Craig Carey wrote: > EXAMPLE showing Approval will get rejected by voters (if politicians > pass it): > > 1. Suppose that there are 45 candidates. > 2. The number of seats to be filled equals 3. (3 winners). > 3. Suppose that the latest poll data indicates that 14-20 of the > candidates running a close contest.
I have never seen Approval recommended for multiwinner elections; I advocate Approval only for single-winner elections. Contrary to popular intuition, the number of seats to fill should have nothing to do with the allowed number of votes per voter. In fact, rather ironically, when considering election methods that allow at most one vote per candidate per voter (like FPTP, Approval and everything in between), allowing multiple votes per voter (i.e., Approval) is best in the single-winner case and allowing only one vote per voter (i.e., SNTV) is best in the multiwinner case. Unfortunately, common intuition leads to the reverse (i.e., using FPTP for single-winner elections and "vote for up to n" for n-winner elections). > What is the person that wants to put 2 marks on their ballot paper > going to think when considering that some of the other voters will > be using at least 15 marks. Each person has the same available options and thus identical power. It may be smart for a given voter to vote for only two candidates, but deciding beforehand to vote for only two is rather silly. Each voter is responsible for estimating his utility for each possible vote and choosing the best one, whether that means voting for one, two, four or all but one. A ballot with votes for 15 candidates is not necessarily more powerful than one with votes for only two. > Mr Rob LeGrand has a 5 check box example of an Approval ballot > paper: > > ----------------------------------- > > Approval ballot > > Directions: Vote for one or more. > > [ ] Harry Browne (Libertarian) > [ ] Pat Buchanan (Reform) > [ ] George W. Bush (Republican) > [ ] Al Gore (Democrat) > [ ] Ralph Nader (Green) > > ----------------------------------- I'd like to change those directions to allow voting for none, to allow for the possibility that 50% approval is needed for a candidate to win. Does anyone know of a succinct way to revise that? Does "vote for any number" sound good? ===== Rob LeGrand [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.aggies.org/robl/ for Texas State Representative, District 50 __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Yahoo! Health - Feel better, live better http://health.yahoo.com ---- For more information about this list (subscribe, unsubscribe, FAQ, etc), please see http://www.eskimo.com/~robla/em
