SOUTHERN INDIA REGIONAL COUNCIL - ELECTIONS 2012 (Please post your valuable comments below each post)
Monday, December 10, 2012
Single Transferable Vote
What: The single
transferable vote (STV)
is a voting system designed to achieve proportional representation through ranked voting. Under STV, an elector's
vote is initially allocated to his or her most preferred candidate, and then,
after candidates have been either elected or eliminated, any surplus or unused
votes are transferred according to the voter's stated preferences.
Why: The system
minimizes "wasted"
votes, provides approximately proportional representation, and enables votes to
be explicitly cast for individual candidates rather than for closed syndicate of contestants.
How: It achieves this by using
multi-seat constituencies (different regions) and by transferring
votes to other eligible candidates that would otherwise be wasted on sure
losers or sure winners.
Andrew Inglis Clark
ICAI Elections: A modified
version of STV, known as the Hare–Clark
system, is used in ICAI elections. The name
is derived from Thomas Hare, who
initially developed the system and the Tasmanian Attorney General, Andrew Inglis Clark,
who worked to have a modified version introduced. Its critics
contend that some voters find the mechanisms behind STV difficult to understand, but this does not make it more
difficult for voters to 'rank the list of candidates in order of preference' in
an STV ballot paper.
Thomas Hare
History of STV: 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 Rigsraad, and by 1866 it was also adapted for indirect elections to the second
chamber, the Landsting, until 1915.
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