Wouldn’t it be great if you didn’t have to vote for the least horrible candidate? If you could vote for who you wanted without feeling like you’re throwing your vote away?

If we had ranked choice voting, we’d have better legislators in office to start with. And if they used it in the speaker votes this could be resolved already.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    I’m not sure if the Author just doesn’t understand the situation or is misrepresenting it on purpose.

    Either way, a lack of STV isn’t the reason the House Speaker election is going this way. Republican members who are not voting for “the Republican Candidate” know their vote is a protest/obstruction. If the House had RCV, the Speaker Pro Tempore wouldn’t call a vote until the Republicans had the vote, lest Hakeem Jeffries be elected Speaker.

    I fully support Ranked Choice, Instant Run-off, Mixed-Member Proportional, etc., but this is not a supporting case

    • themeatbridge
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      91 year ago

      Right, it’s not like any of the voters would cross party lines. That’s the enemy. You can’t vote for the enemy. They’re evil. They want to destroy us. We must destroy them first, even if it kills all of you.

        • themeatbridge
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          31 year ago

          I agree, there’s zero motivation for the democrats to throw a lifeline across the aisle, nor would such efforts be rewarded with anything but scorn and suffering.

    • @LesserAbeOP
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      21 year ago

      The suggestion is that there would still be a Republican speaker, but that a different consensus candidate would win.

      That said, in the Raskin/Beyer op-ed that FairVote references, they talk about people being required to list a second choice, which would certainly work but of course isn’t required in normal elections.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        It’s naive to think a consensus candidate would win with STV when they wouldn’t with the current system. The majority party controls when the vote is called and if they’d hold until they knew the outcome.

        The second choice option is too easy to game. Choose 2 obscure members and you’re effectively voting, “Present.”

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      If the House had RCV, the Speaker Pro Tempore wouldn’t call a vote until the Republicans had the vote, lest Hakeem Jeffries be elected Speaker.

      This would only happen if some Republicans ranked Jeffries above a Republican. I imagine most of the holdouts would have ranked Scalise higher than Jeffries on the first vote. Alternately if given the option they might rank no one other than their first choice and we’d still be in the same place.

      • @[email protected]
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        -31 year ago

        Hakeem Jefferies could win without Republican voters if enough of them ran through their lists and were effectively voting, “Present.”

        • @[email protected]
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          41 year ago

          If that was how the system defined an exhausted ranking, then they wouldn’t vote that way. Implementing RCV would be a rule change that would also define how the system works with exhausted votes. And everyone would vote under those rules, which wouldn’t end with a surprise Democratic win.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 year ago

            How would that work then in your rule change? Currently, all Representative are eligible so it’s possible to have >400 runoffs. Would all members have to rank all members? Would you introduce some sort of nomination requirement?

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Not the person you responded to but I think there are some systems where your last choice can be a “party” rather than a person.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              There are lots of options. Someone else mentioned a default option (something like “whoever in my party has the most votes”), or simply making an exhausted vote just continue as a vote for their final choice (which prevents the plurality win mentioned above). And you wouldn’t need 400 runoffs, they could just nominate valid options beforehand and require ranking everyone. These are choices that would need to be defined in setting up RCV.

              And even if the rule was “exhaustion = voting present”, Republicans would almost certainly vote for the Republican they dislike rather than risking a plurality Democratic speaker. They’re voting for random other people now to force a change of choice, but if it was resolving one way or another all at once, their choices would be different.