Geographic Open List/Delegated (GOLD) voting: Difference between revisions

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# Tally votes
#* Each ballot counts as 1 point for the chosen candidate.
# Eliminate all butcandidates thewho topdidn't 2get candidatesover in1/3 eachof the votes from their local riding., Transferunless thosethey votesgot the most of any candidate in their riding.
#* This makes sure that no riding is badly mis-represented just because a given party "deserves" more winners.
#* It also helps discourage voters from splintering into small single-issue parties. If a party can’t make the top two33% in even one locality, it won’t get seats. But those votes will still be transferred, so those voters can still be represented by a relatively sympathetic candidate from a slightly larger party.
#* There's an extra rule that candidates with over 1/3 the votes of an average riding are not eliminated in this step. This scarcely ever matters, because in order for the third candidate in a riding to have more than 1/3 of the average riding, that riding must have significantly more than the average votes. But in such a case, where many people from other ridings are choosing to spend their vote for an above-average candidate, the fact that they happen to have two above-average opponents shouldn't count against them.
# Find winners and transfer leftovers.
#* If V is the total number of valid (non-exhausted) votes, and S is the number of unfilled seats, then a “quota” is defined as Q=V/(S+1). This ensures that each full “quota” of voters will get a seat, with less than one “quota” of vote left unrepresented even though they still have a valid preference.
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