Anonymous user
Majority Acceptable Score voting: Difference between revisions
no edit summary
imported>Homunq No edit summary |
imported>Homunq No edit summary |
||
Line 7:
# Highest points wins.
Step 2b probably doesn't matter, because any majority-supported candidate that exists would almost certainly win in step 4 anyway. But step 2b is part of Bucklin voting, which was used in over a dozen US cities during the Progressive era. Also, it lets you say the whole method in one sentence,
Here's a google spreadsheet to calculate results: [https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1siFG6XmOZokygY-86EhAKgv8YwzKtTET6AJopyXRqu0/edit#gid=0]. On page 1, it has some examples of how different combinations of ratings would come out, suggesting that it could work well in both [[chicken dilemma]] and [[center squeeze]] scenarios. On page 2, it has some hypothetical results for the Egypt 2012 election, showing that this system could have elected a reformer over Morsi, despite vote-splitting among the various reformers. IRV could have elected Morsi. (Note: the spreadsheet does not actually check step 2b.)
Line 49:
!bgcolor="#fff"|Nashville
|bgcolor="#fff"|26
|bgcolor="#fff"|37▼
|bgcolor="#fff"|0
|bgcolor="#fff"|
|bgcolor="#
|bgcolor="#
|bgcolor="#bfb"|76.3
|-
!bgcolor="#fff"|Chattanooga
|bgcolor="#fff"|15
|bgcolor="#fff"|
▲|bgcolor="#fff"|21
|bgcolor="#fff"|42
|bgcolor="#
|bgcolor="#
|-
!bgcolor="#fff"|Knoxville
|bgcolor="#fff"|17
|bgcolor="#fff"|
|bgcolor="#fff"|42
|bgcolor="#fff"|
|bgcolor="#fcc"|
|bgcolor="#fff"|(
|}
</div>
|