We shouldn't limit it to just Facebook, but this would be a great idea. 

Wonder if the Republicans have been savaged enough this election to try 
something radical next time…



Seth's Blog: An interesting alternative to primaries
http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2016/04/an-interesting-alternative-to-primaries.html
(via Instapaper)

Presidential primaries in the US have several problems. We do it the way we do 
it because that's the usual way, not because it works particularly well.

The biggest problem is that the people who vote are usually the most political, 
which means that winning a primary involves going hard to one edge or another. 
Instead of electing for consistent productive consensus we nominate for 
short-term TV sound bytes.

The next is polling. The media plus lack of official information equals tons of 
guessing, and as the primaries warm up, polling becomes the dominant driver of 
what happens next. Which would be fine, except the polls are often dramatically 
incorrect, and polls are not votes.

The media are turning this more and more into a sporting event, and the polls 
are the play by play, except they’re being done in the dark.

A bigger problem is the uneven influence of voting. Some votes are worth a huge 
amount (New Hampshire!) while others often don’t have any impact whatsoever. 
The voting takes many forms—anonymous, public, sorted by party, crossover, etc.

These two problems lead to the biggest one: Parties often don’t nominate their 
best candidate (where ‘best’ might mean electable or talented, you pick).

Instead of building a growing cohort of excited, committed voters, more often 
than not the primary process disconnects those that made the 'wrong' commitment 
early on.

Consider for a moment a party that chose instead to run its primary on Facebook.

Before you list your objections, some of the features:

Everyone would vote six times over six months. Only the last vote would count 
in the final results, the first five are sort of a live poll, a straw poll for 
preference.

The voting wouldn’t happen in one day, it would take place over a week, with 
the results tabulated in real time. So you could see how the tide was moving 
and choose to either engage your friends to push back, or to join in. True fans 
would vote early and in public, while the undecided might see what's happening.

Each vote would be for three candidates, in order, from most favorite to ‘I can 
live with this’. This method of voting has been shown to allow consensus 
candidates to rise to the top, diminishing the voice of the angry few.

Each vote might also include a chance to vote for your favorite candidate of 
the other party, further increasing options for consensus.

Votes could either be in public or anonymized. The advantage of public voting 
(like a caucus) is that it gets to a truer sense of democracy, in that choices 
are more easily talked about. But for the reluctant citizen, the vote could be 
tallied but not identified with a specific individual in public.

Because the votes aren’t anonymous in the database, it would be easy to track 
changes over time. People who supported X are now moving toward Y. When we're 
talking about a mass phenomenon like voting, it's these shifts that matter. 
Cultural shift is how pop music works, and it never fails to create a 
profitable top 40.

The kind of polling we’re used to would become obsolete. Too much good data to 
worry much about making data up.

On the other hand, actual polling based on data analysis of the detailed 
Facebook corpus would mean that the public (and their candidates) would have 
much better insight into what people actually want.

This fits in perfectly with the debate channel.

It seems to me that if one party does this, they end up with a candidate that's 
less bloodied, more engaged and more connected to the public, putting the other 
party at a significant disadvantage.

As to the most common objections:

A. This is new. It might not work. Absolutely, agreed. Does what we have now 
work? It costs more than a billion dollars. It occupies a year of our lives, 
every four. Do you have a better idea?

For me, this is an okay place to experiment, because the primary is merely the 
party's chance to figure out how to run a candidate. As a result, it's always 
been quasi-official and always been a mess.

B. There are all sorts of opportunities for fraud. Yes, absolutely, But almost 
certainly only on the margins, probably no worse than we have now, particularly 
when you consider the tiny number of actual voters in the current system.

I'm imagining a public, transparently run app that lives within Facebook. Hard 
to do, difficult, risky. But probably better than the current alternative.

C. Some people don’t have Facebook. Yes, but in four years, far fewer won't 
have access, and we still have the library. Spend some of the millions and 
millions of dollars we spend on elections outfitting libraries with more 
computers instead. Because the voting takes place over a week, no issue with 
lines, nor hanging chad. It's worth noting that today, in order to be an 
effective voter, you need a TV and a car, both of which were new technologies a 
hundred years ago.

Your mileage may vary. Doesn't it always?



Sent from my iPhone

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