If some bad news about a person trusted with a lot of cards break out then it would be predictable that there would be atleast a temptation to pull back a lot of cards away. This could be a problem about volatility of who is the decision maker. If for a year nobody holds a card for more than 3 days it could be too hectic.
Might be a plus or minus, if you have a representative that when important vote is going up then a lot of the representation “goes rogue” and gets used directly it is harder to make political “I do this, you do that” kind of deals.
Having a combination that it would be super clear that each card used is held legitimately and making it secret who you delegate to could be a challenging equation. If some people delegate more often than other people there needs to be a check in that when you delegate that the old authorization goes away and you don’t “double vote” or “double delegate”. Having rare delegations on a constant schedule means especially secure conditions can be held for that day/week.
The line between empty votes and happy partyliner would be blurred. Say that the standard period of voting is 4 years. If you vote in first election and then don’t for the next two elections don’t, voting percentage is down for your part. What if you delegate a vote and don’t redelegate it for 12 years? Is it still valid? Is there a chance that you have forgotten about it? Any kind of rule that “you can only be president for max 2 terms” is going to be tricky to apply (maybe have some threshold of card holding that counts as “term starts” and “term ends”?). Would it be allowed for one person to be ending up to hold all the cards?
With dynamical redelegation it can be ambigous on what kind of powerstructure you are fueling. Does your card get redelegated for 2 layers or 20 layers? Do you get to know if it lands on a person you would disapprove? Does the person you primarily delegate to have the real capacity to supervise the power is used responcibly?
If some bad news about a person trusted with a lot of cards break out then it would be predictable that there would be atleast a temptation to pull back a lot of cards away. This could be a problem about volatility of who is the decision maker. If for a year nobody holds a card for more than 3 days it could be too hectic.
Might be a plus or minus, if you have a representative that when important vote is going up then a lot of the representation “goes rogue” and gets used directly it is harder to make political “I do this, you do that” kind of deals.
Having a combination that it would be super clear that each card used is held legitimately and making it secret who you delegate to could be a challenging equation. If some people delegate more often than other people there needs to be a check in that when you delegate that the old authorization goes away and you don’t “double vote” or “double delegate”. Having rare delegations on a constant schedule means especially secure conditions can be held for that day/week.
The line between empty votes and happy partyliner would be blurred. Say that the standard period of voting is 4 years. If you vote in first election and then don’t for the next two elections don’t, voting percentage is down for your part. What if you delegate a vote and don’t redelegate it for 12 years? Is it still valid? Is there a chance that you have forgotten about it? Any kind of rule that “you can only be president for max 2 terms” is going to be tricky to apply (maybe have some threshold of card holding that counts as “term starts” and “term ends”?). Would it be allowed for one person to be ending up to hold all the cards?
With dynamical redelegation it can be ambigous on what kind of powerstructure you are fueling. Does your card get redelegated for 2 layers or 20 layers? Do you get to know if it lands on a person you would disapprove? Does the person you primarily delegate to have the real capacity to supervise the power is used responcibly?