At 04:44 PM 5/21/2013, Thomas Ruen wrote:
>The 2002 French election is definitely one that Approval would make
>a difference, but its not clear to me that "unlimited approval" is
>necessary or helpful. What is needed is a PRIMARY to reduce the field!
There is a primary. The election is a primary! The problem is the
specific election method used, including the rules for determining
who goes to a runoff, should one be required. As has been pointed out
subsequently, the candidates in the primary are themselves chosen
through party process, which includes party primaries. The field has
already been reduced.
The election has as many candidates as it has because France has a
very healthy multiparty system. However, voters have little
difficulty choosing from among the candidates, if they have a party
affiliation, a party whose goals and process they adequately trust.
Partisan elections behave *very differently* from nonpartisan ones.
>So my (smaller step towards approval) alternative might be a 2-vote
>limit, top-4 winner primary (like the plurality-at-large primary
>rules for a 2 seat election). This would help reduce the field
>without enabling a united plurality of voters to pick all the primary winners.
>A top-4 primary maintains the "plurality" spoiler-disincentive, so
>like-minded candidates who work together before the election can
>improve their odds, without the harsh cliff of top-two cutoff among
>so many choices.
Why limit it to two votes? But I would *not* suggest, for France, a
pure approval primary. I'd suggest a Bucklin primary, or whatever
they call it in France. (We also call it Majority Judgment or
Graduated Majority Judgment or median Range. Sum-of-votes Range could
also be fine.
A top-four primary could then lead to difficulties in the runoff.
With a Range ballot (which can be used for Bucklin or MJ), it's
possible to test for a winner who would beat the other runoff
candidates pairwise. If there are normally two candidates (top-two
range), then, a candidate who beats both of them, it could be argued,
should be in the runoff. Rare, probably, but possible. So the runoff
method should be able to handle three candidates. That's easy.
Bucklin allows specifying preference, still, but amalgamating
approvals, and it would be very simple to vote in a three candidate
elections (It need only be two-rating, but three-rating allows better
expression of preference strength. If there are three candidates,
then, a few voters might rate all three, thereby accepting all three.
It's purely symbolic in a three-candidate election. However, some
voters would defer the second preference to the third rank, and that
has more meaning and can affect the outcome.
It's what I have called "limited later-no-harm protection." That this
can be done with Bucklin has been missed by many analysts, who have
treated Bucklin as if it were a pure ranked voting system.
>With 4 candidates, in the general election, a THIRD election, a
>top-two runoff might still be good if there's no majority winner and
>you require it. Alternately an unlimited approval vote could pick a
>winner immediately, if you skip the majority requirement.
There are already three elections: party primaries, general election,
runoff if needed.
>I'm not saying this suggestion is BEST, only showing the NEED for
>primary process to reduce the field AND I continue to assert that an
>unlimited Approval vote primary (like Arizona's bill) gives too much
>power for manipulating the field.
A critical factor has been missed; the Arizona bill covers only
municipal elections, and is optional for municipalities. There is
only one municipality in Arizona that has partisan elections, that's
Tucson, which, then, has party primaries. Tucson is heavily
Democratic, it's rare for any Republican to get elected to anything
there. Tucson could use approval for the party primaries, if they
wished, it would be a *slight* improvement at *very low cost.* They
could safely use approval in the general election, as well. Approval
can really be used anywhere, with appropriate rules. Approval in the
general election would allow supporting a minor party or candidate
*and* supporting a frontrunner. But Bucklin would make that even
easier as a decision for voters.
The Arizona bill is a giant leap forward, in fact, in context. What I
had never considered even possible was the effect of an open approval
primary with nonpartisan elections, where the primary does *not*
determine the winner. In these elections, it is quite unlikely that
the best winner of the primary would not be among the top two in the
primary. It's possible, then, later, to tweak the primary to improve
it even further; but meanwhile, if there are any implementations, we
will get real election data. At very low cost. After all, Approval is
merely Count All the Votes.