 We have electoral institutions that make it very hard for third parties to compete. I think we have a large degree of consensus here on the panel that we're in this moment of really destructive binary hyper-partisanship that is a fundamental threat to our system of government which demands a high level of compromise and give and take and the way our two-party system is currently operating. Everything is about destroying the other party for now our electoral game. One of the things when we look comparatively around the world most democracies are multi-party democracies. The U.S. is really a rare and strange two-party system and it's not because Americans only want two parties. It's because we have electoral institutions that make it very hard for third parties to compete. We have winner-take-all, first-best-the-post, plurality, electoral systems. I think multi-party democracies allow for more flexibility, more fluidity, more voter choice, more voter engagement because voters are more likely to find a candidate in a party that represents them and every election is competitive.