[EM] Cheering for simplicity
Alex Small
asmall at physics.ucsb.edu
Mon Sep 1 20:23:07 PDT 2003
Dave Ketchum said:
> If I really wanted to broaden the field, I might get into ways for the
> people being represented to control who got to be officials, and
> when officials got replaced, WITHOUT doing elections.
Here's a simple scheme along those lines. Surely it can be improved, and
as set forth it's only for legislatures, but it's a way to proceed.
Each eligible voter has one vote. At any time he can give it to any
representative or would-be representative that he wishes to. As long as a
representative has a certain threshold of support he retains his seat in
the legislature.
Proportionality is achieved because as soon as a group gets enough people
on board to elect one representative, it will start recruiting voters for
another. Groups will add representatives until they've maxed-out.
Recall is simple: If enough voters withdraw support from one
representative and transfer it to another the representative loses his
office. Maybe there could be a grace period, so that he has a certain
interval of time to regain support before losing office. But that's a
detail.
As I think of it, here's one of many possible embellishments: Give each
person TWO votes, which must be given to two different representatives or
aspiring representatives. A person may be reluctant to relinquish
representation temporarily by transfering votes to somebody else who has
not yet attained a quota. People may be more willing to do so if they
have two votes. Or, let people make provisional transfers: Let people
indicate that they're willing to transfer a vote to candidate X, but only
if enough other people are also willing to do so.
Anyway, there are all sorts of ways to flesh out this framework. I don't
present it as a finished plan, just as a starting point. Of course, these
direct representation schemes have even less chance of implementation than
the most complicated Condorcet-IRV-Approval hybrids that we might devise.
But they're fun to contemplate, and they may find application in private
organizations.
Alex
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