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by dane-pgp
1829 days ago
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If we're comparing Approval and FPTP in terms of easily distributed counting, it's worth noting that a ballot paper with N candidates can be marked in N different ways with FPTP and 2^N ways with Approval. That may not be a problem for computers, but if you want to avoid the potential failure modes of (and conspiracy theories related to) electronic voting machines, there is a big difference between an election official trying to place a ballot on one of 10 piles versus trying to find the correct one out of 1024 piles. A system like MMP can avoid this problem by using FPTP counting of ballots and then topping up the number of seats for each party to make the distribution of winners match the distribution of total votes. |
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If you insist on a degenerate formulation, just split the ballots into n different elections and transmit the results of each one of those elections. We can use the same equipment we have today.