way to this new system that works differently. And by definition, these are the candidates with established networks.
Another issue is whether it is practical to hide identity this way. Look at the show The Masked Singer. In that show, contestants hide their identity, as you suggest. But people speculate, often correctly, on who they are. For example, I know that the Alien was correctly identified before her identity was revealed. As was the Raven before her. How do I know? I read those predictions before the shows and saw them proved right in the after-show reports. Why would it be more successful in politics than in a reality show?
What happens if someone simply reveals that they are running? What happens if a supporter does? An opponent? I can easily see a court case that establishes that it is a candidate's right to reveal identity, overturning any rule against it.
How would this work with the existing ballot system? Currently candidates ask to be on the ballot (in the United States). But under this system, you couldn't ask that. You couldn't go to voters and tell them who they are and ask for signatures.
What happens to experience? Successful presidents were often successful governors or senators or generals. But under this system, we wouldn't know the candidate's experience. And we can't check the candidate's past positions or truthfulness or, well, anything. You aren't just hiding gender and race. You're hiding their past identity.
If you don't hide that identity, then you're not hiding their race or gender either. E.g. in 1980, a retired actor who was formerly the head of the screen actors guild is running for president after almost winning the nomination in 1976 and being governor of California for eight years. How would people not recognize Ronald Reagan? And of course, he was known to be a white male.
More examples:
In 2016, a billionaire businessperson who has also appeared on reality television is running. Against a former first spouse.
In 2012, a multi-millionaire financier who had been governor of Massachusetts is running.
In 2008, a former community organizer from Chicago who is now Senator from Illinois. Is running against a former Marine famous for being tortured while held as a prisoner of war, who is also a current Senator.
In 2004, a Senator from Massachusetts who had previously been a decorated military officer is running.
Does anyone seriously think that these people would win their first office without these aspects of their biography? Not to mention that politicians have been known to exaggerate their biographies. How would you check?
If it worked, it might remove bias. But it would also remove discernment. Unless everyone did this, all the time, candidates couldn't give enough of their background to be considered. And I don't think it is really feasible for everyone to do this to eliminate bias. How would people date?
An easier way to achieve the same objective would be sortition. Just draft the right proportions of each group. It's a mechanical process, so it can only be biased if the process is. And it would save the problem of anonymity. You still lose discernment, but you gain representativeness.
add a comment |
Candidates partially compete through their networks. Hillary Clinton spent years developing the support that carried her past Bernie Sanders. Donald Trump's path was different, but he too relied on his established brand. It seems unlikely that the existing candidates, who are accustomed to competing in this way, will give way to this new system that works differently. And by definition, these are the candidates with established networks.
Another issue is whether it is practical to hide identity this way. Look at the show The Masked Singer. In that show, contestants hide their identity, as you suggest. But people speculate, often correctly, on who they are. For example, I know that the Alien was correctly identified before her identity was revealed. As was the Raven before her. How do I know? I read those predictions before the shows and saw them proved right in the after-show reports. Why would it be more successful in politics than in a reality show?
What happens if someone simply reveals that they are running? What happens if a supporter does? An opponent? I can easily see a court case that establishes that it is a candidate's right to reveal identity, overturning any rule against it.
How would this work with the existing ballot system? Currently candidates ask to be on the ballot (in the United States). But under this system, you couldn't ask that. You couldn't go to voters and tell them who they are and ask for signatures.
What happens to experience? Successful presidents were often successful governors or senators or generals. But under this system, we wouldn't know the candidate's experience. And we can't check the candidate's past positions or truthfulness or, well, anything. You aren't just hiding gender and race. You're hiding their past identity.
If you don't hide that identity, then you're not hiding their race or gender either. E.g. in 1980, a retired actor who was formerly the head of the screen actors guild is running for president after almost winning the nomination in 1976 and being governor of California for eight years. How would people not recognize Ronald Reagan? And of course, he was known to be a white male.
More examples:
In 2016, a billionaire businessperson who has also appeared on reality television is running. Against a former first spouse.
In 2012, a multi-millionaire financier who had been governor of Massachusetts is running.
In 2008, a former community organizer from Chicago who is now Senator from Illinois. Is running against a former Marine famous for being tortured while held as a prisoner of war, who is also a current Senator.
In 2004, a Senator from Massachusetts who had previously been a decorated military officer is running.
Does anyone seriously think that these people would win their first office without these aspects of their biography? Not to mention that politicians have been known to exaggerate their biographies. How would you check?
If it worked, it might remove bias. But it would also remove discernment. Unless everyone did this, all the time, candidates couldn't give enough of their background to be considered. And I don't think it is really feasible for everyone to do this to eliminate bias. How would people date?
An easier way to achieve the same objective would be sortition. Just draft the right proportions of each group. It's a mechanical process, so it can only be biased if the process is. And it would save the problem of anonymity. You still lose discernment, but you gain representativeness.
Candidates partially compete through their networks. Hillary Clinton spent years developing the support that carried her past Bernie Sanders. Donald Trump's path was different, but he too relied on his established brand. It seems unlikely that the existing candidates, who are accustomed to competing in this way, will give way to this new system that works differently. And by definition, these are the candidates with established networks.
Another issue is whether it is practical to hide identity this way. Look at the show The Masked Singer. In that show, contestants hide their identity, as you suggest. But people speculate, often correctly, on who they are. For example, I know that the Alien was correctly identified before her identity was revealed. As was the Raven before her. How do I know? I read those predictions before the shows and saw them proved right in the after-show reports. Why would it be more successful in politics than in a reality show?
What happens if someone simply reveals that they are running? What happens if a supporter does? An opponent? I can easily see a court case that establishes that it is a candidate's right to reveal identity, overturning any rule against it.
How would this work with the existing ballot system? Currently candidates ask to be on the ballot (in the United States). But under this system, you couldn't ask that. You couldn't go to voters and tell them who they are and ask for signatures.
What happens to experience? Successful presidents were often successful governors or senators or generals. But under this system, we wouldn't know the candidate's experience. And we can't check the candidate's past positions or truthfulness or, well, anything. You aren't just hiding gender and race. You're hiding their past identity.
If you don't hide that identity, then you're not hiding their race or gender either. E.g. in 1980, a retired actor who was formerly the head of the screen actors guild is running for president after almost winning the nomination in 1976 and being governor of California for eight years. How would people not recognize Ronald Reagan? And of course, he was known to be a white male.
More examples:
In 2016, a billionaire businessperson who has also appeared on reality television is running. Against a former first spouse.
In 2012, a multi-millionaire financier who had been governor of Massachusetts is running.
In 2008, a former community organizer from Chicago who is now Senator from Illinois. Is running against a former Marine famous for being tortured while held as a prisoner of war, who is also a current Senator.
In 2004, a Senator from Massachusetts who had previously been a decorated military officer is running.
Does anyone seriously think that these people would win their first office without these aspects of their biography? Not to mention that politicians have been known to exaggerate their biographies. How would you check?
If it worked, it might remove bias. But it would also remove discernment. Unless everyone did this, all the time, candidates couldn't give enough of their background to be considered. And I don't think it is really feasible for everyone to do this to eliminate bias. How would people date?
An easier way to achieve the same objective would be sortition. Just draft the right proportions of each group. It's a mechanical process, so it can only be biased if the process is. And it would save the problem of anonymity. You still lose discernment, but you gain representativeness.
answered 7 hours ago
BrythanBrythan
68.1k8142231
68.1k8142231
add a comment |
add a comment |
Its possible when the basis of approval is something that can be demonstrated separately from personal information.
For example, some orchestras interview candidates who are behind a curtain, to judge them only by their musical competence. They found that without it, unconscious bias does happen a lot.
Similar might work for objects or documents people create, or problems they solve,or factual data that doesn't identify them.
If probably doesn't work in politics generally, because the skill you want include .matters that are inherently unable to be tested other than by linking with the person and their history - how honest they've been, how well they executed past roles, positive and negative features in their background, possible past controversies, personality, and so on.
add a comment |
Its possible when the basis of approval is something that can be demonstrated separately from personal information.
For example, some orchestras interview candidates who are behind a curtain, to judge them only by their musical competence. They found that without it, unconscious bias does happen a lot.
Similar might work for objects or documents people create, or problems they solve,or factual data that doesn't identify them.
If probably doesn't work in politics generally, because the skill you want include .matters that are inherently unable to be tested other than by linking with the person and their history - how honest they've been, how well they executed past roles, positive and negative features in their background, possible past controversies, personality, and so on.
add a comment |
Its possible when the basis of approval is something that can be demonstrated separately from personal information.
For example, some orchestras interview candidates who are behind a curtain, to judge them only by their musical competence. They found that without it, unconscious bias does happen a lot.
Similar might work for objects or documents people create, or problems they solve,or factual data that doesn't identify them.
If probably doesn't work in politics generally, because the skill you want include .matters that are inherently unable to be tested other than by linking with the person and their history - how honest they've been, how well they executed past roles, positive and negative features in their background, possible past controversies, personality, and so on.
Its possible when the basis of approval is something that can be demonstrated separately from personal information.
For example, some orchestras interview candidates who are behind a curtain, to judge them only by their musical competence. They found that without it, unconscious bias does happen a lot.
Similar might work for objects or documents people create, or problems they solve,or factual data that doesn't identify them.
If probably doesn't work in politics generally, because the skill you want include .matters that are inherently unable to be tested other than by linking with the person and their history - how honest they've been, how well they executed past roles, positive and negative features in their background, possible past controversies, personality, and so on.
answered 3 hours ago
StilezStilez
1,8432716
1,8432716
add a comment |
add a comment |
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user581844 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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1
I'm sure most politicians would love to say they support whatever the most popular thing is, knowing that during the next election nobody would be able to hold their actions and policy work accountable. Would really lower their PR costs.
– Giter
7 hours ago
I've always wondered what would happen if L became a politician...
– ahiijny
4 hours ago
I do not know if anonymity is practical or even desirable. However, this seems like a (non) problem that the electoral college was meant to solve.
– emory
4 secs ago