Anti-plurality voting: Difference between revisions
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See [[w:Anti-plurality voting|Anti-plurality voting]] on Wikipedia |
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Anti-plurality is the reverse of [[Plurality voting]]. You vote '''against''' one candidate, and the candidate with the fewest anti-votes wins. It is a [[weighted positional method]] that passes the [[favorite betrayal criterion]]. |
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[[Category:Single-mark ballot voting methods]] |
[[Category:Single-mark ballot voting methods]] |
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[[Category:Monotonic_electoral_systems]] |
[[Category:Monotonic_electoral_systems]] |
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[[Category:No-favorite-betrayal electoral systems]] |
Latest revision as of 23:38, 21 July 2022
Anti-plurality is the reverse of Plurality voting. You vote against one candidate, and the candidate with the fewest anti-votes wins. It is a weighted positional method that passes the favorite betrayal criterion.
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