kevin_standlee: Logo created for 2005 Worldcon and sometimes used for World Science Fiction Society business (WSFS Logo)
kevin_standlee ([personal profile] kevin_standlee) wrote2013-04-10 09:03 am

Popular Ratification

A longer version of this post is in a comment over here, but I'll say it here for the record again:

I am in favor of replacing the current system of ratifying changes to the WSFS Constitution (a vote in person at the Business Meeting of the Worldcon following the one where the proposal first passed, with only persons present in person eligible to vote) with what I call Popular Ratification. In my proposal, anything passed by the Year 1 Business Meeting would be submitted to a vote of all of the members, supporting and attending, of the Year 2 Worldcon at the same time as the Hugo Final Ballot. Anyone eligible to vote on the Hugo Final Ballot could vote on the ratification question. Voting would close at the same time as the Hugo Final Ballot (about four weeks pre-Worldcon). The results would be announced at the Year 2 Preliminary Business Meeting, but would not take effect until the end of Year 2 (just like amendments today don't take effect until the end of the Worldcon that ratifies them). Any proposal that gets more yes votes than no votes passes. No quorum. No minimum vote requirements. No voting fees (other than you have to be a member of the current Worldcon to vote).

While I think the regular BM attendees would consider this to be a radical, dangerous proposal, and I'm thus reluctant to work too hard on putting it through the Business Meeting, I also think it would go some way toward cutting the legs out from under the argument that it's "unfair" that members have to be present in person to have any say in the constitutional amendment process.

Aside: I would include as a rider on this particular proposal that it would have to be ratified by both the existing system and by its own process. In other words, it would have to pass in Year 1, be ratified by the Business Meeting in Year 2, then be submitted to the members for vote in Year 3, and if they approve it, it would take effect at the end of year 3. Amendments passed at Year 2 would be subject to ratification in Year 3 by the existing process. Amendments first passed at the Year 3 Business Meeting would be subject to the new process, submitted to the members of Year 4. (You can do this because you know the results of the ratification vote at the start of the Year 3 Business Meeting.)

Cons: This would raise Worldcon administrative costs. It would remove the Year 2 Business Meeting as a "House of Revision" able to reduce the scope of pending amendments; ratification would be strictly up or down. It would still not allow non-attending members to send primary legislation straight to a ratification vote (like the California initiative constitutional amendment process does).

Pros: It would allow non-attending members who already have Hugo voting rights a voice in the process. It would improve the "legitimacy" of WSFS government by removing the requirement of physical presence at a Worldcon Business Meeting at every stage of the process. It would reduce the plausibility of the argument that the entire WSFS governance process in the hands of a "bureaucracy" that never lets "real fans" have a say.

[identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com 2013-04-10 04:21 pm (UTC)(link)
I suspect more things would fail of ratification, just because the group ratifying is different from the group originally passing. And it would cause people concerned with WSFS governance to spend energy finding ways to annoy Worldcon members with WSFS issues :-). All in all that might well be a good thing, either directly or because it pulls the legs out from under the elitist argument.

But it doesn't; the elitist argument is pretty much perfect and self-contained and can't be defeated from the outside, to those really committed to the position.

[identity profile] daveon.livejournal.com 2013-04-10 04:25 pm (UTC)(link)
As I was saying in my original post, it would need those that are interested in ratification to actual reach out and engage with like minded people attending the convention... of course, that might not happen. But as I don't have a problem with the current system, don't much want to get involved and frankly, don''t care either way, that's not my problem.

My problem is with people complaining they're not involved and then ignoring every single thing people do to try and help them.

[identity profile] kevin-standlee.livejournal.com 2013-04-10 04:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, and the people who have hermetically-sealed views of their self-imposed victimtude aren't ever going to change. Heck, even if you gave them what they claim to want, they'd still be unhappy. Them I can't please, but I can influence the people who read them and might be inclined to believe their sob stories. But if they then go and discover, "Hey, I can vote just by joining and clicking on a web browser," then the only remaining argument is, "I shouldn't ever have to pay to vote," which is a different issue that can't be addressed logically IMO. (The people who say, "I shouldn't have to pay" implicitly think they own something that they do not own.)

[identity profile] daveon.livejournal.com 2013-04-10 04:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Yup. Agree. Now that's not to say that some of the points raised haven't been valid and that there aren't improvements, that other people,can make. However, my degree of interest in doing them or being involved is muted because, I suspect, strongly, that valid improvements get made, and the people who don't engage, still don't and still moan that people are out to get them :)

[identity profile] bovil.livejournal.com 2013-04-11 05:13 am (UTC)(link)
It depends on the electorate. California state initiatives are statistically likely to result in failures without a massive "yes" campaign. Local education measures in CA, on the other hand, even in conservative districts, are likely to win a popular vote.

I haven't got the pulse of the average Worldcon attendee enough to guess which way the votes would fall. I wouldn't be surprised if the ratification ballots weren't any bigger than business meeting participation. I wouldn't be surprised if it turned out there were some odd split of motion types that would tend towards ratification and other types that tended against.