Raph Frank > Sent: Wednesday, March 24, 2010 5:31 PM > Sorry, I wasn't clear at all.
No, it certainly wasn't clear. > I was thinking of the decoy > list issue with MMP. I don't think this is at all a helpful way of looking at the Swiss CN voting system. > What I meant was that it is like MMP in that the voters have > a party vote and an additional vote using a different method. No, it is not at all like MMP in that. ALL the votes are party votes. All the votes are used to allocate seats to parties and then the votes within parties are used to decide which candidates should fill the allocated seats. Importantly, all the members are elected on an equal basis - quite unlike MMP. > It is immune to decoy lists since it doesn't elect anyone > directly. OK. > The additional vote is purely used to decide which > members of the party are elected. No, because for every "cumulated vote" you must "strike out" a corresponding vote. Of course, when it comes to the allocation of candidates to seats, the cumulated votes do have a separate effect. > Also, it is single > constituency based. This I do not follow. The country is divided into "constituencies" = "electoral districts". The numbers of members elected from each electoral district ranges from one (very few) to 35. So there is a "regionalised" element in this system. Perhaps you meant that the country was treated as one constituency (electoral district) for the initial allocation of seats to parties? > It does have the advantage that it is summable. Coming from a UK background, where all ballots are always taken to a counting centre irrespective of the voting system, this is irrelevant for far as I am concerned. James No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 9.0.791 / Virus Database: 271.1.1/2767 - Release Date: 03/24/10 07:33:00 ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info