Lifthrasil: I think for the cycling idea we would need at least one more trusted Liberal. ...
Brasas: I missed your post earlier while typing - didn't refresh before posting. As I understand you have played IRL, what are your experiences with the cycling strategy? Have you seen it tried often? If yes how did it work?
I have seen it used successfully in late game, after a majority was reasonably sure of the liberality of the players involved. It is also regularly suggested early in the game, but I've never seen it carried through for an entire game. Because:
a) it is suggested as often by fascists as by liberals
b) there WILL be instances in which the president draws 3F cards and has no choice but to pass on 2F, which will cast doubt on the president/chancellor combination after which the rest of the players will not be willing to go along. And rightfully so because
c) fascists will use exactly this excuse: 'I have drawn 3F and couldn't pass along anything else!'
So, we can try the cycling idea, but it's too early to say if greek, scene +at least two more are the correct people to trust.
Also Brasas is right, trusting me with the 'power play' option of being first chancellor and then president is a risk for the liberals, since they don't know that I'm liberal. However, the fascists DO know that I'm liberal and so have even more reason to oppose me in the 'power play' position.
But the 'power play' scenario isn't as dangerous as it may seem at first, since if I were elected chancellor and then pass a fascist policy, the liberals can still vote me out of office when it is my term to be president. So the danger isn't as much one player passing two fascist policies in an unstoppable way. The danger is rather damaging my reputation, if you want to call it like that, if Scene should turn out to be fascist after all and passes 2F to me, in spite of having a choice himself (which no one but him will know). So I agree that there are reasons to skip this government and go directly to me being president. However, I think there is a good chance that Scene is actually liberal and that would increase our chances of passing more liberal policies early and I think that chance is worth the risk it comes with.
@all: keep count of which policies are out of the deck so that we can estimate how likely claims of having drawn 3F are true.
Currently we know that
-1L is out of the stack
-at least 1F is out of the stack as well, since both P and C said that 1F and 1L was passed along.
-if we trust greek's statement, 1L and 2F are out of the stack. But if you don't trust him, 2L and 1F are also possible, even if mathematically less likely.
So, most probably stack composition at the moment is 9F and 5L (less likely, but also possible: 10F and 4L)