Let's say you've got a legislature or another relatively small body (roughly around Dunbar's number) that needs to elect someone to some kind of position. This body is educated enough to know about any voting system and knows how to use their knowledge of their colleagues to come up with the best voting strategy to elect the candidate they like. What would the best voting system be to avoid strategic voting and ensure that the best candidate wins with very little chance of somebody accidentally winning due to a miscalculation of voting tactics?
I would use a Condorcet method that handles a cycle with a restricted version of range voting. Every member of this body would rank each candidate. They would then score each candidate with the following rules:
1) You can't score a candidate higher than a candidate you ranked higher.
2) The score given to a candidate must be at minimum (number of candidates- rank of candidate) multiplied by 3. For the first ranked candidate, this would also be the mandatory score and last place would have a mandatory score of 0 pts.
In a four candidate race, first place would get a score of 9 pts; second place could be 6 -9 pts; third place could be 3 to however many points the second candidate was scored. fourth place would get 0 points
If the UK used this system, do you think Nick Clegg would be Prime Minister instead of David Cameron?
I would use a Condorcet method that handles a cycle with a restricted version of range voting. Every member of this body would rank each candidate. They would then score each candidate with the following rules:
1) You can't score a candidate higher than a candidate you ranked higher.
2) The score given to a candidate must be at minimum (number of candidates- rank of candidate) multiplied by 3. For the first ranked candidate, this would also be the mandatory score and last place would have a mandatory score of 0 pts.
In a four candidate race, first place would get a score of 9 pts; second place could be 6 -9 pts; third place could be 3 to however many points the second candidate was scored. fourth place would get 0 points
If the UK used this system, do you think Nick Clegg would be Prime Minister instead of David Cameron?
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