Juries are terrible at offering specialized knowledge, which is becoming increasingly critical in the world.
That's why their primary use in the US (trials) offloads all the specialty requirements onto other parties (adversarial prosecution and defense teams, judges, court staff).
Consequently, in using juries you gain some measure of protection from corruption and responsiveness.
Congress members are rarely experts (but those that are do exist), but their staff usually includes some.
And the problem with expert witness testimony is that it needs to be validated.
If you know nothing about a topic, and I and someone with an opposite viewpoint both put experts in from of you that support our positions, how do you decide?
Better funding and expanding a non-partisan, Library of Congress type resource seems like a better approach to me.
> If you know nothing about a topic, and I and someone with an opposite viewpoint both put experts in from of you that support our positions, how do you decide?
How indeed. How, for instance, would a congress member? What about staffers make them better experts than expert witnesses in a trial? Who are these expert staffers accountable to?
I feel you are being a little unbalanced in your criticism.
I'm all for better "resources", but fail to see how that could be held up as an "either or" replacement for my proposal.
Also, I am confused how it would remedy the ills I am addressing with the proposal. There's a meme online to the effect ~"remember when before the internet we used to think hate was result of lack of access to information".
Your representative will still have their staff and likely even their token experts, but it will still be on them to plead the case to a jury.
I feel those of us with interest in conjuring math in stone with electricity tend toward thinking there is the binary of right and wrong. That, "if only we had more data everyone would agree", but humans and human societies are much more complex and often an argument can be made for both sides of an debate regardless of how sure I am of my side of it.
The point is how do you ensure the argument with better evidence is the one we use to determine policy.
While only using existing tools from our current system I would argue the best way we have is trial by jury.
But how do term limits solve the misinformation and cult of personality that is currently plaguing contemporary American democracy?
The interesting part, for me, of the introduction of juries in bill voting is having to plead the case to the jury rather than their ephemeral status.
This would immediately remove all of the “carve out diplomacy” that is currently used to get bills passed.
Politicians lie by a matter of course, courts have consequences and checks and balances for lies; imperfect, but at least they are there.