[EM] margins of victory with different voting methods
Kathy Dopp
kathy.dopp at gmail.com
Mon Apr 4 12:15:42 PDT 2011
> To: election-methods <election-methods at electorama.com>
>
> On Apr 3, 2011, at 10:10 PM, Dave Ketchum wrote:
>
>> US Electoral College - done with each state done separately, unlike
>> most any other election - meaning that various parts are done in
>> different ways.
>
> but not to a significant degree. *every* state, except Maine and
> Nebraska, simply award their entire allocation of electoral votes to
> the plurality winner in that state. Maine is 4 electoral votes,
> Nebraska is currently 5 electoral votes, out of 538.
Each state is done with *very* different ways in that they vary in:
1. who is allowed to vote - many states disenfranchise anyone who has
committed a prior felony, even after they've served their time and
done probation,
2. many states disenfranchise recent movers and students - anyone who
has not lived for at least 30 days at the same address or who does not
have a local state driver's license, etc. and other states do not
3. whether or not votes cast in the wrong precinct are still counted
in state and federal elections, under what circumstances provisional
ballots are counted, how closely the signatures have to match or
not...
4. how strict the matching rules are that purge voters from the voter
rolls by matching with social security, driver's license, property
tax, and other databases (probably depends on the partisanship of the
county voters too sadly
5. the extent to which votes are open to fraudulent manipulation -
some states use e-ballots which are wide-open to undetectable vote
fraud, others use auditable voter marked paper ballots but count them
electronically and never audit them, some states do audits of some,
but not all of their ballots (neglecting to audit any mail in ballots
for instance) and no states audit sufficiently to prevent incorrect
outcomes in close contests
6. the extent to which the public is allowed access to electoral
records necessary to verify the integrity of the tallies (most states
are highly secretive and allow no public verification of ballot
security or jurisdiction-wide ballot and voter reconciliation,...
7. states vary widely in which private company they are allowing to
count their votes in secret with trade secret software
8. many states have already signed the popular vote compact, which I
believe is very unfortunate when states vary so widely in the public
verifiability of their election outcome accuracy and so many of them
are so hopelessly wide-open to undetectable vote tally manipulation
via vote manipulation, ballot box stuffing, ballot substitution,
ballot tampering, ballot absconding, failure to count ballots and the
like.
I agree with you that all states are currently winner-take-all in most
state and federal elections, except for NC's one judicial contest
which was IRV this year, but probably will never be again. I think
the spate of IRV adoption is going to, unfortunately sour the public
on the idea of any more fair, auditable electoral methods due to its
many vagaries.
Regards,
--
Kathy Dopp
http://electionmathematics.org
Town of Colonie, NY 12304
"One of the best ways to keep any conversation civil is to support the
discussion with true facts."
Fundamentals of Verifiable Elections
http://kathydopp.com/wordpress/?p=174
Realities Mar Instant Runoff Voting
http://electionmathematics.org/ucvAnalysis/US/RCV-IRV/InstantRunoffVotingFlaws.pdf
View some of my research on my SSRN Author page:
http://ssrn.com/author=1451051
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list