Quote:
Originally Posted by freerover
I'm suggesting %27 of the city shouldn't overrule the vast majority. Crazy in a democracy, I know.
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I am not trying to get into a fight, so please do not flame me, but I often worry that the terms of democracy and republic are often conflated.
At a high level (and in a perfect world), a republic allows everyone an equal voice through the election of representatives (in this case, council members). Whereby a democracy is a system where the simple majority wins/winner takes all (more like a ballot measure).
The current 10-1 council and the previous council's makeup is not a democracy but a republic. Council members are selected through a democratic election process.
In a democracy, a decision would be put to the general public's vote.
In a republic, we elect representatives (council members) that align with our beliefs/viewpoints; this allows a (quasi) equal voice for all members of the electorate.
As we operate in a hybrid system- our council members (representatives) are democratically elected (by a popular vote of their districts) to represent the interest of their constituents, thereby allowing them an equal voice. The 27% did not overrule the 73%, but the republic system worked.
I think you might be frustrated with the requirement that it takes a super-majority to pass certain items.
https://www.thoughtco.com/republic-vs-democracy-4169936