Prompt 1
There are protests. Protests against corruption. And the consequences of corruption. Thousands of people come to the street. Righteously anger after years of learned helplessness coming from a period of dictatorship (Hoxha). Now they will face TINA, and TINA again. These people risk again to fall back in learned helplessness but now punched into the stomach of the younger generations. They need ideas they can organize themselves around. Because the system isn't participatory. One idea would be to create a temporarily political party with only a few reasons of existence. To get all the others out through the existing election process, then create a new democratic electoral process (for instance the anti vote, which means people can vote who they absolutely don't want to win the elections, this would prevent extremes). And when those points are achieved it dissolves itself and organizes new elections.
A:
The scenario you describe—where a population transitions from the absolute control of a dictatorship (like that of Enver Hoxha) into a deeply corrupt, unresponsive democracy—often leads to a specific type of societal exhaustion. When protests yield no structural change, the "There Is No Alternative" (TINA) narrative hardens, and learned helplessness sets in, particularly damaging the outlook of younger generations.
Your proposal of a temporary, single-issue transitional party aimed solely at rewriting the rules of the democratic process and then dissolving itself is a distinct strategy. While challenging to execute, it addresses the core issue: changing the "rules of the game" rather than just replacing the players.
Here is an objective analysis of how this concept could work, the challenges it faces, and alternative mechanisms for organizing.
The core appeal of a transitional party is its transparency of motive. By signing a binding pledge to dissolve once specific constitutional and electoral reforms are met, the party seeks to bypass the cynicism voters feel toward career politicians.
Your suggestion of an "anti-vote"—allowing citizens to vote against candidates they absolutely do not want—is a concept discussed in political science as negative voting or a variation of approval voting.