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Page 1: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

AccurateDemocracyPrimer

Page 2: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy

Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO.

Full Representation fills a balanced Council.

Fair-share Spending quickly sets Budgets. New

Pairwise tally enacts a popular central Policy.

Goal, Conclusions and Action

Accurate DemocracyAccurate DemocracyBetter Tools for Elections and Meetings

Page 3: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Ways of adding up votes fail to represent large groups in many places. In North Carolina, there were enough black voters to fill up two election districts. But they were a minority spread over eight districts. So for over 100 years they won no voice in Congress. As voters they were silenced.

The Northwest has been ripped apart for 30 years as forestry laws are reversed again and again. Hasty log-ging in times of weak regulation wasted resources. Sudden limits on logging bankrupted some workers and small businesses. A political pendulum swings; it cuts down forests and species, families and towns.

Tragedies of Democracy Tragedies of Democracy

More stories later…

Page 4: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

We all know how to decide the simplest sort of issue: A question with only two answers is voted ‘yes’ or ‘no’. For such an issue, the yes-no votes are enough.

But as soon as three candidates run for one office, the question becomes more complicated. Then a yes-or-no vote is no longer suitable.

What’s Wrong What’s Wrong

3

Our defective voting rules come from the failure to see

different jobs for voting; need different types of voting.

Page 5: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Winner-Take-All Districts = Off-Center Councils

$$$ LAWS $$$

Typical Council Elected By Plurality Rule

In the 1800s

Page 6: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Some English-speaking countries still count votes by England's old plurality rule. It elects only one rep from a district; and winning it does not require a majority. It merely elects whoever gets the most ‘yes’ votes.

Where only the largest party in a district wins a rep, only two big parties thrive. So the voters get only two real candidates; that is a very limited choice.

A council majority sets policies (blue reps in picture). A small change in one district's popular vote can shift all power, making policies swerve from side to side. Plurality politics is a war of winner take all.

4

Eras, Voting Rules and Typical Councils

Page 7: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

In the 1900sIn the 1900sFair-Share Elections = One-Sided Majorities

$ $$ LAWS $$ $ Typical Council Elected By Full Representation

Page 8: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Full RepresentationFull RepresentationProportional Voting was developed around 1900

to end some problems caused by the plurality rule. Most democracies have adopted “PV”. It elects several reps from each large district. A group that gets, say 10% of votes, gets 10% of seats.

Thus PV delivers fair shares of representation.

It leads to broad representation of issues and views. But usually there is no central party (C above); and the two biggest parties normally refuse to work together. So the side with the most seats forms a ruling majority. Then they enact policies skewed to one side.

5

Page 9: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

In the 2000sIn the 2000sEnsemble Councils = Balanced Majorities

$ $ $ LAWS $ $ $

Ensemble Elected By Central And Fair-Share Rules

C

Page 10: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Ensemble CouncilsEnsemble CouncilsNew ensemble rules elect most reps by PV,

plus a few by a central rule. (C in picture) A central rule we’ll see later picks winners with wide appeal and views near the middle of the voters. Its winners are thus near the middle of a PV council. So they are a council's powerful swing votes.

Most voters in that wide base don’t want an averaged or centrist policies. They want policies to combine the best suggestions from all groups.

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Page 11: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Democratic Democratic ProgressProgress

A centrist policy enacts a narrow point of view. It excludes other opinions and needs. A one-sided policy also ignores rival ideas.

A compromise policy tries to negotiate rival plans. But contrary plans forced together often work poorly. And so does the average of rival plans.

A balanced policy unites compatible ideas from all sides. This process needs advocates for diverse proposals. And it needs powerful moderators.

Page 6

Page 12: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Broad, Balanced MajorityBroad, Balanced Majority A broad, balanced majority works to enact

broad, balanced policies. These give more chance for happiness to the greatest number of people. The success of policies is measured in a typical voter's education and income, freedom and safety, health and leisure.

Old rules cause one-sided results and tragedies. An ensemble council is inclusive, yet it is well centered, and decisive. So it can make a group popular, yet stable and quick. The best rules for spending and policies follow this pattern.

6

Page 13: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Nine VotersLet’s think about an election with nine voters whose

opinions range from left to right. The figures in this picture mark the positions of voters on the political left, right or center – as though we asked them, “If you want high-quality govern-ment services and taxes like Norway, please stand here. Like Canada? Stand here please. Like the USA? Stand here. Stand over there for Mexico's low taxes and government.”

High taxes, Low taxes,great gov. services poor services 8

Page 14: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Plurality ElectionThree candidates stand for office. A voter

likes the one whose political position is nearest. So voters on the left like the candidate on the left.

Ms. K is the candidate nearest four voters; L is nearest two and M is nearest three. L and M split the voters on the right.

K is nearest four voters. L is nearest two. M is nearest three.

Page 15: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Runoff ElectionWho wins a runoff between the top two?

K, MThe two (teal) who had voted for L now vote for M. Do votes that move count more than others?

Yes, No

Runoffs practically ask, “Which side is stronger?”

Candidate M wins the runoff. 10

Page 16: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Politics on Two Dimensions Voting rules behave the same even when opinions do not fit

neatly along a line from left to right.

Here a group spreads out on two issue dimensions: left to right plus up and down. On the steps of their school, we asked them a second question. It was about an issue apart from taxes and services. “Please take a step up if you want more regulation. Please step down if you want less regulation. Take more steps for more change.”

Kay wins a plurality.

Em wins a runoff

9

Page 17: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

The goal of Instant Runoff Voting is this:

How does it work? You rank your favorite candidates as your first choice, second choice, third and so on. Then your ballot goes to your first-rank candidate.

If no candidate gets a majority, the one with fewest ballots loses and there is another round of counting.Your ballot stays with your favorite if she advances. It moves to your next choice if your favorite has lost.This repeats until one candidate gets a majority.

A majority winner,from a single election.

Page 18: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Benefits of IRVBenefits of IRVA majority winner from 1 election, so no winners-

without-mandates and no costly runoff elections.

No drop in voter turnout for the runoff.

Less negative campaigning, as a candidate must ask a rival's supporters for their 2nd choice votes.

No hurting your first choice by ranking a 2nd, as a 2nd does not count unless the 1st choice has lost.

No lesser-of-two-evils choice, as you can mark a true 1st choice without fear of wasting your vote.

No split-vote, worries for parties as votes for minor candidates move to each voter's more popular choices. 10

Page 19: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Instant Runoff Voting Patterns In South Korea's 1987 election, two liberals faced the

heir of a military dictator. The liberals got a majority of the votes but split their supporters, so the conservative won under a plurality rule. These rules elect whoever gets the most votes; 50% is not required.

The winner claimed a mandate to continue repressive policies. Years later he was convicted of treason in the tragic killing of pro-democracy demonstrators.

With Instant Runoff Voting, ballots for the weaker liberal could have transferred to elect the stronger.

Page 20: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

From five factions to one majority.

1) Ms. Violet loses. Her ballots go to each voter's next choice. 2) Ms. Blonde loses. Her ballots move.

3) Ms. Green loses. 4) Ms. Carmine loses.

X

X XX

11

1 2 3 4

Page 21: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

IRV Elects Leaders

IRV elects leaders in more and more cities: London, Melbourne, Minneapolis, San Francisco, Sydney... Students use it at Duke, Harvard, Stanford, Rice, Tufts, MIT, Cal Tech, Carlton, Clark, Reed, Vassar, The University of: CA, IL, MD, MN, OK, VA, WA,…

IRV lets you vote for the candidate you really like. And even if that option loses, your vote isn't wasted. It goes to your next choice.

Page 22: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Single-Winner District Elections A class of 27 wants to elect a planning committee.

We could elect 1 rep from each of the 3 seminar groups. But bluish majorities would win in all three sections. And other voters would get no voice on the committee.

Full RepresentationFull Representation Election

A better suggestion says, “Keep the class whole. Change the definition of victory from half of a small seminar to a quarter of the whole class, plus one.” So 3 reps must get 3/4, not just a plurality. Few wasted votes mean a strong mandate for council decisions. Now bluish voters win two seats, a majority.And yellowish voters win the third seat.

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Page 23: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Single Winner Districts vs. Full RepresentationFull Representation

Page 24: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

The principle of Proportional VotingProportional Voting is:

Majority rule, with representationMajority rule, with representation

for political minorities,for political minorities,

in proportion to their votes.in proportion to their votes.

That is, 60% of the vote gets you 60% of the seats, 

not all of them. And 10% of the vote gets you 10% of  

the seats, not none of them. These are fair-shares.

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Page 25: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

How Does Full RepFull Rep Work?

In Germany and New Zealand, each party offers its list to the voters.

In Australia and Ireland each voter makes a list by ranking candidates.

Either way, the more votes a list gets, the more names on it get elected.

How does it work? There are 3 basic ingredients:Elect more than one rep from each district.You vote for more than one; you vote for a list.

Parties offer lists to us, or we each list favorites.The more votes a list gets, the more reps it elects.

Page 26: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Benefits of Full Full RepresentationRepresentation

Fair shares of reps go to the competing groups, so Diverse candidates get a real chance to win. so Close races for swing seats are on most ballots, so Real choices for the voters and high voter turnout.

Women get elected about 3 times more often. soMajority rule improves — also by few wasted votes, real choices, turnout and reps with equal support. soPolicies match public opinion betterHealth and education often increase.

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Page 27: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Fair-SharesFair-Shares and Moderates

Chicago elects no Republicans to the State Congress, even though they win up to a third of the city’s votes. But for over a century it elected reps from both parties. The state used a fair rule to elect 3 reps in each district. Most gave the majority party 2 reps and the minority 1; so both parties courted voters in all districts

Those Chicago Republicans were often moderates. So were Democratic reps from Republican strongholds. Even the biggest party in a district tended to elect more independent-minded reps. They could work together and make state policies more moderate.

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Page 28: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

New Zealand switched in 1996 from Single-Winner Districts to a blend of SWD and Proportional Voting. A small, one-winner district exaggerates local issues. PV frees voters from district enclosures to elect some reps with thin but widespread appeal.

The seats won by women rose from 21% to 29%.

The native Maoris reps increased from 7% to 16%, which is almost proportional to the Maori population. Voters also elected 3 Polynesian and 1 Asian rep.

This is called Proportional Voting, Fair Voting, Fair, Full or Proportional Representation.

New Zealand

15

Page 29: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Why Elect WomenWhy Elect WomenDoes PV tend to elect more women?

New Zealand and Germany elect half of their MPs by list PR and half of them in single-winner districts. Their districts elect few women; but in the same election, the PR lists elect three times more women.

In every one-seat district, a party's safest nominee is likely to be a member of the dominant sex, race, etc. That adds up to very poor representation of all others.

PR leads each party to nominate a balanced team of candidates to attract voters. This promotes women. A team may have class, ethnic and religious diversity. And that gives us diverse reps to approach for help.

18a

Page 30: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

18b

Some leading women spoke of starting a new party in Sweden. In one-seat districts, new parties split a side and lead to certain defeat. But PR promptly gives seats to a new party, if a big group of voters support it.

This credible threat made some parties decide that job experience was not as important as gender balance. They dropped some experienced men to make more room for women on the party list. And they won. Now they are incumbents with experience, power and allies.

Why Elect Women 2Why Elect Women 2

Page 31: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

19a

Voting Rules and Policies 1Voting Rules and Policies 1A woman in a multi-winner race is not so much

running against a man or an incumbent. She is more often seen as running for her issues. Also, most “Women prefer to compete in teams,” not solo.

With more women and a stronger mandate, the council represents more voters, and so do its policies. This helps make the policies match public opinion, which often raises the quality of health and education.

Page 32: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

19b

Consequences: Legislatures with fewer women tend to give less attention to health care, child care, educa-tion, and other social needs. Run-down schools and city hospitals are one blight; a class of citizens with inferior education and health are another.

If those urgent needs overwhelm us, we neglect the essential needs, the structural roots of our problems. We may get bad results from poor policies, due to poor representation, caused at the root by bad voting rules.

Voting Rules and Policies 2Voting Rules and Policies 2

Page 33: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

The link between better voting rules and a better quality of life is clear in the statistics from countries. It's likely true for towns and other organizations too. The data makes it plain: people who want better public health or schools, a clean environment or government, all need to speak-out for better voting rules.

Voting Rules and Policies 3Voting Rules and Policies 3

Page 34: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

C

Fair SharesFair Shares to Buy Public GoodsElecting reps is the most obvious use of voting.

Rules to set policies and budgets are important too. In fact, they get used much more than election rules.

$   $ $ $ LAW $ $ $ $ 

Fair shares give minority voters some power. 16

Page 35: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Fair SharesFair Shares in History

Full Rep spreads seats fairly. In the same way,

Fair-share Spending funds optional projects fairly.

It is the next logical step.

Democratic rights fulfilled through history:

Voting for rich men, poor men, colored men, women.

Full Representation for large political minorities.

Fair-share Spending by big groups of reps.

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Page 36: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

A Pattern of Unfair Spending Many organizations shirk competitive elections.

But members may still compete over money.

Sometimes a faction captures a lot of the budget. Others may grow rebellious, or leave.

They need a rule to make funding fair.

x Many empty hands Fair shares 18

Page 37: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

The principle of Fair-share SpendingFair-share Spending

That is, 60% of the voters spend 60% of the fund, not all of it. A project needs grants from many voters to prove it is a public good worth public money. So we let a voter fund only a fraction of a project.

How does it work? Like IRV: you rank the choices. Then your money moves to help your top choices. And a tally of all ballots drops the least-funded item. This repeats ‘til all still in the race are fully funded.

Spending power for all, Spending power for all, in proportion to their votes.in proportion to their votes.

Page 38: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Fair-share Spending Works This WayFair-share Spending Works This WayIn a citywide vote, each neighborhood or interest

group funds a few school, park or road improvements. The city's taxes then pay for the projects as the School, Park and Road Departments manage the contracts.

Every neighborhood and interest group controlsits share of spending power; no one is shut out. This makes (hidden) empires less profitable.

“We’ll fund this project.”

“We’ll fund “We'll fund this one!” another." 19a

Page 39: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

If a plurality spends all the money, the last thing they buy adds little to their happiness. It is a low priority. But that money could buy the high-priority favorite of a big minority. It could make them happier.

Fair-sharesFair-shares or Winner Take All

In economic terms: The “social utility” of the money tends to increase if we each allocate a share. Shares spread the opportunities and incentives too.

In political terms: Fair shares earn wide respect, as we are each in some minority wanting a project. The budget serves and appeals to more people.

19b

Page 40: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Merits of Fair-share SpendingFair-share Spending

After discussion, 1 poll quickly sets many budgets. It reduces agenda effects such as leaving naught

for the last items or going into debt for them. It splits free-rider or poison-pill items from others.

It lets sub-groups pick projects; it’s like federalismbut without new layers of taxes and bureaucracy.And it funds big groups both spread out and local.

This does not hand minorities too much power: The majority spends most of the fair-share fund.

20b

Page 41: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Merits of Fair Share SpendingFair Share Spending

Smooth budget roller-coasters that hurt efficiency.

Stop starvation budgets designed to cause failure.

Majorities enact policies that direct the programs.

But they cannot block the grants from a minority.

A member can waste only her share of the fund. Voters can see a rep’s grants to each project, tax

cut or debt reduction and hold her accountable.

Fair-share voting builds trust in group spending

and may raise support for more of it.

21b

Page 42: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

More Merits of Fair SharesFair Shares

FS reduces majority domination of others; so it makes empire building less attractive. The majority

lose a fraction of power for every minority annexed.

FS helps any interest group which is dispersed; which is not the local plurality.

FS avoids both centralized and self-centered economics. It aids cooperation in ad hoc groups.

It keeps high incentives for inventors and investors to increase efficiency.

Extra

Page 43: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Every “line item” starts with most of its old budget. You write-in and rank higher budgets for the items. Your ballot can afford to pay your fair shares for your top choices. This is how it gives them votes.

Each budget level of an item needs a quota of votes. It gets a vote when a ballot pays a share of the cost up to that level or higher. cost / quota = 1 share = 1 vote

The item with the weakest top level loses that level. Any money you gave it flows to your highest rank that lacks your vote. This repeats until the top level of each item is fully funded, by winning a quota of votes.

21

Reset Ongoing BudgetsReset Ongoing Budgets

Page 44: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

PairwisePairwise Test Number Two The Runoff shown on slide 15 was a one-against-one or

“Pairwise” contest between candidates M and K. Five voters preferred M over K.

Here is a second Pairwise test with the same voters: Candidate K loses this one-against-one test.Candidate L wins by five votes to four.

K is nearest four voters. L is nearest five voters. 22

Page 45: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

PairwisePairwise Test Number Three Candidate L wins her next one-on-one test also.

She has won majorities against each of her rivals, so she best represents all the voters. She is the Pairwise winner. Could another person top candidate L? Yes, No Hint: Is anyone closer to the political center? Yes, No

L is nearest six voters; M is nearest three 23

Page 46: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

The goal in a Pairwise TallyPairwise Tally is this:

Majority victories,Majority victories,over every single rival.over every single rival.

The winner must top every rival, one-against-one.

The sports analogy is a “round-robin tournament.” A player has one contest with each rival. If she wins all her tests, she wins the tournament.

Each voting test sorts all the ballots into two piles.If you rank J higher than D, your ballot goes to J.The option with the most ballots wins that test. If an option wins all its tests, it wins the election.

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Page 47: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Pairwise TalliesPairwise Tallies quickly pick balanced policies.

Full-choice ballots rank related motions all at once. They simplify the rules of order, speed up voting, and cut agenda effects, poison and free-rider amendments.

Balanced policies avoid erratic or excessive changes.That saves money and builds respect for government.It reduces the game-of-chance and fear in politics. And it reduces the payoff from big campaign gifts.

Pairwise can elect a neutral judge or administrator. It also can elect a moderator to be the swing vote for a balanced, “ensemble council.” (See slides 9 and 10.) 24b

Page 48: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

PairwisePairwise Popularity and Balance

A policy needs good marks from voters all along the political spectrum, because every voter can rank it relative to other policies. So all voters are “obtainable” and valuable. This leads to policies with wide appeal.(A plurality or runoff winner gets no votes from the losing side and doesn't need to please those voters.)

The Pairwise winner is central and popular: Most centrist and liberal voters prefer it over each conservative policy. At the same time, centrist and conservative voters prefer it to each liberal policy. All sides can join to beat a narrowly-centrist policy.

Page 49: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Liberal voters rank Kennedy higher than Clinton. So to win a majority over Kennedy, Clinton must outrank him on ballots from centrists and conservatives. (She will not be a conservative’s first choice though.)

Conservative voters rank Bush higher than Clinton. So to win a majority over Bush, Clinton must outrank him on ballots from centrists and liberals.25

Chair’s Balanced SupportChair’s Balanced Support

“Our centeris near me.”

“I think it's

over here.”“I am the center!"

Page 50: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Gerrymander Candidate M lost the last election by plurality rule. Now let's

say her party gerrymanders the borders of her election district. They add neighbors (purple below) who tend to vote for her party, and exclude less favorable voters (the yellow voter mis-sing on the left). The party's nominee is certain to win the new district. Reps will tend to come from the party's activist wing.

Now K is nearest 3 voters, L is nearest 2, and M is nearest 4.

Page 51: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

The old plurality rule is the easiest to manipulate.

But Pairwise winner L doesn’t change in this case. And Full Representation also resists gerrymanders.

Bribes lead some reps switch sides on a policy. Pairwise resists such corruption well. Bribing a few reps moves the council's middle, and its winning policy, only a little.

Fair shares limit the affect of bribing a big party. Visible grants restrain corruption.

Resisting Rigged Voters

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Page 52: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Meetings often make interlocking decisionsone at a time. They use a yes-no process, with or without explicit rules of order, agendas, and votes. Proposals decided early can shut out later options.

Or people may talk about all options at once butnever clearly tell (vote) their second and third choices. So a few people pushing a single idea can appear to be the strongest group. And one person with a balanced idea but no ardent supporters might drop it from the discussion.

The best rules avoid all those problems by ranking the rival motions (or budgets) on the same ballot.

Unstack the Agenda

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Page 53: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

A good tally assures equality; even busy or unassertive people cast a full vote.

The secret ballot protect dissenters from all types of pressure and coercion.

A ballot or survey teaches members as they try to set budgets and priorities.

Multi-winner funding gives fair shares. Yet it doesn’t let any block action. It is co-operative, not consensual or adversarial.

For Groups of Any Size

Page 54: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

When choosing a voting rule, a new Mercedes costs

little more than an old jalopy. That price is a bargain

when the votes steer important budgets or policies.

Does your car have an 1890 steering tiller or a new,

power-steering wheel? Does your organization have an

1890 voting rule or a new, centrally-balanced rule?

A group may test drive a new rule in a survey.

Or a “committee of the whole” may vote, tally and

report its result for adoption by the usual rules.

Steering Analogy

28b

Page 55: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Voting affects our laws – and our views on life. By making us practice winner-take-all or sharing, rules change the way we treat each other and see the world.

Expectations of voting can rise with better rules. They work less as tools to fight culture wars, more as tools to support the freedom of diverse communities.

Voting reform opens doors to many popular changes. The improvements can last for many election cycles.

Tools Between People

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Give voters real choices of candidates who can win, by electing fair shares of reps from all big groups.

This supports a wide array of candidates, debate of issues, and turnout of voters.

Reduce wasted votes and so end weak mandates.Cut the influence of spoilers and gerrymanders.

Reduce attack ads and anger among voters.Cut the payoffs from private campaign funding.

Benefits to Voter and RepsBenefits to Voter and Reps

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Page 57: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Give fair representation to all major groups, so the council will enact laws with real majorities.

Elect a central chair with wide appeal; she’ll bethe swing vote between reps from interest groups.

Cut the chances for agenda scams. Speed-rankall options to detach poison pills and free riders.

Give all reps equal funds for projects and agencies.And make each rep's spending visible to her voters.

Some Ethical Goals for LegislationSome Ethical Goals for Legislation

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Strengthen Votes & MandatesStrengthen Votes & Mandates

Good rules help voters organize. They expand the base of power, the number of voters supporting:

a Chairperson from a plurality to a majority;

a Council from a plurality to over three quarters;

a Budget from a few power blocs to all members;

a Policy from a one-sided to an over-all majority.

These rules give voters more effective votes. So they give stronger mandates to the winners.

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The best voting rules are fast, easy and fair.

They organize big groups backing popular choices.

Politics are more principled and peaceful with

fair shares for representation and money,

full majorities for presidents and policies.

ConclusionsConclusions

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Next Steps for Groups

Organize voters, with Movable Votes.

Represent everyone, with Full Representation.

Empower everyone, with Fair-share Spending.

Center policies, with Pairwise winners.

Steps toward accurate democracy include:

Page 61: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Learn more at AccurateDemocracy.com.

Play its complimentary software.

Then give these benefits to your school,

club or town with help from FairVote.org,

The Center for Voting and Democracy.

Next Steps for Readers

© 2003-2011, Robert Loring, [email protected]

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Page 63: Accurate Democracy Primer. Tragedies, Eras and Progress of Democracy Instant Runoff Voting elects a strong CEO. Full Representation fills a balanced Council

Ultimately, voting cannot satisfy two people with opposing values. Leaving or “voting with your feet” is the surest way to get to the policies you want. When you can’t do that, avoid willful authoritarians; build democratic institutions with open-minded egalitarians.

Democracy improves in periods such as The Enlightenment, when many people curb blind faith, obedience and ideology to expand knowledge through rationalism, skepticism and empiricism.

Exit or Power

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Ballot access laws make it hard for minor parties to get on the ballot. Big parties make those laws because they fear spoiler candidates. Better voting rules put that fear to rest.

News firms might inform us better if they were ruled by the subscribers' votes.

Public campaign funding in Maine lets reps give less time to rich donors and more to common voters.

Optical-scan ballots and open-source software check fraud by election workers and corporations.

Other Election Issues

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Voting holidays can raise turnout.

Sabbaticals pit returning reps against incumbents. IRV avoids making both lose due to a party spilt.

Long terms in office reward reps for long-term planning as voters see the results by the next election. Overlapping terms smooth small, frequent changes.

Initiative voters get more choices and power with full-choice ballots and Pairwise tallies. They should set the rules for politicians.

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Other Election Issues 2

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Bad Old Budget Rules

The old way to set budgets blursblurs responsibility. Take overspending. Liberals say big weapons are the cause; conservatives blame social services. Every rep can claim, “I didn't spend too much.”

Protecting the environment is popular with liberal and conservative voters. Reps don't dare attack it openly. So, to pay off some of their corporate sponsors, reps slyly starve agencies that enforce environmental laws. Similar cuts hit OHSA, and auditors of corporate tax returns.

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“Lower but constant funding is more productive than a roller-coaster budget that might average far more.”

The Super-Conducting Super Collider was an effort to build the world’s largest cyclotron. It was funded by a majority in Congress for a few years… then cut. All it left was a “Billion-dollar hole in the ground.”

Members might be more cautious about starting vast projects if they cannot spend other members' shares. And they need the power to finish projects with their own shares.

Roller-Coaster Budgets

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A System of Unfair Spending

The US Congress lets each rep “earmark” funds for

pet projects in their district. In 2004 they spent $45B on

14,010 earmarks.

Some reps earmark much more money than others.

Each rep must vote yes or no to a huge “omnibus” bill.

It holds hundreds of earmarks, some good, some bad.

This makes it hard to prove who wasted the money.

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So if we all agree, we can change budgets radically. But if many disagree, they can moderate the changes. Yet a minority cannot slow the budget process.

Each agency starts with [80%] of its past budget.*A rep may refill only a limited share of each budget.So it takes many reps to refill one, and more to raise it.Adjust your grants, to cause and counter budget changes. Repeat 'til a timer stops the voting.

Majority rule, in a balance of forcesMajority rule, in a balance of forces

Old principle of Budget Refill Voting:Budget Refill Voting:

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