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Add party & house filters to the policy page, so I can quickly review policy agreement by party or house of parliament #1092

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brtrx opened this issue Mar 21, 2016 · 18 comments

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@brtrx
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brtrx commented Mar 21, 2016

Rationale

Currently, users must click twice from this page in order to determine which party a particular member belongs to, making it impossible to use this page to quickly understand party policy positions or relative agreement within a party.

The mockup below attempts to repair this by allowing users to quickly filter by party.

At the same time, often critical debates happen in one house or another (e.g. the recent SenateSleepover), and so positions across House or Senate are more important.

Notes

option 3c party house filters

@brtrx
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brtrx commented Mar 21, 2016

Mind the typo in the filter options on the right in the mockup above.
Obviously, it should read "House of Representatives" not "House of Representative"

@brtrx
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brtrx commented Mar 21, 2016

Once we add filters, we'll need an empty state.
Here's a mockup.
policy page - filter results empty state - no summary

Clicking "refresh the page" should do just that, and in doing so, clear filters (i.e. filters shouldn't be stateful).

@equivalentideas
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Thanks @brtrx .

Currently, users must click twice from this page in order to determine which party a particular member belongs to, making it impossible to use this page to quickly understand party policy positions or relative agreement within a party.

Could you explain the user need for this feature?

@brtrx
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brtrx commented Mar 22, 2016

Hey Luke,

Here are some questions I might have in mind when arriving on this page, which currently require a lot of effort to answer.

"Are the Greens for or against this policy?"
"Did the Greens vote against this in the Senate?"
"Are there any rebels within the ALP on this issue?"
"What was the name of that opposition Senator who voted with the govt on this policy?"
"How did the minor parties / independents vote?"

All of these could be quickly answered without leaving this page, by providing party and house filters.

Does that explain the user need better?

@equivalentideas
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Does that explain the user need better?

Hmmm. Those are all potentially interesting questions, but I'm not sure if knowing the answers will be useful to most people.

We have a fairly strong belief that has driven the design of the site that the people are much more important that the parties. This is because it's much easier for someone to impact what their elected representative does in parliament than unelected party organisations. You also elect a person, not a party.

One of our design principles is:

Focus on enabling actions that citizens want to take and access to the knowledge that they are looking for. Reduce the cost of them taking action. The action is the important bit. Citizens don't need to understand the bureaucracy in order to use and access government.

So I guess the real question is “What's the action that this information would help people take?”

@brtrx
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brtrx commented Mar 22, 2016

That's fair enough. And thanks for pointing me to those design docs. Great design principles, BTW!

I guess I have a couple of ways of responding.
Obviously, I'm new, so if I'm contradicting any user research you guys let me know. I'd love to read it.
Still, a few of the questions I've mentioned above are in your design docs here https://github.com/openaustralia/publicwhip/blob/master/design_docs/user-questions.md#policy including "How does the parliament vote overall?" (why could be interpreted as e.g. is the senate hostile) and "How do the parties vote on this policy?"

OK, so if that's information that people might want, one of the other principles is people are smart and busy, so we need to offer them a way to get that info quickly.

But you also asked what actions people can take, and how this enhances a connection to members of parliament.

And sure, this feature mighn't do anything to modify your relationship to your own member or Senator directly, apart from providing political context.

But it can do a few other important things, especially if you are genuinely concerned about the policy in question

  1. it can help you identify whether your MPs party needs you to speak up on this issue, and whether you should be writing to Senators or other House MPs in doing so (e.g. by quickly seeing that Senate is hostile)
  2. if your own MP is against the policy, it can tell you whether they voted with their party or against, I.e. whether you need to change your MPs mind, or their party's, on this issue
  3. it can help you discover other MPs or parties that think like you, which may make you change (or threaten to change) your vote to that party - especially pertinent for Senate voting, I think.
  4. if you do need to change your party's mind, it can help you identify other party members who do rebel on the issue, I.e. potential allies in changing the party line.

What do you think?

@equivalentideas
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@brtrx Thanks heaps for this detailed thinking but it’s going to require some more serious thinking, research and discussion on our part next time we're working on this project as a team.

I also think those user questions are a bit outdated from our thinking at this point :( I realise our thinking about the UX for They Vote For You isn't well documented, which is a bug we should fix. It makes it hard to act on contribution like this, which are still really useful in documenting a line of thinking—just hard to pick up for us at the moment.

@mackaymackay
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Related to this issue, we've had a Facebook comment that adding a background colour to our head shots would be helpful since it would give users a visual indication of how party members are voting.

For example, we could add a red border for Labor members, blue for Coalition members and green for Green members.

@mackaymackay
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Another related suggestion via Facebook today: "How about colour coding the background or tagging photos with Party affiliation?"

What do you think is the likelihood that we could implement something like this @jamezpolley ?

@katska
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katska commented Feb 25, 2020

The thinking was that party colours props up the idea that people have to vote with their parties, rather than representing their constituents views. I think its worth re-examining the idea! Does it help or hinder to not display party colours?

@mackaymackay
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I think it would help to display party colours. While philosophically I agree with placing the emphasis on a representative as belonging to the electorate first and the party second, the reality of our political system usually means that the opposite is the case. Since we want TVFY to be as helpful as possible, and considering that this suggestion has been made several times, I think it's time to go for it, if we can; unless someone has firm objections.

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stale bot commented Oct 13, 2021

This issue has been automatically marked as stale because there has been no activity on it for about six months. If you want to keep it open please make a comment and explain why this issue is still relevant. Otherwise it will be automatically closed in a week. Thank you!

@stale stale bot added the wontfix label Oct 13, 2021
@mlandauer mlandauer modified the milestone: Post 2022 Federal Election Dec 1, 2021
@mlandauer mlandauer modified the milestone: 2022 Federal Election Dec 15, 2021
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This issue has been automatically marked as stale because there has been no activity on it for about six months. If you want to keep it open please make a comment and explain why this issue is still relevant. Otherwise it will be automatically closed in a week. Thank you!

@stale stale bot added the wontfix label Jun 16, 2022
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@mackaymackay mackaymackay reopened this Oct 7, 2022
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@MarkWhybird
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Reading through all this having come over from my #1410 suggestion, I think that a small, fairly deemphasised (current) party logo in the bottom left corner of each photo achieves the goal of seeing party lines while still maintaining the emphasis on the individual rather than the party. Super quick example attached.

image

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@mackaymackay
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We've had another suggestion related to this via an email from Tal Nelson:

Firstly, when hovering over an MPs headshot on a policy vote page, it would be helpful to include what party they belong to in brackets.

Secondly, some kind of graphic that illustrates what parties have voted in favour or against a policy, and the percent of MPs within a party that voted for or against.

And another graphic the illustrates total support for a bill.

See the attachment for an example of these suggestions: Features.pdf

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