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Preferential voting

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This article is about voting systems that use ranked ballots. For alternative meanings, see: Preferential voting (disambiguation).
A preferential voting system (or preference voting system) is an electoral system in which voters rank a list of candidates in order of preference. In other words (on the most common kind of ballot paper used) the voter writes a '1' beside her first choice, a '2' beside her second preference, and so on. This contrasts with most non-preferential systems, in which the voter simply marks an 'x' beside one or more candidates.

The two preferential voting systems most commonly in use for political elections are instant runoff voting and the Single Transferable Vote (STV). Other preferential systems include Condorcet's method, Bucklin voting and the Borda count. While STV is a form of proportional representation most other preferential systems are designed for single winner elections.

Ballot variations

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Uniqueness of votes

If there are more than a small number of candidates then it becomes likely that many preference voting patterns will be unique to individual voters. For example, in the Irish general election, 2002, the electronic votes were published for the Dublin North constituency. There were 12 candidates and almost 44,000 votes cast. The most common pattern (for the three candidates from one party in a particular order) was chosen by 800 voters, and more than 16,000 patterns were chosen by just one voter each.

The number of possible complete rankings with no ties is the factorial of the number of candidates, but with ties it's equal to the corresponding ordered Bell number and is asymptotic to [\frac}]. [link]

Australia

Australia uses two forms of preferential voting; these are instant-runoff voting and the Single Transferable Vote, although neither of these names is commonly used in Australia. Federal House of Representative ballots (which might have 5 to 10 candidates) are counted by hand. Federal Senate ballots with 50 to 100 candidates are now data-entered into computer systems, which then process the ballots.

Supporters of the parties and candidates hand out "How to Vote" cards (HTVs) at the entrance to polling stations, advising voters how to fill in their ballots to support that candidate. Taking these cards is voluntary, and no voter is obliged to follow their instructions, but a high proportion are happy to do so.

The voting systems of some jurisdiction in Australia allow group voting tickets or "above the line voting" where a voter can with a single mark indicate support for a predefined set of preferences. This reduces the burden on voters, especially where there are large numbers of candidates and when a complete preference list is required to make a vote valid. However it then gives the political parties drawing up the lists considerable tactical power.

List of preferential systems

See also

Further reading

 


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