A slightly better way might be to have two VPs, one your running mate and the other the opposition candidate (or their running mate if they refuse the position). Then the Prez and both VPs form a triumvirate and vote on all Prez matters. Also, put a rule in place as well that each of the triumvirate needs to side with each of the others a specified minimum amount of the time in votes, so that they are forced to play a compromise shell game rather than always voting down the opposition. That would ensure that the minor candidate wins 1/3 of presidential decision votes rather than 0%
I see this as counter-productive in one very important manner: the
executive part of the executive branch. It's arguably the only branch that still does anything, and weakening it in that way purely to further... what? Make the President accountable to the votes? Not minimize the value of the people who voted against? The *point* of the President, to the extent that there is one, is that they
act. They aren't supposed to decide things in the first place; the fact that they do is more a function of the weakness of Congress as an institution than of the Presidency. The fact of the matter is that Congress does a very good job of preventing the President of running amok by hamstringing it, and unless someone can provide to me a reason why creating
more situations for gridlock, I think it's a silly idea. I mean what is your solution even: one-third of the time? So what, the two that agree with each other just pad out their dcisions with some specified quota of superficial decisions and get to do what they want anyway? Or what if one decides to simply not approve anything: then what?
You guys need to stop thinking about your proposals as if they would work, and start thinking about your proposals as if someone would twist them as much as they can get away with, because they
will be.
If you mean have people elect the Cabinet members, that'd be a horrible idea, mainly because a lot of people would have no clue as to who those people are.
That's only true because we don't have to elect them, and thus most people don't have to care. And again, given the recent election, any points about political apathy for the President vs. the Cabinet is probably already invalid.
Try this argument then: do people make better decisions when they care about the issue a lot? Caring and knowing a lot about are not synonymous, as the recent debate on any number of issues illustrates.