| It doesn't eliminate the spoiler effect. Here's a simple example of what can happen under RCV: Pretend Bernie Sanders in 2016 ran under the Green Party after dropping out of the Democratic Primary. RCV claims to eliminate the spoiler effect, so it is "safe" for all the people who want Bernie as their first choice to actually express that. Assume everyone who likes Bernie the best follows that: they put Bernie as their first choice and either Trump or Clinton as their second choice. Presumably more will have Clinton as their second choice than Trump since Clinton is more centrist than Trump who is on the right. Say the "first choice" votes go as follows: - 45% top choice Trump - 35% top choice Bernie - 20% top choice Hillary Hillary gets eliminated and the people who put Hillary as their first choice now have their second choices distributed among the remaining candidates. Say that split goes (within the 20%): - 6% 2nd choice Trump - 14% 2nd choice Bernie Trump wins, even if all the Bernie voters had Hillary as their 2nd choice, because their second choices didn't count for anything. So the claim that it was "safe" to express their true preferences and put Bernie as their first choice completely backfired. summary: among three choices, under Ranked Choice Voting, you only get your votes moved to your 2nd choice in Ranked Choice if you do not come in 2nd place overall. If your candidate comes in 2nd, your votes are worthless. A system that fixes this and other issues is STAR Voting, and it's what people should be pushing for: https://www.equal.vote/ https://www.starvoting.us/ |
This video does a good job of explaining RCV:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Y3jE3B8HsE
Is there a similar video for STAR?
I can see the problem with RCV now. It doesn't completely eliminate the spoiler effect, just makes it less likely.
I understand how votes are cast in each system and they seem similar. STAR seems like RCV, but you can put multiple candidates in the same rank. I'm not sure how STAR votes are tallied, but wouldn't you be able to implement that same system with RCV? The only difference is same-ranking candidates. Is that the key to STAR's improvement?
EDIT:
Is it just this simple? You sum their score, then instant runoff the top 2?:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NuVSn2rAFVU
I can't tell if it's better or not yet. It still definitely doesn't elect the condorcet winner... which you can see from 3 voters and 12 candidates:
Voter 1: 4 for A, 3 for B, 2 for C, 1 for J
Voter 2: 4 for D, 3 for E, 2 for F, 1 for J
Voter 3: 4 for G, 3 for H, 2 for I, 1 for J
It's more contrived than the example for RCV, so I think it's more resistant to spoiler effect, but it clearly happens here. Essentially, every favored candidate higher than 1 is different and they all have the same candidate for their last favorite candidate. As you can see, A,D,G have the most votes, but in 1-on-1 face-offs, J would win most of the elections. Voter 1 likes J more than D,E,F,G,H, and I. Voter 2 like J more than 6 other candidates as well and same with Voter 3. But in STAR, he gets eliminated.
I believe you could come up with an example where the top two candidates aren't tied, but it would be more complicated.
These voting systems are difficult to measure. I thought RCV was very secure until this HN thread. Hopefully STAR holds up, but I think you'd have to look more into the incentives to fully know if it eliminates the spoiler effect.