Just a thought and a bit of defense:
When I was elected to the position of prez, our membership was a total of 8 members on a good night. We do not pay dues, so everyone can belong, regardless of their monetary situation. Did free membership encourage people to attend? It did not. We do vote each April to continue with our same Fall Fundraiser. Except the year I was elected. Our then prez did the research, and found a prospective new fundraiser. I made the decision as the incoming prez. It looked like everyone had a say in it, but the fact remains, I chose. The reason for that decision is that it would fall into my lap (as prez AND fundraising chair) to organize the event over the summer months. Of the 8 people who attended that well publicized meeting, 4 were moving on to the Jr. High and one was moving. Again, it would fall to me to do most, if not all, of the grunt work involved, as two of the officers were moving on. I began the year a veep short and the other two officers were teachers.
When the school year began (2001-2002 school year), the fundraiser came before the first meeting. It always has. I still recruited people to help, but by the time we had our first meeting, the fundraiser was already completed, which was a good thing because of 9/11 (our fundraiser ended on 9/11). At our first meeting, there was 55 people who attended. I got them signed up for one thing or another. Thing is, with this many people (our average meeting after this one continued to draw 30-40 people), it is hard enough to get them all to agree on what color a shirt should be, much less expect them to do the research on, and make a decision on a fund raising company that the majority of them will willingly (using past experience) have no part of.
I think that it is up to the board to determine if a new vendor is something needed. Our old vendor just had too many problems with our stuff. They weren't helping us, becoming more of a problem for us than a solid fundraising company. It was time for a change, a decision made by the people who would do the brunt of the work, from researching to fundraising. In our school, that would be the board. If you have a fundraising committee that sticks it out together, they should make the decision. I know that when the Spring Fundraiser came up, we were unable to secure a decent candle-sales deal. Presented to the members were two other, well researched, choices. Even then, the members each had their own idea of what we should do. 30 choices, none of them researched. Just imagine! And who ran the event? Not one of the people who had a different choice helped out.
Like you, the new prez (2002-2003) believes everyone should get to make the decision. I can't wait to see all that stuff laid out on the table and 30 people combing through it. And then getting them to agree on what unresearched event they should let someone else run. Meanwhile, I will be running the Fall Fundraiser the same as it has always been done, without 30 or 40 different opinions on why we should have gone with someone else. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. Our current vendor is a dream. I hope they don't get rid of him because of some misguided, well intended, I-wanna-make-decisions parent/teacher/volunteer, who will not even end up working the event.
Sorry to sound so harsh. I've seen the nasty side of "Let Everyone Pick" and it isn't pretty.