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Single Transferable Vote




Single transferable vote (STV) is a Preferential Voting System designed to minimise Wasted Vote s and provide Proportional Representation while ensuring that votes are explicitly for candidates rather than Party List s. It achieves this by using multi-seat constituencies (districts) and by transferring votes that would otherwise be wasted. STV initially allocates an individual's vote to their most preferred candidate, and then subsequently transfers unneeded or unused votes after candidates are either elected or eliminated, according to the voter's stated preferences.

As of 2007, STV is used for elections in the Republic Of Ireland (since 1919), Northern Ireland (except elections to the British House Of Commons ) and Malta . It is also used for federal Senate and certain regional and local elections in Australia , local government elections in Scotland and some local government elections in New Zealand — see History And Use Of The Single Transferable Vote . In the United States, it is used for city elections in Cambridge, Massachusetts , and will be used for certain city elections in Minneapolis, Minnesota , starting in 2009. Under a bill before the Parliament Of Canada , STV would be used for Consultative Elections of Senators. A variation of STV known as BC-STV was rejected in British Columbia in a 2005 referendum, but is expected to be re-proposed in 2008. STV has been used for Scottish local elections since May 2007.


TERMINOLOGY


When STV is used in a single-winner election, it is the same as Instant-runoff Voting . When used in multi-seat constituencies, it is also called proportional representation through the single transferable vote (PR-STV). Because instant-runoff is not a form of Proportional Representation , some scholars consider it a separate system from PR-STV. ''STV'' usually refers to PR-STV, and it does in this article. In Australia STV is known as the '''Hare-Clark Proportional''' method, while in the United States it is sometimes called '''choice voting''' and '''preference voting'''.


VOTING


In STV, each voter ranks the list of candidates in order of preference. In other words (under the most common ballot design), they place a '1' beside their most preferred candidate, a '2' beside their second most preferred, and so on. The ballot paper submitted by the voter therefore contains an ordinal list of candidates. In the ballot paper shown in the image on the right, the preferences of the voter are as follows:

# John Citizen
# Mary Hill
# Jane Doe


COUNTING THE VOTES


Setting the quota

In an STV election, a candidate requires a certain minimum number of votes – the quota (or threshold) – to be elected. A number of different quotas can be used; the most common is the Droop Quota , given by the formula:

  { Border "1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin-left: 1em border-collapse: collapse"


When ballots are counted the election proceeds as follows:

Result: The winners are '''Chocolate''', '''Oranges''' and '''Strawberries'''.


DIFFERING COUNTING METHODS

illustrates Group Voting Ticket s. Voters can either rank every candidate individually or use their preferred party's preferences by voting 'above the line'.]]


STV systems differ in a number of ways, primarily in how they transfer votes as well as in the exact size of the quota used for determining winners. In fact, for this reason some have suggested that STV can be considered a family of voting systems rather than a single system. Today the .

The simplest methods of transferring surpluses under STV involve an element of randomness; partially random systems are used in the Republic of Ireland (except Senate elections) and Malta, among other places. For this reason the Gregory method (also known as Newland-Britain or Senatorial rules) was invented, which eliminates randomness by allowing for the transfer of fractions of votes. Gregory is in use in Northern Ireland, Republic of Ireland (Senate elections) and Australia. Both Gregory and these earlier methods have the problem, however, that in some circumstances they do not treat all votes equally. For this reason Meek's Method and Warren's Method have been invented.Hill, I.D. (1987). " Algorithm 123 — Single Transferable Vote by Meek’s method ". However, while simpler methods can usually be counted by hand, except in a very small election Meek and Warren require counting to be conducted by computer. Meek is currently used in STV local body elections in New Zealand.

The most recent refinements of STV involve attempting to remove the problem of sequential exclusions. Sequential exclusions mean that sometimes STV eliminates, at an early stage in the count, a candidate who might have gone on to be elected later had they been allowed to remain in the contest. Systems such as CPO-STV and Sequential STV have been invented to overcome this problem by incorporating elements of Condorcet Method s into STV. A method known as BTR-STV deals with the problem differently and more simply than these systems by simply making sure no such candidate could possibly be eliminated. None of these new methods has yet been used in a government election.

Most of the systems that are currently in use were designed to facilitate a manual counting process. With the ever increasing use of computer technology, many of the processes are in need of review. For example, in calculating a candidate's surplus, some systems use the ''number'' of ballot papers (surplus/number of papers) as opposed to the ''allocated value'' of the ballot papers to determine the value of any candidates surplus (value of the vote/surplus). Computers make it feasible to use the more accurate allocated value method, which maintains the one vote one value principle. A paper-based formula distorts the vote, increasing the value of some votes at the expense of others.

Manual counting issues, like segmentation transfers, need to be further considered in a computerised count. Segmentation transfers are where votes are distributed according to either the order in which they where received, last bundle or the grouping of common value of ballot papers to be transferred from highest to lowest. To simplify the counting process in a computerised count there should be single transaction per candidate without segmentation.


HISTORY AND CURRENT USE

See Also: History and use of the Single Transferable Vote



The concept of transferable voting was first proposed by Thomas Wright Hill in 1821. The system remained unused in real elections until 1855, when Carl Andræ proposed a transferable vote system for elections in Denmark . Andræ's system was used in 1856 to elect the Danish Rigsdag , and by 1866 it was also adapted for indirect elections to the second chamber, the Landsting , until 1915.

Although he was not the first to propose a system of transferable votes, the English Barrister Thomas Hare is generally credited with the conception of STV, and he may have independently developed the idea in 1857. Hare's view was that STV should be a means of "making the exercise of the suffrage a step in the elevation of the individual character, whether it be found in the majority or the minority." In Hare's original STV system, he further proposed that electors should have the opportunity of discovering which candidate their vote had ultimately counted for, to improve their personal connection with voting.Lambert & Lakeman (1955). "Voting in democracies". London : Faber, pg. 245. This is unnecessary in modern STV elections, however, as an individual voter can discover how their vote was ultimately distributed by viewing detailed election results.

The noted political essayist, , also praised the Hare system for allowing everyone to elect an MP, even ideological minorities, but also added that the Hare system would create more problems than it solved: " Hare system is inconsistent with the extrinsic independence as well as the inherent moderation of a Parliament - two of the conditions we have seen, are essential to the bare possibility of parliamentary government."Bagehot, Walter. "English Constitution".

Advocacy of STV spread through the British Empire , leading it to be sometimes known as ''British Proportional Representation''. In 1896, Andrew Inglis Clark was successful in persuading the Tasmanian House Of Assembly to be the first parliament in the world elected by what became known as the ''Hare-Clark system'', named after himself and Thomas Hare.


Meek also considered a variant on his system which would have allowed for equal preferences to be expressed.


ISSUES

See Also: Issues affecting the Single Transferable Vote



A frequent concern with STV among electorates considering its adoption is its relative complexity compared with Plurality Voting methods.

STV differs from all other proportional-representation systems in actual use in that candidates of one party can be elected on transfers from voters for other parties. Hence, the use of STV may reduce the role of political parties in the electoral process and corresponding Partisanship in the resulting government.

As a multi-member system, filling vacancies between elections can be problematic, and a variety of responses have been devised. The countback method is used in the Australian Capital Territory, Tasmania, Victoria, Malta, and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Casual vacancies are filled re-examining the ballot papers data from the previous election. Another option is to have a head official or remaining members of the elected body appoint a new member to fulfill the vacancy. A third alternative to fulfill a vacancy is to hold a single-winner by-election (effectively instant-runoff); this allows each party to choose a new candidate and all voters to participate. Another alternative is to have the candidates themselves create an ordered list of successors before leaving their seat. In the European Parliament, a departing Republic of Ireland or Northern Ireland member is replaced with the top eligible name from a replacement list submitted by the candidate at the time of the original election

Standing too few candidates may result in all of them being elected in the early stages, and votes being transferred to candidates of other parties. Standing too many candidates might result in first-preference votes being spread too thinly amongst them, and consequently several potential winners with broad second-preference appeal may be eliminated before others are elected and their second-preference votes distributed

The outcome of voting under STV is proportional within a single election to the collective preference of voters, assuming voters have ranked their real preferences and vote along strict party lines. However, due to other voting mechanisms usually used in conjunction with STV, such as a district or constituency system, an election using STV may not guarantee proportionality across all districts put together.

STV systems in use in different countries vary both as to ballot design and to whether or not voters are obliged to provide a full list of preferences. In jurisdictions such as the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland voters are permitted to rank as many or as few candidates as they wish. Consequently voters sometimes, for example, rank only the candidates of a single party, or of their most preferred parties. A minority of voters, especially if they do not fully understand the system, may even 'bullet vote', only expressing a first preference. Allowing voters to rank only as many candidates as they wish grants them greater freedom but can also lead to some voters ranking so few candidates that their vote eventually becomes 'exhausted'–that is, at a certain point during the count it can no longer be transferred and therefore loses an opportunity to influence the result.

STV provides proportionality by transferring votes to minimise waste, and therefore also minimises the number of unrepresented/ disenfranchised voters.

According to the Gibbard-Satterthwaite Theorem tactical voting is possible in all non-dictatorial Deterministic voting systems. A number of methods of tactical or strategic voting exist that can be used in elections conducted using STV. In general these methods are only effective in marginal districts and only affect the allocation of a single seat per district.

Academic analysis of voting systems such as STV generally centers on the (like most other vote-based ordering systems) as well as Monotonicity .


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