Ethics of Representative
The other night I saw two delegates from Florida interviewed. Both were elected to vote for Trump at the convention. The two were Cruz supporters and freely admitted on national television they ran as Trump delegates only so they could switch their vote to Cruz on the second ballot if there was one. I gather is part of the Cruz “ground team” procedure. The rules allow this. The two were asked if they thought they were doing anything unethical by being elected to vote for Trump with an agenda to vote for Cruz. Both answered it was not unethical. What is the opinion in the Gulch?
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1. Is there an issue here or is an issue being created (including giving false or misleading information)?
2. If there is an issue, are reality and reason going to prevail or are lies going to win the day?
3. Is the issue at hand an attempt to overtake reality and reason and replace them with a counterfeit reality?
Deception is always an indicator of ethical misconduct. Look for deception and you will find ethics are under assault.
We who laud ethics often get most upset with the ethics of those we would like to respect. Let's have a shout out for the vile "ethics" of the utterly corrupt Clinton. Or the jovially perceived monster in the Bernie suit, selling the poison of socialism to unwitting children.
Delegates who will actually vote for what they promised by law fall a lot closer to the ethics tree than most of what transpires in presidential campaigns.
Like Treebeard in "Lord of the RIngs", since no one is entirely on my side, I'm not entirely on anyone else's side. But that doesn't mean I stay in the forest and don't fight in the battle for Middle Earth.
Our entire nation would be very different sans the Twelfth Amendment because third party runs for President would be the norm - not the exception. A repeal of the Twelfth Amendment (IMO) would go a long ways towards eliminating much of the power of the current two-party political system we have had for the last two centuries.
You are arguing "fairness" - not ethics at all! It is not unlike Donald Trump's continual whining about how "unfair" the process is despite the fact that the rules were the rules before the campaigning began, but because the outcome wasn't in his favor that somehow it is an ethical dilemma.
Ethical dilemmas arise when there is a conflict between the letter of the law and the spirit of the law. You are implying that there is a spirit of the law with respect to delegate voting that delegates must continue to vote for the same candidate no matter what. I do not see that implication anywhere in our current voting system, which is what I pointed out with Jefferson v Adams. It is an argument concocted by Trump supporters merely to gin up emotional outrage and manipulate public opinion. I reject such attempts as the resort of the immature: a temper tantrum of a spoiled brat.
However, what one must recognize is that this very style of election was first used to select our President of the United States. If the votes are distributed in such a manner in which no candidate achieves the critical number necessary to secure that seat (or in this case nomination) than some votes must necessarily change to break the impasse. So to say that changing one's vote after the first/obligated vote is unethical is ridiculous. It would result only in perpetual stalemate of the system. Voters must be able to be swayed to break such an impasse. Otherwise, you would have no delegate at all from that Party.
Hmmmm... Maybe I inadvertently hit on something there...
Anyway, going back to the mention about the original elections for President, I think the original election between Adams and Jefferson to be highly instructive as to the ramifications of such a system (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_.... As a result, we got the Twelfth Amendment, which also instituted political parties and neutered the threat of Presidential veto.
Republican National Committee
1854-2016
Perhaps its the end of the two party ram-it-down-our-throats system. I hope so. The whole delegate system is VERY unethical and crooked, as is the electoral college.
Then is it ethical to vote for a candidate in the general election if you do not truly support that candidate's views, that is, if your "hidden agenda" is really to advance a cause contrary to the one that candidate supports? If not, then your only ethical choices are to vote Libertarian, cast a write-in ballot or stay home.
Should he evasively start to talk rules, I'd tell Ted that Trump was right about him after all.
As for the two delegates, I'd like to send them rat costumes for Christmas.
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