Dear Peter Zbornik, this is my proposal:
--Use the Schulze proportional ranking method. --The top-ranked candidate becomes the president. --The second-ranked candidate becomes the vice president. --If the first two candidates happen to be male, then, when you calculate the third-ranked candidate, restrict your considerations to female candidates. If the first two candidates happen to be female, then, when you calculate the third-ranked candidate, restrict your considerations to male candidates. The third-ranked candidate becomes the 2nd vice president. --The fourth-ranked candidate becomes the 3rd vice president. --The fifth-ranked candidate becomes the 4th vice president. --If 4 of the already elected candidates happen to be male, then, when you calculate the sixth-ranked candidate, restrict your considerations to female candidates. If 4 of the already elected candidates happen to be female, then, when you calculate the sixth-ranked candidate, restrict your considerations to male candidates. The sixth-ranked candidate becomes the 5th vice president. --The seventh-ranked candidate becomes the 6th vice president. Markus Schulze ---- Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
