Historical: https://www.meetup.com/DesigningOpenDemocracy/events/243645818/

Audio Recordings (2 Hours):

Audio (.mp3): https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B_CxDJdeqkGMZERfSGJvMGFZSjA

Written Notes: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-gN-Cqj_KEvNPSLqN4BRWi2xy6Sd-0iBXq58Wd6G970/edit

Nicolas Gruen’s lecture slides: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzE34qpoZvoIdXRscS1ZTGphTjg/view

Hubertus Hofkirchner slide showing how Prediki works from a systems perspective:

Audio Timestamp Summary:

00:00:00 : Designing Open Democracy Intro

00:03:08 : Nicholas Gruen Introduction

00:27:04 : Huburtus Hofkirchner

00:53:43 : QA Starts Here

00:54:11 : Question: How do you introduce this idea to the general public?

00:56:49 : Questions: What sort of result do you need in the next election, before you can demostrate to the public that this system can work?

00:57:21 : Question: Is there an algorithm to help select a citizen juries to make it as representative as possible?

01:01:54 : Question: Have you heard of any kind of meriocratic appointment system?

01:07:42 : Question: How would your system avoid corruption and manipulation?

01:14:07 : Nicholas Gruen & Huburtus Hofkirchner brief debate

01:24:25 : Question: Citizens can deal with issues, but are they dealing with the right issues?

01:27:37 : Questions: How will citizen juries work within existing systems?

01:30:40 : Question: How do you hold your citizen juries party representative accountable?

01:36:39 : Question: Are you suggesting to have citizen juries replace the senate?

01:43:54 : Question: Host noted a question from a previous event. What are the main factors for the acceptance of citizen juries? Did the press humanise the citizen juries members?

01:44:57 : Nicholas Gruen’s difference to Ian Walker’s New Democracy approach

01:48:05 : Event conclusion speech

Audio Timestamp Detailed Breakdown

hh:mm:ss : Description

00:00:00 : Designing Open Democracy Intro 00:00:41 : General Intro to Huburtus 00:01:09 : General Intro to Nicholas 00:01:50 : End of sub 2 min general introduction

00:03:08 : Nicholas Gruen Introduction 00:05:03 : vox pop democracy 00:07:04 : 2013 Australian Election 00:07:22 : Current human biology have not evolved much from the past 00:07:48 : We evolved to like sweet high energy food which is close to good food at the time but in modern times is now junk food 00:08:08 : The current trouble happening in democracy, is because we are getting exactly what we are asking for. 00:09:23 : One of the fundamental issues of democracy is to navigate the cognitive division of labor. 00:10:54 : In the world of politics there is no rational reason for us to vote at all personally 00:11:11 : Politics is essentally ran by emotive force 00:13:43 : Cultural Politics 00:14:12 : Nicholas Gruen shows a UK poster to illustrate bad media coverage 00:14:29 : Media example of Australia Media coverage of Indonesia execution of Australian drug smugglers in comparison to how the media covers Indonesian drug smuggler caught in Australia. 00:15:57 : Cognitive Elites 00:16:24 : This can be done via election or via lot (random selection) 00:16:41 : Election is a recent idea around the french revolution 00:17:32 : Election is a competitive process and aristocratic 00:17:58 : While democratic, how representative is the elected politicans to their population 00:18:22 : Here we have a unitary system where people main problem is try to get to an agreement 00:18:29 : In a jury your job isn’t to beat anyone its to come to a conclusion 00:18:44 : Juries is democratic in the sense of equality of speech not freedom of speech 00:19:05 : Pauline hanson is an authentic voice 00:19:38 : Adelate citizen juries example 00:21:19 : 18th and 19th century about setting up checks and balances, between lower house representing the people and upper house representing property rights 00:21:34 : Now in modern times we should do checks and balances between the people represented by elected representives and the people represented as themselves in a jury 00:23:19 : The magic trick/myth is that the reason for current troubles is because the pollies are the letting us down or are the bad guys.

00:27:04 : Huburtus Hofkirchner 00:27:21 : Huburtus Hofkirchner introduction 00:28:29 : Huburtus Hofkirchner background as an investment banker 00:28:56 : The idea of Prediki started around the time of the internet bubble 00:31:01 : Austrian Economics thought that with proper processes a collective intelligence can form 00:32:26 : Iron law of oligarchy. Michels’ theory states that all complex organizations, regardless of how democratic they are when started, eventually develop into oligarchies. 00:34:11 : mechanic of prediki 00:34:42 : Prediki people have to first bet on outcome of a decision, which switchs a different mode of thinking 00:35:18 : Prediki also prompts users to specify reason for their decision 00:36:27 : Sentiment Analysis 00:36:45 : Prediki then dissects the arguments into graphs of sentiments to an issue, as well as breakdown on reasons for such sentiment 00:38:00 : “Brexit Example: Most google search after the vote is ““what is the EU?””” 00:39:52 : Simililarties and difference towards Nicholas Gruen’s proposal 00:40:29 : What is the biggest motivator for people to participate in democracy? 00:41:27 : Many public concerns are ignored because pollies think the public is too stupid to decide anything 00:42:19 : Attempts to proposed this system to traditional political parties was unsuccessful 00:44:11 : Showed a slide about prediki system map 00:45:32 : Using algorithms to determine the breakdown of opinions 00:47:01 : Breaking down misconception of stupidity of the masses 00:47:41 : Finding domain knowlegable people via algorithms 00:49:37 : Allowing for specialisation 00:50:03 : Citizen juries allows for increased political bandwith 00:50:58 : End of presentation warning 00:51:46 : How did Huburtus Hofkirchner’s party go in the election? 00:52:32 : What he learnt to improve chances for the next election 00:53:06 : Face it, no one is interested in democracy. Everyone assumes it works

00:53:43 : QA Starts Here

00:54:11 : Question: How do you introduce this idea to the general public? 00:55:05 : Huburtus Hofkirchner response

00:56:49 : Questions: What sort of result do you need in the next election, before you can demostrate to the public that this system can work? 00:57:07 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Response

00:57:21 : Question: Is there an algorithm to help select a citizen juries to make it as representative as possible? 00:57:37 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Response 00:58:27 : Geelong citizen juries example

01:01:54 : Question: Have you heard of any kind of meriocratic appointment system? 01:03:51 : Nicholas Gruen - athenian used elections for army commanders 01:04:45 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Adds

01:07:42 : Question: How would your system avoid corruption and manipulation? 01:08:29 : Nicholas Gruen Responses 01:12:15 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Adds

01:14:07 : Nicholas Gruen & Huburtus Hofkirchner brief debate 01:14:10 : Nicholas Gruen starts 01:15:17 : Huburtus Hofkirchner 01:16:37 : Nicholas Gruen 01:17:52 : Huburtus Hofkirchner - on prediction market 01:20:41 : Nicholas Gruen 01:21:14 : Huburtus Hofkirchner 01:23:23 : Nicholas Gruen

01:24:25 : Question: Citizens can deal with issues, but are they dealing with the right issues? 01:25:29 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Respond

01:27:37 : Questions: How will citizen juries work within existing systems? 01:28:23 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Responsed

01:30:40 : Question: How do you hold your citizen juries party representative accountable? 01:31:53 : Huburtus Hofkirchner Respond 01:35:27 : Nicholas Gruen Adds

01:36:39 : Question: Are you suggesting to have citizen juries replace the senate? 01:37:02 : Nicholas Gruen Responds 01:43:35 : Slow Democracy

01:43:54 : Question: Host noted a question from a previous event. What are the main factors for the acceptance of citizen juries? Did the press humanise the citizen juries members? 01:44:30 : People in general think elections are kind of like auctions

01:44:57 : Nicholas Gruen’s difference to Ian Walker’s New Democracy approach

01:48:05 : Event conclusion speech

Designing Open Democracy : Citizens’ Democracy - Presentations and Q&A

Presenters:

Nicholas Gruen

Huburtus Hofkirchner

Nicholas Gruen’s Presentation:

“Detoxing Democracy: is there a simple solution to a complex problem?”

Global Context

2008 Obama elected, economic crisis, policy brainstorming session (anyone policy suggestion - internet mediated democracy) Legalise marijuana, Released Obama’s birth certificate, Info/Conspiracies about aliens

‘Vox pop’ democracy: finding what people think before they think

Brexit predicated on idea of wanting to do a deal?

Trump, “nothing like anything we’ve ever seen before, sociopathic presumably, disorganised mentally

Australia Situation

Living in upshot of Aus parliament 2013 after elections blasting away of difficult policy consensus over 15 years - Carbon tax (10 billion p/y) most parliamentarians against it, 80-90%



Analogy: society being optimised for things evolved on African Savannah

- applies to industry, aspects of our lives

- liked clean food, rich in fat, sweet

- getting exactly what we’re asking for vs “nasty poiticians”

Joseph Schumpeter (Austria), 1943

1.Division of cognitive labour

- fundamental issue: navigate division of labour

- essentially: simple orgs have to break themselves up

2.Engine of engagement: emotion

- no rational reason to vote, infinitismal chance to influence to vote

- politics run by emotion

- ’feminine emotions’: bind together from within

- ’masculine emotions’: ‘ill’, emotion for many, reason for the few

- balance of emotions:

It was quite a joy to hold the little kids hands and watch them smile ~~~ Naval Commander

We decide who comes here and the terms that they come ~~~ John Howard

Consequence:

- ~1989 only soundbites get through - ’politics as culture war’, strengthened by press (plays on emotions) - vignette: Indonesion smuggler - contrast of Daily Telegraph’s contradictory position

What kind of emotions, look at origins

Deliberative: representation by election by lot

Schumpeter’s view: not everyone can have a view about everything

Before French Rev = by lot

By election Competitive: cannot be a politician w/o using other politicians Aristocratic

by lot Unitary (problem: come to agreement, conclusion) Democratic (greek word for ‘equality of speech’)



e.g. people heard more through Pauline Hanson

Citizen Jury

People on citizen juries report the experience as a good one

Design proposal to implement Citizen Juries in Australia upper house: By lot (vs by property) lower house: By election (vs by people)

the path political activism; philanthropy, crowdfunded; people’s chamber chosen by lot



Vox pop democracy

magic trick: politicians ‘bad guys’ responsible for ‘dirty policy’

Joe Trippi, The revolution will not be televised (2008)

idea: we the people need to take the charge (political activism)

Co-founder of Medium, ‘hype hype hooray cycle’

idea: app lowers transaction, brings people in proposal: need more transaction cost



Solutions people want to build introduced for other problems

Huburtus Hofkirchner

Story of past 3 months, group in Austria - more direct participation of citizens in parliament

Background: invest banker in IT space, founded first online brokerage, become CEO of Austrian telecom company, serial entrpreneur

Prediki founded in time world was mad (tech bubble), internet companies founded by media companies worth more than established media

Issues he aims to solve

People say what they think before they think e.g. stock exchange, before elections

people don’t change - still vote same people

Thus he started the Prediki project.

It aims stop collective madness

school of economics: put proper processes; collective intelligence

give tools that don’t produce madness, raise collective intelligence unlike existing: Twitter, Facebook create mobbing behaviour



New Demarki: should not have party democracy

’agency problem’-‘iron law of oligarchy’: eventually serves not original mission but the people running it these people will fall, but they will fall with Atom bombs



Prediki, is a software that allows for sentiment analysis on rate of comments; dissection of arguments

People don’t just say their opinion, they have to set a bet (with virtual currency) on their certainty. If asked after bet to give reason; Most will exhibit ‘post-rationalisation’



Current issue in modern politics is that people expected to be dissatisfied; yet voted the same; think after election it will be better:

This is due to post-rationalisation leading to: people argued more people most disatisfied because everything will remain the same



Austrian economics group: Denmarki

instead of representation (oligarchy)

Google: After the british people voted for Brexit. Google statistics showed a spike in the search term “what is the EU”?

Greek national television: lady interviewed “no idea what will happen”, limited capacity to ask

Best tool is citizen juries + open-phase of survey/inquiry in deliberative format

What is the biggest motivator for people to participate in Democracy? what they say/decide actually matters; decisions actually being implemented politicians think people are to stupid to decide

Wanted to worked with existing political parties, {citizen’s}(German word) parliaments; However was rebuffed

Refusal is likely due to politician/decision maker’s fear of being put out of work.

Refusal is likely due to politician/decision maker’s fear of being put out of work. GI!LT is a "Kiss my backside” party to get this new form of goverance in.

Existing governance pardigram: Vote every 5 years, 1-2 months politicians care about what people think as mob



Proposal by GI!LT party

Open Ideation everyone involved in ideation phase voting system where every problem/solution, calculate index from suggestions - ideas on top w/ little objections

Open Survey (diagnostics, prognostics - prediction market)

*problem: ask in 5 minutes, people biased

*problem: ask in 5 minutes, people biased ”people think 90% of people think other people more incompetent than themselves”

How will Prediki software work?

Prediki to find competent people: people better in predicting, better decision makers

’Super Forecasting’ book, Tetlock Hedgehogs vs Foxes (knows many tricks, better decisions)

”Everybody is good at something”; one or two particular things no need to restrict capacity right people to right parliament

e.g. Which democratic system will win, which topic parties should address better than parties not yet in parliament “Nobody interested in democracy. Everybody assumes it works”



Q&A Session

Q: People aren’t engaged; not aware they’re not in democracy; media doesn’t tell them their choices. How to get to people if not aware of?

A: cannot blame media, party system & media same interest (emotion)

Thus the solution may be: as deliberative democrats, not just propose deliberative democracy, conduct citizen juries (3-5) - communicate people’s will on issues, media will write about it

Q: What sort of result would you need in the next elections before you can get a representative into parliament to demonstrate

A: 4%, already obtained 1%

Q: Is there an algorithm for selecting a citizen’s jury - as representative as possible?

A: eg Melbourne citizen’s jury, financial planning jury, Ian Walker Council 5k invitations, 500 interested, random draws ; good outcome for Melbourne council (voted on relevant issues)



Survey phase; in addition to people who volunteered, preselect good decision makers Representative of good decision makers



Q: Theory looks at whole of Government, functions in terms of getting things done. Problem in respect to democracy: parties, representatives, bureaucracy.

Proposal: instead of parties, elect people to perform specific functions. People would elect based on experience.

A: (Nick): US ‘hanging judges’. Atheneans used merit for military (not other situations).

A: (Hubert): statician, drawing of lots. Socrates: statistician not good principle. Media today: election of person. Economics today: we decide by what we buy, consequently the inventor of what we buy. Elect solution irrespective of person (elect on merit of solution); party election based on person - too much about faces.

Q: About interest groups. Concern: parties doing things in interest of big donors, gamers of ‘the system’ i.e. manipulation, corruption. How would you stop that in your proposal?

A: (Nick): stronger discipline on funding. Manipulation still possible / will happen - build system so that ‘bad apples’ don’t. Citizen’s jury - aren’t incentives to favour particular interests. Transparency, anyone can inspect process e.g. Electoral process. This is via Scrutineers, interested parties on both sides. They have the ”Right to clambour over the process by which those people are chosen on the jury” Sufficiently simple, and technical for our society; take into account contextual factors

A: (Huber): interest groups know how to buy politicians, very hard to follow the money unlike Citizen’s jury



Short Debate

Nick: Question - No way to make predictions about what is the case

Huber: Answer - best captured by measurement, ‘what will be’ what shall be” - best answered by citizen juries. (to be put in people’s value judgement) will, prediction market what is, questionaires

Nick: Claim - very difficult separate high and low quality arguments. Predicting the future not the same as indicating what one’s values are.

Huber: Response - no such thing as ‘this prediction market’ as much as there isn’t ‘this …‘ most stuff crap, Prediki is able to distinguish arguments (eg Education, system does find best argument, text-analysis algorithms) Important how you do it

Nick: Question - If you have a campaign, people will flood onto your platform. How do you deal with that?

Huber: Answer - openness, by betting report proves that you can document empirically that the outcome is extremely representative of the general expectation

-Nick: Can you explain how the prediction market works to do that?

-Nick: Can you explain what you mean this is calibrated against prediction?

-Huber: Answer - reflexive system (e.g. How often do you exceed the speed limit)



Q: Who will be asking the questions? Politican make everyone look ‘over there’ whilst something else is happening. Can deal with issues, but something else might be happening?

A: (hubert): Citizen’s jury q - which are the important subjects? World Cafe style into tables, in depth



Q: If you manage to get a representative into parliament, how is it going to work with the normal representative, they’re assumed to be an autonomous actor in the parliament

A: (Hubert): Parliamentarians should speak their own mind and not be bound by anything. Bringing that back for citizens. Representatives do that already. Party leadership - don’t bote accordingly, they won’t be on the list the next time. Parliament already undermined. before simple, nowadays work in communities, goes back to party, goes back to parliamentarians. nobody voting according to their own, because of complexity



Q: G!lt’s representative placed in parliament, elected on assumption to follow through on system. No way in current workings in government they follow the consensus.

A: You can police it. Those people put in parliament must commit, put into writing. people sign declaration, oath Their vote what representative citizens decided (e.g. South Australia, nuclear cycling jury) 70% don’t trust government to decide it minister’s response: only 300 people, not representative. Wanted emotion-driven media referendum.

Nick: “We agree about the moral, but we’re not sure about the facts”

Q: Not sure about the difference between Nick’s and Hubertus’ proposal

A: citizen’s chamber to be a part of parliament, senate chamber govern’s itself with a 51%-49% 3 month delaying power; incentive to take seriously (House of Lord’s in UK) ramp up power w 60/65% majority Carbon price ‘line ball’ thing Section 57 of constitution, ‘joint sittings’ Like war: the fact you can end up in one, you want to avoid it = government wants to court opionions of the people

Politicians terrified of people, trying to give everything they want sit in committee (eg sitting in Gaven Nuseman, California) the wrong Bogeyman, low saleries, got into game due to set of ideological ideas, trying their best

“in poltical combat, the considered opinion of the people amounts to nothing unless if you consider it properly”

we have to face up to the fact that the system does give something close to the will of the people, there’s something [off] about that

Comment (Nick Merange): Ian Walker, opportunity for people to see people on citizen juries were like them; humanised.

Comment (Nick): If you go into democratic election and say what I’ve said or Hubert’s said, it doesn’t ‘cut the mustard’

Difference with Ian Walker, I want to use citizen’s juries as form of political activism vs New Democracy; citizens jury for specific problem eg Oregan, 2011, people got into constiution mechanism where citizen’s initiated referundum (also in their constituion) accompanied by citizen’s review - 300 words how they’re going to vote, how they argue one way or the other

Proposition 73 - classic example of vox pop democracy, result: 70% to 56%

Mailout

Hi everyone,

Brian, Christian and I will be planning the short and medium term future for Designing Open Democracy - the key question will be how to best advocate for interaction between the stakeholders involved in reforming or developing democracy with activity or projects.

In the spirit of ‘openness’, the meeting is open to anyone who wants to help contribute!

Thanks to all who were able to attend the Citizens’ Jury Event! Presentations were interesting and we thank Nick Gruen and Hubertus Hofkirchner for presenting their proposals to improve democracy. If you missed out, there’s a youtube video of Nick Gruen’s presentation here (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0G55N7kdZJY) (and the slides from his presentation are here (https://drive.google.com/open?id=0BzE34qpoZvoIdXRscS1ZTGphTjg)), a link to the recorded podcast from the night (https://drive.google.com/open?id=0B_CxDJdeqkGMZERfSGJvMGFZSjA), and the Open Google Doc with the notes we took (https://docs.google.com/document/d/1-gN-Cqj_KEvNPSLqN4BRWi2xy6Sd-0iBXq58Wd6G970/edit?usp=sharing).

We’d love to get your feedback on this, so please let us know if you find this post-event media useful, and what areas could be improved for next time!

In any case, we’d be interested to get your thoughts on how Designing Open Democracy can help reduce the gap between democracy reformers and other key stakeholders.

Hope to see you there!

Nick