A New Zealand farmer proposes sortition, but “strictly tongue-in-cheek”

From the NZ Herlad‘s “The Country” section:

Election 2023: Jane Smith thinks about ancient Greek voting options we might prefer

No-nonsense North Otago farmer Jane Smith is the last person you’d expect to get swept up in a TikTok trend but she may have inadvertently created an alternative version of “How often do you think about the Roman Empire?

In Smith’s case, the question is “How often do you think about ancient Greece?”

The sheep farmer told The Country’s Jamie Mackay that she’s so tired of Kiwi politicians and election campaigning that she had gone back in time, in an attempt to find a more palatable way of choosing leaders.

Admitting that this was all strictly tongue-in-cheek and “off the top of my head” Smith listed her favoured election processes from Ancient Greece.

Sortition – lottery system

Sortition is when officials were in large part chosen by lottery.

“So, a wee bit like jury duty,” Smith said.

According to Smith’s high school history teachers, this resulted in a “better cross-section of society” and less “narcissistic behaviour,” she said.

“They weren’t power hungry and they were just chosen to do a good job – they also had to do their day jobs.”

Ostracism – negative elections

This was an Athenian democratic procedure in which any citizen could be expelled from the city-state of Athens for 10 years.

“So, basically each year the voters – and it was every year – were asked to vote for the political leader or candidates that they most wanted to be exiled,” Smith said.

One Response

  1. […] a steady beat of activity around the world proposing or reporting the application of sortition in various ways for various purposes, along with a stream of condemnations and warnings against the […]

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