I
have to admit it — I fell asleep at my computer last night while doing some
research for today’s program, and I had the most amazing dream. Well, maybe it was a daydream.
In it, I was listening to a nationally known journalist and historian talk about his new book recapping the stories he had covered and the history of the last forty or so years.
“Most people don’t remember this,” he said. “But if the United States hadn’t adopted ranked choice voting in the 1990s, President Al Gore might have lost the 2000 election to George Bush, who at that time was the governor of Texas. You can never know for sure,” he continued.
“But a Bush presidency might have been a disaster. As we know, after the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, President Gore speedily occupied Afghanistan, and in a brief firefight, U.S. Army Special Forces killed Osama bin Laden in a cave that December.
“Following that, a multinational coalition occupied Afghanistan, and Gore, his popularity boosted, was able to rally Congress to enact much of his major agenda to fight climate change.
“Governor Bush criticized that, and in 2005, during a
bizarre interview with Fox News, said he would have used 9/11 as an excuse to
invade Iraq and get rid of Saddam Hussein, who he accused of “trying to kill my
dad.” That, foreign policy experts
agree, made no sense.
“In any event, the former governor agreed he was much
happier as Commissioner of baseball than he would have been in the White
House. But Bush did say he was very
disappointed in what had become of his Republican Party. After losing six
straight Presidential elections, the GOP went off on a bizarre tangent in 2016,
nominating a self-promoting New York developer who pledged to “Make America
Great Again,” despite showing an appalling ignorance of any policy questions. In
the end, after a bizarre sex tape surfaced, Donald Trump won only four small
states.
“Today,” the author continued, “we take our peace and
prosperity for granted.
“But it’s interesting to note that without ranked
choice voting, Bush would actually have won the 2000 election by carrying
Florida by less than a thousand votes, and our history might have been very
different.”
At that point, I woke up, shaken, dazed — and
convinced.
Convinced, that is, that Instant Runoff Voting, as I prefer
to call it, is an idea whose time has come. But I also know that it will be
very hard to sell politicians on changing the status quo.
The Peace Corps should be a much easier sell these
days. I wish I had joined years ago.
There was a long waiting list when I was younger, one of the consequences of
the Vietnam War.
But if my circumstances were different, I would join
now, if only to help show the rest of the world that all Americans are not like
Donald Trump.
Once upon a time, we had a President who stood in
divided Berlin and told the world that while our government may not be perfect,
we had never had to build a wall.
That same President had said in his inaugural address,
“to those peoples in huts and villages in the globe
struggling to break the bonds of mass misery, we pledge our best efforts to
help them help themselves, for whatever period is required … because it is
right.”
Yes, that was the President who created the Peace Corps. My biggest
fantasy is that someday,