The workers of a communist company vote on every aspect of how the business is run. They don't need one leader because everyone agrees on what, how, and how much each person gets payed
what if the majority of workers thought a leader could make some decisions more efficiently and vote for one to make such decisions in exchange for some of their labor?
As long as the workers have a say in what that leader does and how much he gets paid, then this is not an issue. But the leader must be doing his share of the work as well.
Though perhaps cumbersome, the will of the workers could be more accurately understood by all if they voted every day to keep the leader. So one day of failure could depose the leader.
Yeah, basically it's all according to the will of the voters. A Co-op might elect to have multiple leaders or have a completely different structure. Everyone who works gets to vote.
could you say that by continuing to work at the business (or Co-op) every day a worker is voting for the leader and leaving the business/co-op is a vote of no confidence?