You’d think midterms would be a great time to get your name out there and run high profile candidates to win House districts led by charlatans…

  • Liz
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    5 months ago

    I like Approval Voting for single-winner elections and Sequential Proportional Approval Voting. Approval is way easier than RCV in every sense (RCV is complex enough to disenfranchise minorities) and it gets more accurate results because it doesn’t have spoilers (RCV actually does, they’re just different than what you’re used to).

    Approval is great for third parties because their full support in the final results, which RCV doesn’t always do. Those results are important because they influence voters in the next election, helping little parties build up legitimacy even when they lose.

    It’s currently in use in Fargo and St. Louis, and of course they’re very happy with it.

      • frezik
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        5 months ago

        Right; ranked choice seems to have a lot of momentum behind it. There are a lot of other possibilities with pros and cons. I don’t think it’s worth bickering too much about what makes the best one. I do know first past the post needs to go. If ranked choice is being pushed, I’ll go with it.

    • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      Just gonna throw STAR voting into the rink for the hell of it. Any of these systems is better than FPTP and I would endorse any of them in a local push for better voting.

      • The Snark Urge@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        I used to mention AV a lot, but STAR is my preference now. Of course, any improvement to the voting system makes it easier to further improve the voting system (which is why improvements are against the interest of either of the main two parties - they will not help)

      • DMBFFF@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Let’s say one voter gives all candidates 5 stars each, except 1 who gets no stars; and another voter gives no candidate any stars, except 1 who gets 3 stars?

        • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          Couldn’t tell you the outcome unless you actually gave me the actual votes for each candidate. For personal impact, the first voters has communicated “anyone except this guy” and the second has communicated “I don’t like this guy but I hate every other option”.

          STAR does have the risk of having more than two candidates win with the same rating, but the chances of that happening are astronomically low - even in town elections. You’d have to be using an insanely low number of voters for it to even be plausible.

          • DMBFFF@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            Let’s say 101 voters each give Trump 5 stars.

            Let’s say 100 voters each give RFK JR 3 stars, Biden 2 stars, and Stein 1 star.

            Let’s say 100 voters each give Biden 3 stars.

            301 voters

            200 gave Biden stars

            101 gave Trump stars

            however,

            Trump gets 501 stars

            Biden gets 500 stars

            RFK Jr gets 300 stars

            Stein gets 100 stars

            1401 stars, and with 501 Trump wins.

            I’m not totally opposed to the idea, but it seems to have some weakness.

            • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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              5 months ago

              EDIT: just realized the math is off. 101 giving 5 stars each is 505 stars. Doesn’t change outcome, just the math’ll be slightly different.

              It feels like you do not fully understand the system yet.

              Yes trump and Biden win the most stars, and trump has 1 5 more stars.

              Then runoff happens. It’s now a two-person race between the two individuals with the most stars.

              Each person has their vote count towards the candidate they gave more stars to, with equal ratings being treated as abstained votes.

              I am taking your writing to mean that if a candidate isn’t mentioned for a group, then that group gave zero stars to that candidate. So that is now 200 voters who gave more stars to Biden than trump. Biden 200 - 101 Trump. Biden wins.

              The star count only matters for the first stage in narrowing the playing field to two candidates. The actual vote then occurs in runoff. That is not a flaw. The system operated as intended, and the candidate preferred by the largest portion of society won.

              • DMBFFF@lemmy.world
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                5 months ago

                505 not 501 stars: thanks for the correction.

                Runoffs can be done without stars.

                Runoffs would improve either form of counting.

                • _NoName_@lemmy.ml
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                  5 months ago

                  That is a bit of a weird criticism of STAR voting. Scoring Then Automatic Runoff. The runoff is fundamentally a key stage of STAR voting.

                  I also do not think runoff fixes most voting systems. It isn’t compatible with FPTP, approval voting with runoff would cause alot of vote erasure (if you approve of both finalists, your vote is ignored even if you approve one more than the other), and you’d fundamentally have to change how ranked choice works to accept runoff, to the point that you’ve essentially recreated STAR voting again (but with more or fewer boxes depending on how many candidates there are).

    • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      (RCV is complex enough to disenfranchise minorities)

      RCV is a straight-up misuse of multi-winner systems, but it happens to beat first-past-the-post because anything would.

      The right use of ranked ballots is a Condorcet method like Ranked Pairs. It works the way people think ranked ballots work before they really ask how ranked ballots would work.

      But yeah, Approval should be the default. There is no good reason not to do it.