At 12:44 PM 3/11/2007, Matthew Welland wrote: >Based on what I know now I would settle on Range Voting. However for a while >I was dead set on approval voting and before that I was advocating IRV. Is >Range Voting "satisficient" or are its flaws or limitations serious enough >that there are many scenarios where it will fail to meet a satisficity >ratio of greater than one?
Mr Welland, if he has not done so, should consider joining the Range Voting mailing list, which actually discusses election methods in general, but also implementation strategy and related election topics, such as voting machines, gerrymandering, etc. A rather broad consensus has appeared among election methods activists that the best first step is Approval. First of all, it is terminally simple. Implementing Approval is simply a matter of striking out a few lines of the election code, those which cause overvoted ballots to be discarded. I have never seen a good argument for tossing these ballots, and I've seen quite a bit of mischief done by discarding them. In any case, this reform has a crackerjack slogan: Just Count All the Votes! And, of course, it solves the first-order spoiler effect quite well, without complicating voting for the large majority of voters who will continue to vote as they had been voting prior to the reform. Ballots stay essentially the same, instructions might change a little. Counting methods and equipment do not change (discarding overvotes can't be hard-wired or built-in except as an option, because all equipment must be able to handle multiple-winner elections). Sometimes when Approval is presented as some shiny new method, "Vote for every candidate you Approve," it gets a bad reaction. All that is necessary, though, is to stop discarding ballots! Once Approval is in place, further reforms will, I think, become more popular, and it is an open question as to whether reform will move toward Condorcet or Range methods. As I suggested in another post, it is possible to combine the two by risking a top-two runoff (between a Range and Condorcet winner). However, once it becomes possible for voters to equally rate or rank candidates, voters may correctly see an IRV method that requires ranking as a loss of one kind of voting power in order to gain another. And that is not necessary, nor is it necessary to risk the center-squeeze effect of IRV. If one is going to have a fully-ranked ballot, why not have a fully-rated ballot? I.e., a Range ballot. If one wants to use a Range ballot to find a Condorcet winner, no problem. But rankings without ratings causes quite a bit of important information to be lost, specifically preference strength information. ---- election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
