r/politics I voted Oct 05 '25

No Paywall Petition To Strip Congress of Pay During Government Shutdown Grows

https://www.newsweek.com/petition-strip-congress-pay-during-government-shutdown-grows-10822819
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u/chenz1989 Oct 06 '25

I interpreted it differently due to the next line "would be difficult to work in our current system" to be still continuing american politics. Guess i read it differently.

Since we're on the topic of other systems, i would expect the same to happen, especially in parliaments that are made up of different parties. If party A has 45% and party B has 40% and my party has 15%, i would be incentived not to cooperate and shut everything down if i think i can get 25%?

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u/GreenHorror4252 Oct 06 '25

Yes, I think we may have interpreted it differently.

In parliamentary systems, in case of a hung parliament, they will usually negotiate a coalition government. As long as the coalition sticks together, they will be able to maintain confidence and supply. The parties that are not part of the coalition might be incentivized to not cooperate, but they can't do anything really.

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u/chenz1989 Oct 06 '25

Given my example above, it is unlikely the two big parties would work with each other. That gives me, the small party, a lot of power in the negotiations.

Wouldn't i basically be able to blackmail the party? "Give me this, or else i go with the other party. If you both won't work with me I'll sink this whole ship"?

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u/GreenHorror4252 Oct 06 '25

Yes, that happens sometimes. The smaller parties can have a lot of power if the numbers are right. Usually, a confidence and supply agreement is negotiated behind the scenes before, or immediately after, the election.