Exhausted ballot: Difference between revisions

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Single-winner STV is sometimes referred to as "instant-runoff voting" because of the way the ballot count simulates a series of runoffs, similar to an [[exhaustive ballot]] system, except that voter preferences do not change between rounds.<ref>[[User:RobLa]] quoted oldid 1141090457 of [[w:Instant-runoff voting|]]: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Instant-runoff_voting&oldid=1141090457</ref><ref name="publications.parliament.uk">{{cite web |date=15 February 2001 |title=Second Report: Election of a Speaker |url=https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200001/cmselect/cmproced/40/4005.htm |access-date=18 February 2008 |publisher=House of Commons Select Committee on Procedure}}<!--This ref describes similarities/differences between IRV and exhaustive ballot.--></ref> It is also known as the alternative vote, transferable vote, ranked-choice voting (RCV), single-seat ranked-choice voting, or preferential vote.
 
A ballot becomes exhausted when a voter:
According to [[FairVote]], an "inactive" or "exhausted" ballot counts for candidates in the first round but not in the final round.<ref>https://fairvote.org/our-reforms/ranked-choice-voting-information/#_13-what-are-inactive-or-exhausted-ballots</ref> Ballots become inactive for the following reasons:
* Exhausted choice: a voter can list their preferences such that when applied to a runoff round it is for a candidate who is already eliminated - the vote is taken out of this round of the election
* Spoiled choices: if a voter cast a [[spoiled ballot]] which included an overvote or undervote as their top remaining choice
** Overvotes - example: voter accidentally ranks two candidates for the choice being evaluated
** Undervotes - example: voter ranks only one candidate on their ballot and that candidate is eliminated from the contest before the final round
 
"Ballot exhaustion" occurs when rankings on a voter’s ballot prevent their vote from being counted and determining the election’s end result. The selection in this particular race is then discarded, and does not influence the final outcome.
* The voter doesn’t rank all candidates, and all of their ranked candidates are eliminated during the round-by-round count. Also known as "voluntary abstention", this is the most common source of inactive votes.
* Election administrators limit voters to a certain number of rankings, such as three, and all of their ranked candidates are eliminated during the round-by-round count. This is known as '''"'''involuntary exhaustion".
* The ballot is disqualified due to error, such as giving multiple candidates the same ranking.
Because the ballot marking is more complex, there can be an increase in spoiled ballots. In Australia, voters are required to write a number beside every candidate,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://aec.gov.au/Voting/How_to_Vote/Voting_HOR.htm |title=Voting in the House of Representatives |publisher=Australian Electoral Commission |date=28 June 2016 |access-date=9 December 2018}}</ref> and the rate of spoiled ballots can be five times higher than plurality voting elections.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.no2av.org/why-vote-no/av-myth-busting/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110208014140/http://www.no2av.org/why-vote-no/av-myth-busting/ |url-status = dead|archive-date=8 February 2011 |title=Busting the Myths of AV |publisher=No2av.org |date=25 October 2010 |access-date=17 April 2011 }}</ref> Since Australia has compulsory voting, however, it is difficult to tell how many ballots are deliberately spoiled.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.abc.net.au/antonygreen/2011/02/informal-voting-two-ways-of-allowing-more-votes-to-count.html |title=Informal Voting – Two Ways of Allowing More Votes to Count |publisher=ABC Elections |date=28 February 2011 |access-date=15 August 2011}}</ref> Where complete rankings are not required, a ballot may become inactive if none of the ranked choices on that ballot advance to the next round.
 
=== Exhausted ballot and exhausted ranking ===
Most jurisdictions with IRV do not require complete rankings and may use columns to indicate preference instead of numbers. In American elections with IRV, more than 99% of voters typically cast a valid ballot.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://politicalreform.newamerica.net/files/irvracememo.pdf |title=Instant Runoff Voting and Its Impact on Racial Minorities |publisher=New America Foundation |date=1 August 2008 |access-date=15 August 2011 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110615181347/http://politicalreform.newamerica.net/files/irvracememo.pdf |archive-date=15 June 2011 }}</ref>
"Ballot exhaustion" or "ranking exhaustion" occurs when a ballot/ranked-list is no longer countable in a tally as all of the candidates marked on the ballot are no longer in the contest. An "exhausted ballot" or "exhausted ranking" occurs when a voter ranks only candidates that are eliminated from a race.
 
Ballot exhaustion almost certainly occurs for some voters when all the candidates a voter ranked have lost, even though two or more other candidates remain in the race being tallied. This might happen because a voter undervoted (chosing not to rank all or many candidates) or because a voter ranked as many candidates as allowed on the ballot paper. Since such a ballot/ranking contains no rankings of a candidate still in the race, it is allowed to exhaust and is no longer included in the tally for winner. As such, it may be possible for the winner to have a majority of all the non-exhausted votes, but not a majority of total votes cast in the election.
A 2015 study of four local U.S. elections that used IRV found that inactive ballots occurred often enough in each of them that the winner of each election did not receive a majority of votes cast in the first round. The rate of inactive ballots in each election ranged from a low of 9.6% to a high of 27.1%.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Burnett|first1=Craig M.|last2=Kogan|first2=Vladimir|title=Ballot (and voter) 'exhaustion' under Instant Runoff Voting: An examination of four ranked-choice elections|journal=Electoral Studies|date=March 2015|volume=37|pages=41–49|doi=10.1016/j.electstud.2014.11.006|s2cid=11159132}}</ref> As one point of comparison, the number of votes cast in the 190 regularly scheduled primary runoff elections for the U.S. House and U.S. Senate from 1994 to 2016 decreased from the initial primary on average by 39%,
 
according to a 2016 study by FairVote.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://fairvote.app.box.com/v/federalprimaryrunoffs2016 | title=Box}}</ref>
For example, it's possible for 10% of rankings are exhausted in the first round of a tally, but the winner to only beat the loser by only 5% of the remaining votes If voters who had their ballots/rankings exhaust in this example election were permitted to choose again (e.g. in a top-two runoff election) a different winner might emerge with a clear majority of votes cast in the runoff. Advocates of RCV argue that voters should provide as complete of a ranking as possible to avoid this uncomfortable situation.
 
=== Spoiled ballots and spoiled choices ===
{{Main|Spoiled ballot}}
Because the ballot marking is more complex, there can be an increase in [[Spoiled ballot|spoiled ballots]].
 
According to [[FairVote]], an "inactive" or "exhausted" ballot counts for candidates in the first round but not in the final round.<ref>https://fairvote.org/our-reforms/ranked-choice-voting-information/#_13-what-are-inactive-or-exhausted-ballots</ref> Ballots become inactive for the following reasons:
 
* Election administrators limit voters to a certain number of rankings, such as three, and all of their ranked candidates are eliminated during the round-by-round count. This is known as '''"'''involuntary exhaustion".
* A partially-spoiled ballot due to one of two conditions:
** Overvote: The ballot is disqualified due to error, such as giving multiple candidates the same ranking.
** Undervote: The voter doesn’t rank all candidates, and all of their ranked candidates are eliminated during the round-by-round count. Also known as "voluntary abstention", this is the most common source of inactive votes.
In some jurisdictions, election officials ignore overvotes and undervotes in the first round of tabulation, skipping to the voter's second preference during the tabulation process. Overvotes and undervotes in the second and subsequent rounds of tabulation may also be ignored rather than treating them as [[Spoiled ballot|spoiled ballots]] and discarding them entirely. In cases where a voter has ranked only candidates that did not make it to the final round of counting, it is only then that the voter's ballot is said to have been exhausted.
 
==== Other terminology ====
* spoiled ballots
* over-voted
* under-voted
* inactive choices
* disqualified ballots
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== Background ==
STV-based systems in use in different countries vary both as to ballot design and to whether or not voters are obliged to provide a full list of preferences. In jurisdictions such as the [[Republic of Ireland]] and [[Northern Ireland]] voters are permitted to rank as many or as few candidates as they wish. Consequently, voters sometimes, for example, rank only the candidates of a single party, or of their most preferred parties. A minority of voters, especially if they do not fully understand the system, might even "bullet vote", only expressing a first preference. Allowing voters to rank only as many candidates as they wish grants them greater freedom, but can also lead to some voters ranking so few candidates that their vote eventually becomes "exhausted"; that is, at a certain point during the count it can no longer be transferred and therefore loses an opportunity to influence the result. (In [[First Past the Post]] elections, many, sometimes most, votes are disregarded, as there is no opportunity to mark back-up preferences. To the extent that voters mark back-up preferences and the back-up preferences consulted - many are not consulted even if marked - the portion of votes ignored under STV is less than under First Past The Post. Back-up preferences are not consulted if the vote is cast at the start for a candidate who wins in the end as the last seat is filled, or cast for a candidate who is eliminated at the end. They are also not used if they are marked for a candidate who has already been elected or eliminated.)
 
In Australia, voters are required to write a number beside every candidate,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://aec.gov.au/Voting/How_to_Vote/Voting_HOR.htm |title=Voting in the House of Representatives |publisher=Australian Electoral Commission |date=28 June 2016 |access-date=9 December 2018}}</ref> and the rate of spoiled ballots can be five times higher than plurality voting elections.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.no2av.org/why-vote-no/av-myth-busting/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110208014140/http://www.no2av.org/why-vote-no/av-myth-busting/ |url-status = dead|archive-date=8 February 2011 |title=Busting the Myths of AV |publisher=No2av.org |date=25 October 2010 |access-date=17 April 2011 }}</ref> Since Australia has compulsory voting, however, it is difficult to tell how many ballots are deliberately spoiled.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blogs.abc.net.au/antonygreen/2011/02/informal-voting-two-ways-of-allowing-more-votes-to-count.html |title=Informal Voting – Two Ways of Allowing More Votes to Count |publisher=ABC Elections |date=28 February 2011 |access-date=15 August 2011}}</ref> Where complete rankings are not required, a ballot may become inactive if none of the ranked choices on that ballot advance to the next round.
=Ballot exhaustion in RCV=
Opponents of RCV bring the concept of Discarded Ballots (Exhausted Choices / Rankings) up as an important drawback in RCV.
 
Most jurisdictions with IRV do not require complete rankings and may use columns to indicate preference instead of numbers. In American elections with IRV, more than 99% of voters typically cast a valid ballot.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://politicalreform.newamerica.net/files/irvracememo.pdf |title=Instant Runoff Voting and Its Impact on Racial Minorities |publisher=New America Foundation |date=1 August 2008 |access-date=15 August 2011 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110615181347/http://politicalreform.newamerica.net/files/irvracememo.pdf |archive-date=15 June 2011 }}</ref>
Proactively and accurately explaining the challenges / drawbacks can help avoiding buyer's remorse down the line (e.g. Maine repealed RCV and eventually brought RCV back again).
 
A 2015 study of four local U.S. elections that used IRV found that inactive ballots occurred often enough in each of them that the winner of each election did not receive a majority of votes cast in the first round. The rate of inactive ballots in each election ranged from a low of 9.6% to a high of 27.1%.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Burnett|first1=Craig M.|last2=Kogan|first2=Vladimir|title=Ballot (and voter) 'exhaustion' under Instant Runoff Voting: An examination of four ranked-choice elections|journal=Electoral Studies|date=March 2015|volume=37|pages=41–49|doi=10.1016/j.electstud.2014.11.006|s2cid=11159132}}</ref> As one point of comparison, the number of votes cast in the 190 regularly scheduled primary runoff elections for the U.S. House and U.S. Senate from 1994 to 2016 decreased from the initial primary on average by 39%,
What does it mean that some ballot Choices / Rankings are Discarded / Exhausted (never considered in the final tally)?
according to a 2016 study by FairVote.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://fairvote.app.box.com/v/federalprimaryrunoffs2016 | title=Box}}</ref>
=Opponent of RCV=
A ballot becomes exhausted when a voter:
* Exhausted Choices: a voter can list their preferences such that when applied to a runoff round it is for a candidate who is already eliminated - the vote is taken out of the election
* Overvotes - example: voter accidentally ranks two candidates as their first choice
* Undervotes - example: voter ranks only one candidate on their ballot and that candidate is eliminated from the contest before the final round
 
== Commentary ==
This article of focusing on the first category "Exhausted Choices.
Opponents of ranked-choice voting (RCV) bring the concept of discarded ballots (both exhausted ballots and spoiled ballots) as an important drawback in RCV. In RCV, a voter's lesser-preferred candidates may be eliminated before their first choice, so that by the time their favorite is eliminated the vote may have nowhere to transfer to. On average in competitive RCV elections over 10% of ballots are exhausted or spoiled. In some cases, the eliminated candidate may have actually been the candidate preferred over all others, but because RCV doesn't count most of the rankings voters put down, it can fail to elect the most popular candidate.
 
RCV's algorithm doesn't count most of the rankings voters put down on their ballots. In ranked-choice voting, which of the voter's rankings will be counted and which will not depends on the order of elimination. As a result, it may not be safe for voters to vote for their favorite in RCV, just like with traditional [[First Past the Post electoral system|first-past-the-post/choose-one]] voting. Worse, in some cases, voting your conscience can actually backfire, resulting in a worse outcome than if you hadn't voted at all in RCV. Opponents to RCV believe the system should count your vote and it should be able to make a difference, but in ranked-choice voting that's not necessarily the case.
Ballot Exhaustion occurs when rankings on a voter’s ballot prevent their vote from being counted and determining the election’s end result.
The ballot is discarded. These votes do not influence the final outcome.
 
=== STAR voting ===
==Exhausted Choices==
What's the difference between an exhausted ballot in RCV and a vote of lesser-preference in STAR? An exhausted ballot in RCV is not counted in the deciding round, even if it could have made a difference. A vote of lesser preference for one of the two finalists (or no preference between candidates) is counted in STAR Voting's automatic runoff round is counted and the voter intent to support or oppose both finalists equally, was respected.
Ballot exhaustion occurs when a ballot is no longer countable in a tally as all of the candidates marked on the ballot are no longer in the contest.
 
An exhausted choice occurs when a voter ranks only candidates that are eliminated from a race.
 
For clarity - it is better to ignore overvotes and undervotes in the first round of tabulation as “exhausted votes” because voters could make the same mistake on a ballot in an election decided by plurality.
 
In other words, votes that are exhausted in the second and subsequent rounds of tabulation are purely a consequence of using ranked-choice voting method tabulation algorithm.
 
In cases where a voter has ranked only candidates that did not make it to the final round of counting, the voter's ballot is said to have been exhausted.
 
Ballot exhaustion occurs when all the candidates a voter ranked have lost even though two or more other candidates remain in the race.
 
This might happen because a voter chose not to rank all or many candidates or because a voter ranked as many candidates as allowed on the ballot paper.
Since such a vote contains no rankings of a candidate still in the race, it is allowed to exhaust and is no longer included in the tally for winner.
 
Exhausted ballots - who wins and loses in close races - if, for example, ten percent of ballots are exhausted, and the election margin was less than five percent, the winner may have a majority of all the non-exhausted votes, but not a majority of total votes counted in the first round.
 
This leaves open the possibility that some other candidate was the true majority choice -- and that, if voters who had their *ballots exhaust* were permitted to choose again, say in a runoff election among the two leading candidates, a different winner might emerge with a clear majority of votes cast in the runoff.
 
Although this is theoretically possible, it is unlikely. But it also is grounded in assumptions about runoffs that overlook of how much more likely it is to have “exhausted voters” in a traditional runoff than “exhausted votes” in an instant runoff. Runoffs usually mean that fewer voters have a meaningful say in the decisive election.
 
==Wasted votes==
*https://www.starvoting.org/wasted_votes
What's the difference between an exhausted ballot in RCV and a vote of no-preference in STAR?
 
An exhausted ballot in RCV is NOT COUNTED in the deciding round, even if it could have made a difference.
 
A vote of no-preference in STAR Voting's automatic runoff round IS COUNTED and the voter intent, to support or oppose both finalists equally, was respected.
 
It all comes down to '''voter intent'''. Voter intent should not be corrupted by the system.
The system should count your vote and it should be able to make a difference if possible and help you gain representation, but in Ranked Choice Voting that's not necessarily the case. This can often be traced back to the fact that the RCV algorithm doesn't count most of the rankings voters put down on their ballots. Which of your rankings will be counted and which will not depends on the order of elimination. As a result, it may not be safe to vote for your favorite in RCV, just like with traditional Choose-One Voting. Worse, in some cases, voting your conscience can actually backfire, resulting in a worse outcome than if you hadn't voted at all in RCV.
 
Voters in any system can choose to vote in a way that's not as effective as it could have been, but the STAR Voting system won't waste the vote of a voter who showed up and voted their conscience and your vote will never backfire. It's also next to impossible for an inexperienced voter to accidentally waste their vote in STAR Voting.
 
Order of elimination and incomplete tabulation. Compare these uncounted exhausted ballots in RCV to a vote of no-preference in STAR Voting, where a voter explicitly chose to score both finalists equally. These votes are counted and do make a difference to help advance the candidates who were more preferred. Allowing voters to give equal scores in STAR is the key to preventing spoiled ballots, and it's also key for eliminating vote-splitting between similar candidates and maintaining election accuracy in larger fields of candidates.
Wasted Votes: Order of elimination and incomplete tabulation. In RCV, a voter's other candidates may be eliminated before their first choice, so that by the time their favorite is eliminated the vote may have nowhere to transfer to. This is called an exhausted ballot and these ballots are not counted in the deciding round of the election. On average in competitive RCV elections over 10% of ballots are exhausted. In some cases, the eliminated candidate may have actually been the candidate preferred over all others, but because RCV doesn't count most of the rankings voters put down, it can fail to elect the most popular candidate.
 
Compare these uncounted exhausted ballots in RCV to a vote of no-preference in STAR Voting, where a voter explicitly chose to score both finalists equally. These votes are counted and do make a difference to help advance the candidates who were more preferred. Allowing voters to give equal scores in STAR is the key to preventing spoiled ballots, and it's also key for eliminating vote-splitting between similar candidates and maintaining election accuracy in larger fields of candidates.
 
==Scientific articles / studies==
[https://cpb-us-w2.wpmucdn.com/u.osu.edu/dist/e/1083/files/2014/12/ElectoralStudies-2fupfhd.pdf Ballot (and voter) “exhaustion” under Instant Runoff Voting: An examination of four ranked-choice elections]
 
We analyze data taken from images of more than 600,000 ballots cast by voters in four recent local elections.
 
We document a problem known as ballot “exhaustion,” which results in a substantial number of votes being discarded in each election.
 
As a result of ballot exhaustion, the winner in all four of our cases receives less than a majority of the total votes cast, a finding that raises serious concerns about IRV and challenges a key argument made by the system's proponents.
Second, IRV does not ensure that the winning candidate will have received a majority of all votes cast, only a majority of all valid votes in the final round of tallying.
Thus, it is possible that the winning candidate will fall short of an actual majority when a substantial number of ballots are eliminated, or “exhausted,” during the vote redistribution process. Third, and related to the previous point, there is some probability that a voter's ballot will become exhausted, eliminating their influence over the final outcome.
 
If at any point the voter did not rank a next choice (assuming her most favored choice or choices are eliminated), or all of the choices on the voter's ballot have been eliminated, the ballot is “exhausted” d meaning that it is excluded from future vote redistributions, and it does not affect the final outcome of the election. The ballot, in essence, is discarded. The process ends once a candidate receives a majority of the remaining valid votes.
 
=Proponents of RCV - Exhausted Choices=
https://www.rcv123.org/ranked-choice-voting-pros-cons#con8
 
==Con: RCV has a problem with inactive/exhausted ballots==
These occur when all the choices a voter has marked are eventually eliminated and their ballot has no active choices remaining. We should note that because of inactive ballots, the "majority" 50% in RCV can refer to a majority of active ballots, and not necessarily to 50% of the original number of ballots cast.
We believe RCV works best when voters complete all of the available ranks and communicate their complete priorities. But voting is voluntary in the United States, and if a voter does not wish to make a rank, they are free not to - even if that means denying themselves a chance to make their 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. choice known and possibly decisive in an election.
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* [[Spoiled_ballot | Spoiled ballot]]
=Links=
*https://www.starvoting.org/wasted_votes
*https://www.rcv123.org/ranked-choice-voting-pros-cons#con8
*"Ballot (and voter) “exhaustion” under Instant Runoff Voting: An examination of four ranked-choice elections"
**Craig M. Burnett, Vladimir Kogan
**Journal: Electoral Studies, Volume 37, 2015, Pages 41-49, ISSN 0261-3794,
**Link1: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2014.11.006
** Link2: https://cpb-us-w2.wpmucdn.com/u.osu.edu/dist/e/1083/files/2014/12/ElectoralStudies-2fupfhd.pdf
** Quotes:
*** "''We analyze data taken from images of more than 600,000 ballots cast by voters in four recent local elections. We document a problem known as ballot “exhaustion,” which results in a substantial number of votes being discarded in each election. As a result of ballot exhaustion, the winner in all four of our cases receives less than a majority of the total votes cast, a finding that raises serious concerns about IRV and challenges a key argument made by the system's proponents.''"
*** ''"Second, IRV does not ensure that the winning candidate will have received a majority of all votes cast, only a majority of all valid votes in the final round of tallying. Thus, it is possible that the winning candidate will fall short of an actual majority when a substantial number of ballots are eliminated, or “exhausted,” during the vote redistribution process. Third, and related to the previous point, there is some probability that a voter's ballot will become exhausted, eliminating their influence over the final outcome.''"
*** "''If at any point the voter did not rank a next choice (assuming her most favored choice or choices are eliminated), or all of the choices on the voter's ballot have been eliminated, the ballot is “exhausted” d meaning that it is excluded from future vote redistributions, and it does not affect the final outcome of the election. The ballot, in essence, is discarded. The process ends once a candidate receives a majority of the '''remaining''' valid votes.''"
 
=== References ===
<references/>