Equally Weighted Vote: Difference between revisions

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→‎Voting methods which ensure an Equally Weighted Vote: edited term Equality criterion for consistency.
m (→‎Equal Vote Criterion: At the request of Mark Frohnmayer I've changed the section on Equality Criterion to put that name as the primary name and the alternative name, Equal Vote Criterion, as the secondary option to reflect a desire to become more consistent with this terminology across materials.)
m (→‎Voting methods which ensure an Equally Weighted Vote: edited term Equality criterion for consistency.)
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Voting Methods which ensure an Equally Weighted Vote with any number of candidates include Approval Voting, Score Voting, STAR Voting, as well as a number of others. In general Cardinal Voting methods ensure an Equally Weighted Vote for each voter. Many Condorcet methods (most that can be calculated only with the [[Pairwise counting|pairwise counting]] matrix, most Condorcet-cardinal hybrids, etc.) also pass the criterion.
 
Choose One Plurality Voting does not satisfy the Equal Vote Criterion. Instant Runoff Voting (often referred to as Ranked Choice Voting) does not satisfy the Equal VoteEquality Criterion. Any voting method will satisfy the Equal VoteEquality Criterion in elections with two candidates only.
 
=== '''Vote unitarity''' ===
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