It can be argued that a Condorcet method is more complicated than IRV, but I think Borda count is way easier to understand than IRV. This is just anecdotal, but know a bunch of people who assumed "rank choice voting" worked like the Borda count.
I agree with your overall point. I actually...
So it is official. The ballot data is out and Begich should have won. You can see a more detailed pairwise summary here, but this is the main pairwise results:
Begich beats Peltola with 52.5% of the vote.
Begich beats Palin with by 61.4% of the vote.
Peltola beats Palin with 51.4% of the...
I haven't been here in a while, but I have to say that this looks like it was a failure. Polling was pretty accurate saying that Peltola would beat Palin 51% to 49% if they went head to head. The polling also said that Nick Begich would beat Peltola head to head by about 10 pts. One poll said...
It isn’t that there isn’t enough time, it is that there are a lot of races and people are generally lazy and don’t want to do homework and they aren’t going to if they have a shit load of candidates in every race they are going to vote in. I don’t expect them to memorize the character of 50...
It is hard enough to get people to pay attention to candidates when there are just two of them. I feel that any voting system in which multiple candidates can run without a massive spoiler effect will result in more instances of candidates getting elected without much vetting. I think a runoff...
This video pretty much gives the explanation.
The summary is that Cenk Uygur, co-founder of the Justice Democrats, was forced into resignation for sexist comments he made 18 years ago when he was a completely different person.
Anyone who watches TYT knows that does not represent Cenk now. It...
Just saw the Last Jedi. It was so bad. The humor, the dialog, and the acting was just so cringy. It had some surprise twists that I didn't see coming, but I also didn't care about them.
It absolutely is hypocritical of the representative to do that, but it isn’t hypocritical for voters to still vote for him if he is still willing undermine abortion rights.
Furthermore, if there is a candidate like Thomas Jefferson who owned slaves, but wanted to abolish slavery while his...
I don’t like Roy Moore and I think he’ll be a terrible senator, but I don’t think the accusations against him are good reasons not to vote for him in the general election. Making sure an asshole doesn’t get elected pales in comparison to what policy they are going to enact. If you are against...
It would get candidates to pay more attention to Texas and Republican voters from the blue states would also have more sway. It also wouldn't necessarily be just California and New York gaining control of Texas electoral votes. Even if other red states do not agree to the compact, you could...
You don't need all 50 states, you should need enough states to get 270 delegates. Also, you don't just have to exclude states that are not in the compact from the results tabulation. They could count other states plurality system as voters just approving a single candidate. I'd want to do...
I'm saying that every state delegate in the compact would be obligated to vote for the same person. So, if Texas and California sign on to this compact and Bob Bunghole wins through the point system, all delegates from both Texas and California would be obligated to vote for Bob Bunghole. It...
I am a little bit worried about the expenses or at least the perceived expenses of increasing it by a factor of 10. Not only do you have to worry about the salary, but you also have to worry about staffers. Ideally, I'd have a larger body, but not all of them go to Washington. Most of them...
I'm not proposing fractional electors; I'm proposing fractional points. I'm suggesting that states have a compact to keep a point tally and all the states in the compact agree to nominate all of their delegates based on which candidate has the most points. Every delegate would be required by...
I agree that there should be more members in the House, but I don't think that is going to increase it enough to really solve the rounding error problem.
Also, I'm pretty sure Maine and Nebraska go by district, not proportionality.
It can also be done with a state compact. My point was though that just allocating them proportionally is a bad idea because states don't have enough delegates to do it accurately.
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