It seems clear that Craig has not yet grasped the concept of approval voting, and doesn't understand why others might favor it. Nobody here who advocates approval voting does so for multi-seat elections. Since Craig's example is for a 3-seat election, the rest of his argument is moot.
That aside, if there were a single-seat approval election with 45 candidates, each voter would be casting 45 votes (some to 'approve', and the rest to 'not approve'). Under approval voting, checkmark is not the same thing as a vote-- it is only one possible value for a vote. Like a one and a zero are possible values for a bit. If you have two computers containing 20 GB hard drives, and initialize one drive to contain all one bits, and the other to contain all zero bits, do the two computers now contain different amounts of data? Did the drive containing all zeros vanish from existence when the last byte was written? 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. > [...] ---- For more information about this list (subscribe, unsubscribe, FAQ, etc), please see http://www.eskimo.com/~robla/em
