At 09:46 AM 3/15/2010, Terry Bouricius wrote:
Why would one want to have voters be restricted by the list order of one's
favorite candidate, instead of allowing the voters themselves to reorder
the party list (as happens with OPEN list systems - unlike closed party
list PR)? Is the idea to allow candidates to list candidates outside their
own party? Would parties put up with that from candidates they nominate,
or wouldn't they  insist on that level of party loyalty to receive the
party's nomination?

Candidate list is a proposal that is related to Asset Voting, only is fixed, single-ballot. Candidate list allows independent candidates to bypass political parties. Of course the parties would oppose it!

Whether a party would actually allow this, though, depends on how they perceive it as affecting their power.

Sure, you could set up rules to disallow candidates from nominating candidates outside the party. But could you come up with a public policy reason for this? ("For the health of our political system, we must discourage any difference of opinion within political parties, and require parties to make single, monolithic decisions." What does that sound like?)

Candidate list, in the end, would return power to the electorate, which is no longer bound to support a "party" in order to cast an effective vote.

As Lewis Carroll noticed, in 1883, voters know best who is their favorite, that information is relatively clean and solid. Expecting the average voter to know more than that is expecting what is probably impossible.

Party list does deal with this, but effectively confines the voter to supporting a party, rather than individuals, thus deferring power into the hands of whatever process the parties use. Candidate list is quite direct.

There is no need to "restrict voters by the list order of one's favorite candidate." Rather, as I understand Carroll's proposal, I don't have the actual text of it, the method is STV. The reversion to the choices of the candidate is only if the voter's personal ballot becomes exhausted. It is to avoid wasting the vote.

It is also possible to allow voters to vote for a party list. You'd rather support your favorite party than your favorite candidate? Fine. That, really, should be your choice.

Power to the voters.

Count all the Votes.

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