Just a thought... It seems that most countries throughout the world try and keep their elections nice and simple, by reducing the numbers of candidates running. In the UK they charge people for losing their deposit, in other places they require a minimum of X% of the popular vote to get any seats at all, etc, etc. The other factors which do the same are the cost of mounting a campaign which will actually effect the outcome, and the concern about vote-splitting problems hurting similar candidates. Reducing the number of candidates is good because it makes voting simpler, and hence makes people more likely to go out and vote. I'd argue that people who have to distinguish between lots and lots of candidates will find it harder to vote accurately - in Condorcet and IRV because of the difficulty of choosing an accurate ranking, in Plurality and IRV and Approval because of the difficulty in strategising correctly. Hence there is more likely to be a mis-election of the wrong candidate in these cases. On the other hand, if there are two few candidates then some voters may be disenfranchised because they think all the candidates are equally bad, and hence it is not worth their while to vote. There is similarly a danger of important options and debates being missed because nobody is standing up for them. The question is - is it better to reduce the number of candidates standing by charging candidates for standing, or by having a method which isn't fully independant from vote splitting problems? What should be aimed for in terms of numbers of frivolous and serious candidates standing?
