[EM] Student government - what voting system to recommend?

Tim Hull timhull2 at gmail.com
Tue Apr 24 14:40:14 PDT 2007


The partyless method is seen as a plus - our current parties as somewhat
diverse in their composition, and people generally don't like the "vote
counts for candidate and party" when you can have wildly diverging
ideologies on the same ticket.  It also encourages party discipline and
"voting in bloc" at the Assembly level, something no one likes the idea
of...

As far as Condorcet for single-winner, it's yet another complex explanation
and has the issue of failing "later-no-harm", which I feel would cause
massive amounts of strategic and bullet voting, no matter how low the real
risk of LNH failure.  It also can elect centrists with very weak support
along the lines of my "pro wrestler" example (assuming that he'd get a 2 or
1 our of 10 in Range).  Also, dominance by two major parties would be a
significant improvement over the status quo - as of now we have dominance by
*1* major party.



On 4/24/07, Juho <juho4880 at yahoo.co.uk> wrote:
>
> On Apr 24, 2007, at 6:26 , Tim Hull wrote:
>
> > In this case, the only *tested* method which is fully candidate
> > based (i.e. no party lists, open or closed)  - and does not use
> > anything other than votes cast for candidates to determine winners
> > - is STV.
>
> (There are also other interesting methods like http://
> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportional_approval_voting and http://
> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPO-STV. STV is however more established and
> closer to real life, so I don't recommend any more complex or
> experimental systems to be promoted in your case.)
>
> (I have also written about MultiGroup that is a method that could,
> despite of seeing candidates as members of various groupings, be
> fully based on individual candidate decisions on what kind of
> groupings/ideologies the want to promote and benefit of (i.e. not
> "party lists" but "candidate lists of groups he/she likes"). This one
> is also experimental, so not for you.)
>
> >   In the case of voting, it seems like a good idea for the method
> > of voting to be consistent for everyone.  Hence, it only seems
> > logical to use IRV.  Doing anything else would only make the
> > explanation of how voting works twice as long, and make said effort
> > more likely to fail.
>
> (You didn't say if you want the method to be consisted to the voters
> or also to the ones who will decide what method will be taken into
> use. If it is enough to provide a consistent voting experience to the
> votes, any ranked ballot based method would do. But I guess you refer
> also to the latter case.)
>
> > Until these is a good, *proven* single-winner/multi-winner
> > combination that works well, I don't see this type of situation
> > changing.
>
> (Does the "combination" mean combination of multi-seat and single-
> seat "districts" (within a multi-winner election) or combination of
> "government" and "chairman" elections? I guess the latter is the
> case. Also other combinations would work technically, but maybe would
> be more difficult to explain to the decision makers (= not work well).)
>
> >   In my push to implement a better voting system than our truncated
> > Borda/FPTP combo, I see IRV and STV as the best chance to actually
> > make a change.  I don't see myself trying to push two separate and
> > complicated systems (one alone is hard enough), or trying to sell a
> > system that has not been widely used anywhere.
>
> Ok, you know best what is possible and what not. Note however that
> with IRV you'll choose a direction where the major parties will be
> favoured (centrist compromise candidates from smaller parties
> probably won't be elected). Maybe that is ok in the environment in
> question.
>
> > In short - I would say that the lack of any good, tested multi-
> > winner system with a better-than-IRV single-winner version is part
> > of why IRV is so popular...
>
> (I guess this you mean that this is the reason "why IRV is so
> popular" to you in your current case (not in general).)
>
> My summary of the STV-IRV combination is that
> - IRV favours big parties (Condorcet would not, and also it would be
> ranked ballot based)
> - explaining STV and IRV to the decision makers at one go is a bonus
> - you have decided to use a partyless method, which is ok, but I'm
> still wondering if the existing major groupings will agree with this
> - STV-IRV would surely be a significant improvement to your current
> voting practices
>
> Juho
>
>
>
>
>
> ___________________________________________________________
> Copy addresses and emails from any email account to Yahoo! Mail - quick,
> easy and free. http://uk.docs.yahoo.com/trueswitch2.html
> ----
> election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.electorama.com/pipermail/election-methods-electorama.com/attachments/20070424/f9cd64c8/attachment-0003.htm>


More information about the Election-Methods mailing list