My Weird Prompts

The Ballot With No Home for You

21 min · 30. juni 2026
episode The Ballot With No Home for You cover

Description

Daniel calls himself a political refugee — someone who knows what he cares about but can't find a home for it on any ballot. In this episode, we dissect the structural mechanisms that produce this dilemma: Israel's low electoral threshold, its single national district with no geographic accountability, and a coalition calculus that systematically trades away diffuse voter concerns like rental reform for organized bloc priorities. We ask whether any structural reform — ranked-choice voting, local representation, or something else — could actually let voters express what they want instead of picking the least-worst bundle.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the My Weird Prompts community!

Get Started

1 month for 9 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

300 episodes

episode Who Fixes a Broken Political System? artwork

Who Fixes a Broken Political System?

Daniel asks a deceptively simple question: if the political system is broken, who actually fixes it? Legislators are embedded in the system and benefit from it — so who designs reform, pushes it through, and funds that work? This episode unpacks the difference between watchdog organizations and reform engineers, using Israel's coalition instability as a case study. We trace how the Israel Democracy Institute quietly drafts constitutional text and builds consensus over decades, while the Movement for Quality of Government enforces existing rules through the courts. We also look at Germany's constructive vote of no confidence — a single constitutional mechanism that solved the same fragmentation problem Israel faces. The answer to Daniel's question turns out to be about the invisible infrastructure of democracy itself: the institutions that maintain the plumbing while everyone watches the circus.

30. juni 202627 min