Politics II
Global Elections
Over the past month I have hosted a series of meetings to discuss the topic of global elections. The purpose of these discussions was to help expand our understanding of the topic. I also truly believe that someone will begin to produce global elections, in a meaningful way, sometime very soon.
To begin with, I’m not a fan of any form of one-world government, nor do I think it’s even a remote possibility. Instead, there are many other issues that can be decided through some form of global referendum, so we started with this series of questions.
When will we see the first global election with over 500 million people voting from over 50 different countries? Will they be voting for a person, or voting on an issue? If it’s a person, what position will that person be running for? And, if it’s an issue, what issue will be so compelling that everyone wants to vote on it?
Perhaps more importantly, what organization will have the capability to mastermind such an election, and what will they get out of it?
History of Global Elections
The idea of global elections is not new. In fact, people have dabbled with the concept for centuries. However, the Internet has opened up an entirely new toolbox of possibilities.
Indeed, some organizations are already hitting the numbers I had originally posed as a benchmark for global elections. Here are three significant examples:
1.) Eurovision Song Contest
Started in 1956, the Eurovision Song Competition is the longest running example of a global election process, with 51 different countries having participated at least once over the past 54 years.
The contest is also one of the longest-running television programs in the world, with audience viewership as high as 600 million internationally.
The rules for this competition have become quite elaborate with each person allowed to vote multiple with a point system that ranges in value from 1 to 12. One interesting caveat is that voters cannot vote for songs from their own country.
2.) American Idol
American Idol is a reality television competition to find new solo singing talent. Debuting on June 11, 2002, as American Idol: The Search for a Superstar on the Fox network, the show has since become one of the most popular in the history of American television. It is currently the most-watched TV series in the Nielsen ratings.
From the semifinal onwards, the fate of the contestants is decided by public vote. During the contestant’s performance as well as the recap at the end, a toll-free telephone number for each contestant is displayed on the screen. For a two-hour period after the episode ends (up to four hours for the finale) in each US time zone, viewers may dial or text their preferred contestant’s telephone number, and each call or text is registered as a vote for that contestant. Viewers are allowed to vote as many times as they can within the voting window, however, the show discards the votes coming from power dialers.
Over 110 million votes were cast in the first season, and by Season 8 the total has increased to 624 million. Voting via text messaging was made available in the second season when AT&T joined as a sponsor of the show, and 7.5 million text messages were sent to American Idol that season. Over time, the number of texts has rapidly increased, reaching a peak of 178 million texts in Season 8. The votes are counted and verified by Telescope Inc.
3.) New Seven Wonders of the World
New Seven Wonders of the World was a project that attempted to update the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World concept with a modern list of wonders. A popularity poll was led by Canadian-Swiss Bernard Weber and organized by the Swiss-based, government-controlled New7Wonders Foundation, with winners announced on July 7, 2007 in Lisbon.
The New7Wonders Foundation claimed that more than 100 million votes were cast through the Internet or by telephone. Nothing prevented multiple votes, so the poll was considered “decidedly unscientific”.
According to John Zogby, CEO of the New York-based polling organization Zogby International, New7Wonders Foundation drove “the largest poll on record” even though the numbers in the Eurovision Song Competition and American Idol were higher.
The program drew a wide range of official reaction. Some countries touted their finalist and tried to get more votes cast for it, while others downplayed or criticized the contest. After supporting the New7Wonders Foundation at the beginning of the campaign, by providing advice on nominee selection, the UN’s Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) distanced itself from the undertaking in 2007.
In 2007 the foundation plans to launch a similar contest, called New7Wonders of Nature, in mid-2011.
Missing Pieces
The trickiest part to hosting global elections will be the voting process and making sure the technology is hacker-proof. Several companies have tried, but devious people are willing to go to great lengths to find holes in the systems. Each of the three previous examples dealt with this issue differently.
In addition to technological problems are issues of authority, accountability, and enforceability. As an example, if world-wide referendums were used to decide on an official global currency or official global language, who will enforce the results? What penalty will there be for non-compliance?
Credibility will be a deciding factor when it comes to attracting voters. Is the election being hosted by a credible organization, and will the results really matter. As an example, a referendum on an official earth language will have far less credibility if it is sponsored by the BBC or China Daily than if it is officially sanctioned by the United Nations.
Perhaps the biggest missing piece will be the rules that apply to the voting process. Who gets to vote? Will it be a majority-wins process with multiple rounds of voting, or will the greatest number that prevails? How much time will people have to cast their vote? Who will verify the results? What checks-and-balances will be in place to assure the process hasn’t been manipulated or tampered with? Will there be a cost for voting, such as $1 per vote? And will the results be tabulated using the English or Metric system? (Sorry, but I just have to poke fun of this long-standing dispute over measurement standards.)
None of the “missing pieces” I’ve listed above are insurmountable. Someone will figure them out. It’s just a matter of time before we start seeing lots of activity in this space.
Possible Global Election Issues
One central purpose of a global election will be to serve as a marketing tool, to expand awareness of certain events and to give the public the feeling of ownership when it comes to a specific selection process. As an example, each of the following could be handled with an initial slate to choose from, with people around the world making the final selection.
- Location of the Olympics
- Location of the World Cup
- Time Magazine “Person of the Year”
- Selection of the Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Over the coming years we will see a number of variations to the global election theme and you will be asked to weigh-in on a variety of major global topics.
- Should plastic bags and bottles be banned worldwide?
- Should research be banned on creating new forms of life, human cloning, or genetically modified organisms?
- Should there be a global standard for human rights, issues of right and wrong, or other life-related matters.
- Who owns the Moon or Mars? Who has the right to mine asteroids or mineral deposits found deep within the center of the earth?
Again, many of the proposed elections will come across as a nuisance, background noise with very little credibility. But all will be contributing to a larger movement involving global democratic processes.
Organizations Most Likely to Host the World’s First Global Election
When thinking through the list of organizations that may benefit from hosting a global election, it’s important to understand which ones wouldn’t.
Existing countries have an obvious election bias, and the United Nations, beyond the internal complexities of getting an issue like this passed, would have too many members who feel threatened by the results.
Here is an initial list of organizations that come to mind:
- TED – Founded in 1984, TED (Technology Entertainment and Design) is a global set of conferences produced by the American private non-profit Sapling Foundation, formed to disseminate what they refer to as “ideas worth spreading.” TED videos have emerged as the “gold standard” for intellectual discussion, with thousands of the world’s best thinkers unveiling their ideas for anyone to see. Their recent expansion into TEDx events produced in over 60 different countries around the world annually is giving them an unusual platform to work from, with local organizers already in place in each of these countries. As an example, hosting a global election for the “cause of the year” would be a natural extension of their current business operation.
- Google – As the largest company on the Internet, Google is also the most influential. They are also the most likely organization to create the infrastructure necessary to host global elections. Facebook – Voting through a Facebook process will be vastly different than through any other electoral system. It will be a people-encouraging-people process involving person-to-person influence. I would rank Facebook as the second most likely organization to create the infrastructure necessary to manage global elections.
- ICANN – While the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) is already in the position of being a global authority, and they are already hosting “global elections” for board seats, they are not a likely candidate to expand much beyond what they are doing today. The U.S. still controls the Internet backbone and, for the most part, ICANN is on a fairly short leash when it comes to trying something new.
- Fox Television – With American Idol already producing huge revenue streams, the people who have access to the inner workings of this existing system are well positioned to experiment with something new.
- A Virtual Country – Sovereignty is a difficult thing to define. Virtual counties are currently operating below the radar. Their self-claimed authority extends across geographical boundaries and virtual “citizens” can easily sign up without compromising their current affiliations or allegiances. A global election may give them the notoriety they want to attract more people, influence, and credibility on the world stage.
- A Micronation State – A micronation differs from a virtual country in that it has a land mass it calls home. As I mentioned in earlier writings, micronations will be used as experimental nation-states, and one may be developed for the express purpose of hosting global elections.
Final Thoughts
Global elections pose a substantial threat to our current balance of powers. While some people will dismiss them as unrealistic, others will view them as an undermining force. They may be both.
One approach will be to attach global elections to non-threatening referendums about significant, but non-lethal issues such as the Eurovision Song Competition, American Idol, and New7Wonders Foundation. Beauty contest elections like this may include favorite movies, books, actors, actresses, songs, or cause-of-the-year. They pose no real threat to any existing power structures.
Once the number of participants involved reaches a critical mass, a second phase of elections can be structured to deal with more pithy issues.
Global elections are about to enter a whole new era. They open the doors to fame, fortune, power, and influence in ways that no other process ever has.
A sporting event that wraps itself in a global election process can quickly rise in stature to rival the Olympics or the World Cup. A television network with a significant push into the online world has the potential to greatly extend their influence into global markets. Social networks that add meaning and privilege to their existing platforms can make huge inroads into areas where they were ignored in the past.
But I’m only scratching the surface.
Global elections are coming, and they will happen in a big way. Hold onto your hats, it’s going to be a bumpy ride.
By Futurist Thomas Frey
Author of “Epiphany Z – 8 Radical Visions for Transforming Your Future”
Features Archive
- Green Energy
- Climate Change III
- Climate Change II
- Farming II
- Farming
- Banking VI
- Banking V
- Banking IV
- Politics III
- Politics II
- Politics
- AI Ethics IV
- AI Ethics III
- AI Ethics II
- AI Ethics
- Waste III
- Medicine
- Water IV
- Water III
- Creativity
- Solar Energy II
- Solar Energy
- Fashion
- Fashion II
- Humans IV
- Humans III
- Humans II
- Humans
- Money V
- Money IV
- Money III
- Money II
- Money
- Urban Futures II
- Urban Futures
- Ageing II
- Ageing
- Space IV
- Space III
- Space II
- Space
- Governments
- Metaverse IV
- Metaverse III
- Metaverse II
- Metaverse
- Technology III
- Technology IV
- Technology II
- Privacy III
- Privacy II
- Privacy
- Meat IV
- Meat III
- Meat II
- Meat
- Housing III
- Housing II
- Housing
- Retail
- Insurance
- Logistics II
- Logistics
- Mobile II
- Security III
- Security II
- Language II
- Tourism Post-Covid-19
- Entertainment Post-Covid-19 II
- Entertainment Post-Covid-19
- Cities Post-Covid-19
- Work Post-Covid-19 III
- Work Post-Covid-19 II
- Work Post-Covid-19
- Post-Covid-19 Economy II
- Post-Covid-19 Economy
- Education Post-Covid-19 II
- Education Post-Covid-19
- Post-Covid-19 V
- Post-Covid-19 IV
- Post-Covid-19 III
- Post-Covid-19 II
- Post-Covid-19
- Pandemics V
- Pandemics IV
- Pandemics III
- Pandemics II
- Pandemics
- Food II
- Food
- Futures V
- Futures IV
- Cars V
- Cars IV
- Cars III
- Cars II
- Cars
- Futures III
- Futures II
- Futures
- Education XI
- Education X
- Education IX
- Cities VI
- Cities V
- Cities IV
- AfriCities VIII
- AfriCities VII
- AfriCities VI
- AfriCities V
- AfriCities IV
- AfriCities III
- AfriCities II
- Youth II
- Migrants II
- Foresight IV
- Foresight III
- Higher Education VII
- Agriculture VII
- Work III
- Work/Women
- Cities III
- Carbon Tax
- Higher Education VI
- Higher Education V
- Higher Education IV
- Higher Education III
- Higher Education II
- Higher Education
- Banking III
- Banking II
- Banking
- Humanity VII
- Humanity VI
- Humanity V
- Humanity IV
- Humanity III
- Women V
- Digitalisation of Informal sector
- Islamic Economy
- Drones VII
- Drones VI
- Drones V
- Drones IV
- Drones III
- Drones II
- Drones
- Digital Health III
- Digital Health II
- Digital Health
- Transport IV
- Transport III
- Transport II
- Transport
- Infrastructure V
- Infrastructure IV
- Infrastructure III
- Crime V
- Crime IV
- Crime III
- Crime II
- Crime
- Agriculture VI
- Agriculture V
- Agriculture IV
- Agriculture III
- Agriculture II
- Women IV
- Women III
- Women II
- Women
- Humanity II
- Humanity
- Artificial Intelligence V
- Artificial Intelligence IV
- Artificial Intelligence III
- Universal Basic Income
- Alternative Economies V
- Alternative Economies IV
- Foresight II
- Alternative Economies III
- Additive manufacturing
- Artificial Intelligence II
- AI Risk, Ethics & Regulation
- Waste II
- Mining II
- African Futures IV
- Education VIII
- Justice
- Libraries III
- Libraries II
- Libraries
- Education VII
- Education VI
- Education V
- Green Energy II
- Financial Systems III
- Education IV
- Alternative Economies II
- Research
- Education III
- Artificial Intelligence
- Economic Integration II
- Health Inequity
- Invisible Economy
- Future Thinking
- Pan Africanism VII
- Infrastructure
- Financial Systems
- Sustainability III
- Sustainability II
- Alternative Economies
- Water II
- Mega Trends 2015, 2010s, 2100s?
- AfriCities
- Energy
- Sustainability
- Families
- Prisons II
- Prisons
- Work II
- Work
- Health II
- Pan-Africanism VI
- African Futures III
- African Futures II
- African Futures
- Economic Integration
- Climate Action III
- Manufacturing
- Green Economy
- Climate Action II
- Climate Action
- Foresight
- Ethnicity & Tribalism
- Pan-Africanism V
- Youth Policy II
- Gender Equality II
- Gender Equality
- Youth Policy
- Migrants
- Waste
- Pan-Africanism IV
- Pan-Africanism III - East Africa
- Pan-Africanism II
- Pan-Africanism
- Philanthropy
- Renewable Energy III
- Renewable Energy II
- Renewable Energy
- Informal Cities III
- Informal Cities II
- Informal Cities
- Human Development
- Security
- Global Engaged Citizens - Upskilling for Post Growth Futures, Together
- System Thinking - Systems thinking and courage
- Thrivability II - New Movements
- Thrivability - Bottom Line to Full Circle
- Youth Unemployment
- Food Insecurity II
- Food Insecurity
- Language
- Globesity
- Kenya II
- Kenya
- Mining
- Infrastructure II
- Women & Poverty II
- Women & Poverty
- Cities II
- Cities
- Innovation
- Climate Change
- Agriculture
- Books
- Youth
- Mobile
- Regional Integration IV
- Regional Integration III
- Regional Integration II
- Regional Integration
- Fresh Water
- Education II
- Health
- Education
- Leisure
- Urban Poor
- Economy
- Peace
- Women
- Technology
- Environmental
- Democracy
- The brief called for a blog
- Post-oil
- Game Changers