Of course Approval voting will never be used for electing U.S. Congressmen or state governors. Yet at the opposite end of the "size" spectrum, Approval voting is clearly useful in small groups. At what point in the continuum between high-stakes elections and small-group decisions does Approval voting become inappropriate? We don't know, and we wouldn't agree, so let's let others make that choice.

The "elephant in the room" is that advocates of Range voting need to also endorse Approval voting both because one criticism of Range voting is that it can (might?) produce Approval-like results if every voter votes strategically, and because Score ballots have greater appeal if we also promote Approval ballots.

I think our role is to educate citizens about alternatives to single-mark ballots, and then let those newly educated citizens choose which method best fits each specific situation.

Although I wouldn't want a U.S. President chosen by Approval voting, I would be happy to use Approval voting in a _primary_ election for U.S. President.

I agree we should aim high. I think we are already doing that by aiming for a large number of signatures.

Richard Fobes


On 10/3/2011 1:54 PM, Brian Olson wrote:
I know that Approval is technically better than a lot of things, and I think 
it's better than IRV, but I want to argue that it's not good enough and we 
shouldn't aim low or advocate it too strongly.

I've always been personally unsatisfied with the prospect of filling out an 
Approval ballot. Sure I can say that either Al Gore or Ralph Nader would be 
fine choices for President, but I don't get to say which one I like better. I 
think this psychological aspect is important. In my mind it might drive me to 
misjudge my proper approval threshold, and I think I'd be likely to approve too 
few candidates and tend toward pick-one.

I also today see Approval as fitting the pattern of premature compromise in 
politics. Afraid that we might not be able to get the awesome thing, we start 
off only trying for the mediocre thing. We could have real universal healthcare 
or Obama-Romney-care. We could try for a budget that makes sense, or we could 
have a budget half full of cruft and with tax tweaks that make no sense because 
someone whined for it.

If we're going to do this, we should do it right. Go all the way. Go for the 
best thing possible. Isn't that one thing that frustrates us so much with the 
IRV advocates? They recognize that election method reform is important, but 
then they go all-in on a mediocre reform.

Anyway, that's my random afternoon strategy opinion, I could be wrong.

Brian Olson
http://bolson.org/


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