What's your favorite type of voting? And don't forget the sponsor! I love using YouGov to make easy cash! Click my link: www.inflcr.co/SHG32 #YouGovPartner
@WeeBryanYT Жыл бұрын
Idk
@franciscoacevedo3036 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for being based and loving democracy. It seems that facts almost always favor liberals 😂😏
@TheIgorGruzdev Жыл бұрын
Election fraud (SUS)😳
@davea6314 Жыл бұрын
My favorite type of voting for US president is using the popular vote instead of the backward electoral college. If we had done so in 2016 then Don the Con Trump would never have been US president.
@mrscribbles2693 Жыл бұрын
Give me ¥1 trillion Mr Breast of YT 🙏
@PhilHug1 Жыл бұрын
Although we might disagree on what is the best voting system, there's one thing we can all agree on: Mr. Beat ranks first in our heart
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Awwwww thank you
@rparl Жыл бұрын
First in war; first in peace; and first in the hearts of his KZbinrs.
@GutsyTen42 Жыл бұрын
We might disagree on what is the best voting system, but there's one thing we can all agree on: polarity voting is the worst
@Jacj_ Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat mr breast give me money
@scappley1735 Жыл бұрын
@@GutsyTen42 If you don't mind, what is polarity voting? I've never heard of it.
@peterlyon367 Жыл бұрын
I really like Rank Choice Voting for primaries. A recent-ish example in my state. The Republican primary for Secretary of Agriculture in Iowa in 2018 had 5 different candidates and the winner prevailed with only 34.7% of the vote. It is hard to argue that plurality voting resulted in any type of consensus in that election.
@Michael-mh2tw Жыл бұрын
'Consensus' means 100% of the vote.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Which you don't get with plurality voting.
@phonyzebra3848 Жыл бұрын
@@Michael-mh2tw The other definition of consensus is, “The judgment arrived at by most of those concerned”
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
But Macron would have won with RCV!
@reillycurran8508 Жыл бұрын
TIL Iowa elects their secretary of agriculture
@SamiOldChannel Жыл бұрын
Great video! I agree that plurality voting is awful and it should be replaced with either ranked choice or STAR.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Thanks Sami! Glad you APPROVE of RCV and STAR voting. I assume you would SCORE them high. 😏
@SamiOldChannel Жыл бұрын
@Mr. Beat I see what you did there 😂
@kennethbrian806 Жыл бұрын
2 days ago? How did you get access to a video just uploaded 2 minutes ago from my perspective?
@Ultrajamz Жыл бұрын
The main issue with these (though current system is plenty opaque in USA also) is because they are more than counting then the source code needs to be open source.
@davea6314 Жыл бұрын
My favorite type of voting for US president is using the popular vote instead of the backward electoral college. If we had done so in 2016 then Don the Con Trump would never have been US president. Twice impeached Trump was the worst US president in history for many reasons. #1) Trump committed an act of treason against the US by inciting a violent insurrection on January 6, 2021. #2) Trump’s incompetence regarding his management of the US response to the Covid-19 pandemic between January 2020 and July of 2020. Thousands of US citizens died as a result Trump’s failure. If Trump had a proper immediate response to the pandemic the way that the South Korean government did, then thousands of US citizens who died would still be alive today. #3) In April of 2019 Trump vetoed the resolution to end US military support of Saudi Arabia's GENOCIDE of thousands of innocent civilians in Yemen! Trump was using the US military to support GENOCIDE in Yemen! #4) Trump violated the Emoluments Clause of the US Constitution for his entire 4 years in office, then in 2019 Trump verbally mocked the US Constitution. The foundation of the USA is the US Constitution, that is why the presidential inaugural oath includes to swear to protect and defend the US Constitution. In January 2017 Trump publicly swore an oath on a bible at his inauguration ceremony to protect and defend the US Constitution. In 2019 Trump mocked the US Constitution by publicly saying the words "phony emoluments clause". #5) Trump misogynistically and adulterously said of women: "Grab them by the pussy."! Trump committed adultery with Stormy Daniels and then tried to cover it up. Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, was in prison for crimes related to Trump's cover-up of his adulterous scandal with Stormy Daniels. Most Republicans claim to be the moral party and/or the majority Christian party, but hypocritically enthusiastically want to give an adulterous Donald Trump, another 4 years in office. If a US president who was a member of the Democratic Party did the terrible things Trump has, of course, the Republican Party leaders would be screaming for his removal from office. #6) Trump committed the crime of obstruction of justice. #7) Trump committed crimes of trying to tamper with elections, especially in Georgia. #8) Trump's attempted abuse of power regarding Ukraine. #9) Trump committed tax fraud in New York State, which why Trump hid his tax returns for years. #10) Trump practiced corrupt nepotism as he appointed unqualified members of his family into positions of power in the executive branch of government. #11) Trump illegally destroyed documents and illegally took documents with him after he left the office of president. There are many other horrible things about Trump. Here are some of them: Donald Trump is a dumb corrupt businessman which is why he hid his tax returns. Donald Trump is not a self-made man, he benefited from nepotism. His daddy Fred Trump gave him millions of dollars to start businesses many of which have failed! Donald Trump's failed businesses are many but include: Trump Airlines, a Trump Casino, and Trump University. With his failed Trump University, he defrauded hundreds of students. In Trump's many construction projects he failed to pay some of his contractors. Trump committed fraud with his non-profit in New York State which is why Trump recently transferred his residence to Florida. Donald Trump is too stupid to write his own book which why he hired a ghost writer to write "The Art of the Deal". When Trump was in high school, he hired another boy to take his SAT college entrance exam. Trump claims that he is smart, but he refuses to show us his college transcripts. Donald Trump's daddy bribed a physician to write that Donald Trump had bone spurs and therefore could dodge the Vietnam War draft. Donald Trump and his dad also practiced racism in who they would rent properties to in the 1960s and 1970s. That is just scratching the surface of the long list of horrible things about Donald Trump.
@amayasasaki2848 Жыл бұрын
I had heard of Star voting, but didn't actually understand how it worked, so thank you for this video. Having seen how that works, I would tend to agree that Star voting is the best choice. There is a movement in Oregon to make that the voting method for the state. I will definitely be supporting that going forward.
@mjp121 Жыл бұрын
I worry it (And Score) favors bland candidates who appeal to a niche group. My quintessential example would be Andrew Yang. He's come under fire recently, but in 2020 Dem primary he wasn't a high choice for very many, but an overwhelming top choice for a few, so on a score card we see Sanders and Biden with like 3-4/5 each (primary candidates only), Buttigeg and Klobuchar a bit lower than that, then Yang with like 4.5 because because nobody rates him particularly low, but many don't rate him at all, and his group rates him super highly. But he's not strong ranked choice at all, and just denies someone with higher total support a chance. If Score is adjusted that not rating a candidate assumes the average score or average score of all candidates, instead of not factoring, then it's fine, or I suppose you could treat it like Amazon reviews where we only consider people with higher amounts of reviews and pity the little guys. Of course, this will be mitigated by the fact that, in a Score system, the voter is incentivized to rate everyone zero except their preferred candidate. People who genuinely are on the fence may score a few reasonably, but in a tight race, you want to weight the average as much as you can, so for instance in 2020 I'd have rated Sanders 10, Warren 9, the rest of the dem candidates 4-6, and Trump 0, and at that point I'm not sure what the value add it gives over simple ranked. I guess that I can rank multiple people #1 for the initial vote?
@1ucasvb Жыл бұрын
@@mjp121 Your worries are not applicable. STAR and score wouldn't use averages when tallying, but totals. Blank scores default to zero. There's no risk for an unknown candidate getting promoted above everyone else due to a vocal minority. It would require everyone also giving a significant amount of support to that candidate, and if they do get support across the board why shouldn't they become a finalist? Furthermore, a "bland candidate" by definition won't get enough support by everyone to become a main contender, because many people, just like you, wouldn't like them anyway. Also, politics is not 1-dimensional. A consensus candidate is not a "centrist" or a "bland candidate".
@f0rdgamer2 ай бұрын
@@1ucasvb that’s not how the system has been described, friend. The system, as described, has you use the averages *of the people who voted for you*, and blanks are not counted as zero. Each candidate potentially has a different number of votes to average with
@Darticus422 ай бұрын
@@mjp121In STAR voting, most people not having an opinion and not marking would automatically make someone like Andrew Yang lose in the automatic runoff round. That being said, blank not counted as 0 would shove more well known but not as avidly liked (naturally) candidates off the ballot, which is a problem with most runoff systems. It also doesn't meet majority criterion (candidate with > 50% vote in a first preference/plurality system must win) which is a huge flaw IMO, even if the chance is low
@LazyCat01029 күн бұрын
Unfortunately, STAR voting failed in the primary last May. Ranked choice is on the ballot in November, so 🤞
@mkaltreider5322 Жыл бұрын
I like that all of these options seem to place focus on the candidate and not their party. 'Red or Blue' is binary which seems easy - but just makes us more polarized and not really focused on the best candidate; their experience, integrity and how well they listen and communicate to all constituents, etc. I think a lot of the country is shades of purple and not as extreme as the two parties would like us to believe. Also candidates would have to have their own platform of issues, not just copy a political party stump speech (which often aren't relevant to the county, district or state.) Thank you @Mr.Beat!
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Heck yeah. Well put!
@EnigmaticLucas Жыл бұрын
Switching to something like ranked-choice would itself get rid of the two-party system. The parties aren’t monolithic, they’re factionalized. Get rid of FPTP and they’ll schism due to their factions no longer being in fear of the spoiler effect.
@del7896 Жыл бұрын
At least several European countries use some kind of proportional representation system where instead of a single candidate being selected per constituency, you have larger areas that elect several (often 10+) representatives. In a typical system, all the votes for each party are summed up, the party with the most votes gets one seat (e.g. the highest individual votes within that party, or the party's selected primary candidate) and for the next round their tally is halved (if they get another seat, then 1/3, etc.). Thus if one party gets 30 % of votes, they're likely to get around 30 % of seats in that constituency. I think that might be the most realistic way to get out of a 2-party system. Obviously there's little interest in an existing 2-party state to introduce anything that would compromise their power. But I thought it was a bit odd to go into detail on various lipstick-on-a-pig systems and only have a throwaway mention for a system that's already widely used and has proven to promote great diversity in representational democracy.
@walexander8378 Жыл бұрын
Most people are not purple. Especially now. Also I see a point in some of this but you'd still need to trim a candidate pool fast and that's why parties are important. Also parties are fairly diverse, even Dems and Republicans have many caucuses and factions.
@matt_9112 Жыл бұрын
That's why it isn't changed (imo). It would erode the two party system, leaving space for shades of purple, and of course green and yellow (at least that's what our "libertarian" party has as a colour).
@vici9182 Жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm from Germany where you've got 20+ parties to vote between. For that matter I find ranked-choice voting too complex. I prefer score or STAR voting so the results for smaller parties are more accurate. (Also I think the scores should be ranging from -2 to +2 instead of 1-5 because it is easier to understand that 0 means indifferent instead of 3)
@francisluglio6611 Жыл бұрын
What? You just said that ranked choice is too complex and just recommended 2 systems that are more complex. Also, I don’t see why anyone would vote -1 instead of -2. They’re just going to think about how much they hate that candidate and always vote -2. Even though voting “-1” is about the same as voting “1” in the 0-5 system they’re not going to think of it the same way. Also, while score voting usually treats non votes as “0”, that’s not the version this video talked about. So I don’t know what you’re talking about about anything
@KarolYuuki Жыл бұрын
I think that on countries that have many parties, we could have voters rank their top 5. I don't know how it works on Germany, but in Brazil every candidate has a number. So you could put the number of your 5 favorites from 1st to 5th.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
@@francisluglio6611 RCV is easily more complex than score or STAR.
@francisluglio6611 Жыл бұрын
@@galiantus1354 not for the people to understand and only because SCORE and STAR have shortcuts compared to just RCV. The mechanics are what matters for voters and their understanding.
@eragon78 Жыл бұрын
You dont have to rank everyone with RCV. You can just rank the candidates you care most about, and then leave the rest blank. All that means is that once your vote has iterated through all the candidates you ranked, you have equal preference for any of the remaining candidates and thus your vote no longer has an influence on the election once your ranked candidates are out. That said, there is merit to a score style voting system like score voting or star since you can put your LEAST favorite candidates under candidates you are more indifferent to, where as in RCV, in order to rank your lowest candidates, you have to actually rank them all.
@tdawgmaster1729 Жыл бұрын
I had never heard of STAR voting, so going into it I was thinking ranked-choice was the way to go, but the way you explained STAR voting makes me think I might prefer it over ranked choice. I'll have to do some research, though
@margefoyle6796 Жыл бұрын
Agreed.
@HOTD108_ Жыл бұрын
Remember: Listening to Joe Rogan isn't doing your own research.
@tdawgmaster1729 Жыл бұрын
@@HOTD108_ I'm not even sure who exactly that is
@Will-tn8kq Жыл бұрын
star is an interesting idea, but it was only invented a few years ago, it's never even been tried. you can't really blame states and cities for not implementing it at the same scale as RCV. Star is still in the testing phase. They need to focus on just one or 2 cities adopting it, so they can gather some data. it just doesn't make sense (to me) for star to jump to the front of the national movement for election reforms. it's not ready yet.
@Fractured_Unity Жыл бұрын
The problem with star is that it is far more arbitrary than RCV. It’s less concrete and allows the voter to be more indifferent or worse, sabotage anything other than their favorite. With RCV, you have to compare all of them to each other objectively and really think about the differences and which you’d prefer if your first choice didn’t succeed.
@henryhawthorn88498 ай бұрын
I prefer the Buclin Voting system where candidates are ranked, but unlike the Instant Runoff voting, no candidate’s votes are ever eliminated. Instead, if no candidate in the first vote tally receives an absolute majority of votes, then the second choices among the voters are added to the first choices; if after the second tally there is still no candidate with an absolute majority, then the third choices are added to the first and second choices. This process would repeat itself until there is a candidate that reaches the required threshold. Theoretically, it’s possible under the Buclin system for a candidate to win an election even if a/he was in last place in the first round of vote tally.
@jacklazzaro9820 Жыл бұрын
0:11 plurality voting 0:57 better voting methods 2:48 approval voting 3:43 benefits 4:08 drawbacks 4:39 score voting 5:38 benefits 6:02 drawbacks 6:37 ranked-choice voting 7:50 benefits 8:17 drawbacks 8:48 STAR voting 3:58 benefits 10:21 drawbacks 10:45 common benefits 11:26 which is best? 15:31 what’s your favorite?
@theangryMD2 ай бұрын
@@jacklazzaro9820 thank you
@AHumbleReviewer Жыл бұрын
Good work getting the word out there about STAR voting! You're a real supernova for that.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
I see what you did there. :)
@abrahamlincoln937 Жыл бұрын
Nice joke!
@MinunRobotnik4 Жыл бұрын
I think if nothing else, the election shows that ranked choice voting is probably the most well-known of alternative voting systems, at least among your base.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Yep. I'd also argue it's the most well-known outside my viewership as well.
@IloveRumania Жыл бұрын
100th like!
@michaeljmeyer3 Жыл бұрын
I mean, you can never truly take the popularity contest out of voting. That is kind of the point. Still, my take away leaves me much more favorable to Star after years of misconception around Ranked Choice thanks to an unconscious bandwagon bias.
@Fractured_Unity Жыл бұрын
@@michaeljmeyer3 Orrrr, there’s a reason it’s more popular and you feel insecure about your favorite one.
@michaeljmeyer3 Жыл бұрын
@@Fractured_Unity yeah, bandwagon bias.
@Chapter7Certified Жыл бұрын
The results are most likely due to ranked choice being the most well known alternative system as it is championed in a few places online
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Yep!
@Fractured_Unity Жыл бұрын
Orrrr, there’s a reason it’s more popular and you feel insecure about your favorite one.
@Prolute Жыл бұрын
@Fractured Unity I'd like to hear your argument for why ranked choice is better than star.
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
@@Fractured_Unity The reason it's more popular is because it's been promoted in the US for longer, with false claims like "It fixes the spoiler effect" or "It makes it safe to vote honestly without wasting your vote". People believe these claims and pass them on without fact-checking, and now it's the most popular because nobody understands how it actually works. 😒
@Fractured_Unity Жыл бұрын
@@Prolute Because in RCV the priority of the voter is to compare all of the candidates against each other directly instead of against some arbitrary rating scale. Also, of the non-plurality voting options, it deincentivizes strategies to optimize your favorite candidate’s chances the most. The best strategy in RCV is what’s best for everyone: picking your candidates based on who you prefer in descending order.
@alejandrolim8615 Жыл бұрын
First of all, thank you so much for another great video! My problem with ranked choice voting is that by putting so much emphasis on "first place" votes, a lot of centrists who would be many voters' second choice would be at a disadvantage. In this sense, I think RCV still has a problem with potential strategic gimmicking. Primer has a great video on the math (and drawbacks) behind RCV and approval voting, but what really bugs me is when voters have strong opinions on RCV being the best alternative without considering the math behind the wide variety of non-plurality systems. Often times, such strong opinion is itself motivated by partisan incentive as well.
@basilefff Жыл бұрын
Thank you for pointing to a source of information on the topic.
@felipevasconcelos6736 Жыл бұрын
>a lot of centrists would be at a disadvantage Big if true. Centrists are the reason regressive legislation is ever passed. “I have almost reached the regrettable conclusion that the Negro’s great stumbling block in the stride toward freedom is not the White Citizens Councilor or the Ku Klux Klanner but the White moderate who is more devoted to ‘order’ than to justice” (Martin Luther King)
@EthOrlen Жыл бұрын
The Approval winner being different than the other voting methods isn’t a bug; it’s a feature. Approval is the one system among those you mentioned that leans hard into a consensus candidate rather than a majoritarian candidate. More discussion needs to happen on which voting systems are better for what context. Majoritarian systems are more likely to have a larger number of disenfranchised (i.e. “my candidate didn’t win”) voters than consensus systems, which lends itself to polarization. But a much smaller group of disenfranchised voters has much less power, potentially being completely disenfranchised, while a larger group has enough coalition power to advocate for themselves even if they lose the election.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Great argument, thanks for the comment!
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Yes! This is something lacking from most of these discussions: different voting methods work better for different contexts. This isn't an all-or-nothing debate. There is no reason we can't vary the voting method based on what is desirable for the situation.
@peterlewis2178 Жыл бұрын
My favorite type of voting is one I invented that I call Weighted Voting, and it's interesting, because I realized now that it kind of blends the strengths of RCV and Approval voting. The way it works is you rank all the candidates just like in RCV. Although there would also be an option to abstain from/disapprove of a candidate. The difference is that each rank is assigned a weighted point value. For example, in an election with 5 candidates, your 1st choice will get 5 points, and your 5th choice will get 1 point. Any abstained/disapproved candidates will get 0 points. Then you just add up the total points for each candidate, and the person with the most points wins. Like RCV, it still benefits by taking preference into account, but it also actually represents a consensus, by fully accounting for all the non-primary votes. It could actually lead to instances where a candidate that is more broadly liked wins, that in RCV might not have won.
@pace1195 Жыл бұрын
@@peterlewis2178 Congratulations, you invented the Borda Count voting method named for the 18th Century mathematician Jean-Charles de Borda. "Borda is the only proposed method that I know of that can fail to elect a candidate who is the voted favorite of a majority." - Mike Ossipoff
@peterlewis2178 Жыл бұрын
@@pace1195 Yeah, I learned that later in a different comment thread. Although there are a couple small differences in my version, namely the ability to abstain from votes. That's kind of a funny quote, because while it may be capable of failing a candidate who is the voted favorite of _A_ majority, it's also the only one I've seen that can't fail to elect the most favorite of _THE_ majority.
@cg123ize Жыл бұрын
I live in New Jersey. thanks to you I am emailing my State lawmakers to push for this.
@SyntekkTeam Жыл бұрын
I like STAR Voting as well. I like being able to show my preference between candidates, and I like that STAR Voting adds up all the data. I like the ballot on Ranked choice, but it sometimes gives weird results in competitive elections with 3 or more people. Examples include center squeeze, and favorite betrayal issues.
@TheFinalChapters Жыл бұрын
Center squeeze (and thus favorite betrayal) are both easily solved simply by changing the criteria for who to eliminate each round to the candidate that loses the most head-to-head matchups.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
@@TheFinalChapters Despite being a "ranked" method, that would no longer qualify as what most people mean when they say "ranked choice voting". That would be a Condorcet compliant method.
@TheFinalChapters Жыл бұрын
@@galiantus1354 You're not wrong. It still involves the voters ranking their choices just like in RCV though.
@SyntekkTeam Жыл бұрын
Totally, the Instant Runoff variant of Ranked choice is the main problem. I'd be happy to support any of the Condorcet variants of Ranked choice
@jackbaxter2223 Жыл бұрын
The problem with STAR voting is that a minority of passionate zealots can simply run two identical candidates to force the second round 1v1 to be between them and themselves. It doesn't eliminate the major weakness of Score voting, simply moves it a bit further on. It would just end up as score voting but with paired candidates/parties.
@lordofduct Жыл бұрын
Huh, I've read and watched a lot about voting methods and this is the first time I'm hearing of STAR voting. I was always for ranked-choice for well over a decade now... but now that I have heard of STAR, I'm on the STAR wagon and Ranked-Choice is my clear 2nd place. Thank you Mr Beat!
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
That's interesting. I started out with RCV as well, but in recent years I've come to favor both STAR and Approval. I think a lot of it is just money and advertising. Most people don't know about any of these methods, so they latch on to whatever is presented first without really thinking.
@vianabdullah2837 Жыл бұрын
My personal preference is using approval voting for primaries. Then after you've narrowed down the field, you use a condorcet method like ranked pairs to find the consensus candidate.
@Eyelash40Ай бұрын
Sadly, primaries are bought and paid for so ranked choice voting is still better for all forms of voting when it comes to elections and primaries.
@elizabethdavis1696 Жыл бұрын
Do a video on using the shortest split line method to create districts for voting to prevent gerrymandering!
@elizabethdavis1696 Жыл бұрын
Also please do on video on voter referendums
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Both are great ideas. Thanks Elizabeth!
@HikariMagic20 Жыл бұрын
Before today, I liked the idea of ranked choice voting. Now that I've heard of Star Voting, I'm going to have to look further into that since it sounds intriguing.
@EthanReilly Жыл бұрын
I vote this video first place in its ability to explain alternative voting methods.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Awww thanks!
@processlayer1212 Жыл бұрын
For the US, I say a proportional system designed by a Citizens Assembly is the way to go. Rural-Urban proportional I say is a great option in my opinion because it also considers the rural-urban divide. And it is impossible to gerrymander a proportional system.
@processlayer1212 Жыл бұрын
Rural-Urban in a simple term is the STV proportional system for cities where ranked ballots are used and rurals get a form of MMP or the German system. The House would likely have to increase in size though and changes to Senate as well. But it means more parties will appear and have a chance of winning. And more choice. Plus parties must work together so hyper partisanship would be political suicide.
@NightspeakerR Жыл бұрын
@@processlayer1212 Tell me more :0
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
I must learn way more about this. Thanks for bringing it to our attention.
@processlayer1212 Жыл бұрын
@@NightspeakerR The rural part has people vote as normal using plurality or ranked voting. But they get a separate vote for a party. This is MMP. The party list can be open or closed. A closed list means the party will choose the list members who are used to make sure parties have seats in proportion to their popular vote. Ex 34% of the vote means 34% of seats. An open list means voters can choose their list members. Thresholds can be implemented at a national scale or each state can have their own thresholds. CA could have a 5% threshold for list seats in that state while TX could have 4%. STV for the urban portion combines ranked ballots with PR. It is more complicated to explain. I recommend checking out CGP Grey’s video on STV. Alternatively, all seats can be used using only STV or MMP. Rural-Urban just combines the two.
@processlayer1212 Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeatNo problem.
@element119211 ай бұрын
You forgot about my favorite, 3-2-1 voting! Every voter can give as many candidates as they like an "approval," "neutral," or "disapproval" rating. Three semifinalists are chosen, with the most "approval" votes. Out of those, two finalists are chosen, with the least "disapproval" votes. The winner is then whichever finalist more people choose over the other.
@apm77 Жыл бұрын
Australian here. Would point out that "ranked choice voting" and "instant runoff voting" are not interchangeable terms. There are different types of ranked choice voting, instant runoff being by far the most common and the type shown here. Theoretically the fairest ranked choice voting system is Condorcet, which is also more tolerant of blank or tied rankings (eliminating the need for conscientious voters to research obscure candidates), but nobody uses it because it doesn't scale well and is hard to verify by hand.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Good point. Unfortunately, the two terms are interchanged here in the States. I guess to attempt to simplify it for the normies.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Condorcet is a standard, not a method. Though there are systems that actually implement the criterion, such as Ranked Robin, which I assert is far more scalable and verifiable than IRV.
@ziran80 Жыл бұрын
In Australia, we use Ranked Choice (called Preferential Voting here) for our Federal House of Representatives and most of our state's lower house seats. To make counting easier on Election night, the Electoral Commission make a guess as to what the top 2 candidates will be, so when counting votes, the counters keep track of both the 1st preference, and the winner of the 2 preferred candidates. That way, if the count goes into multiple rounds, the media etc has a good idea of who may win if its between those guessed candidates.
@mrewan6221 Жыл бұрын
Yep. It's in every single-member seat. All lower houses (federal, state, territory) except Tasmania, and in Tasmania's upper house. All multi-member seats use similar system. They're all "Anyone who has enough votes for a seat gets one. Then if there are still empty seats, and no-one has enough votes for a seat, eliminate the lowest candidate and re-allocate their votes to their voters' next choice. Repeat until all seats are filled or there are exactly enough candidates remaining to fill all the seats. The number of required votes (the "quota") is calculated as ⟦Total valid votes ÷ (Number of seats + 1) + 1, then drop fractions⟧. Single member electorates also follow this, but it just simplifies to 50% of the valid votes. Voting usually closes at 6pm, or sometimes 8pm. Vote-counting starts straight away, and early result are known quite quickly for single-member seats. If it's very close, the media says so. For multi-member seats, the media instead relies on polls, and previous results to predict what might happen. The last few seats can take several weeks to determine, but they rarely have much effect on the party balance. Apart from not using Plurality voting, the other thing Australia does is compulsory voting. Many people find it a bother and just vote for one of the two major parties, but it'a really hard to waste your vote. Because you have to fill in all the preferences (for single-seat elections), your vote is still in the running when the winner is decided. If there's a very popular candidate, you either win or lose in the first count. But if the voting is such that all but two candidates are eliminated, your vote is still going to be counted in the last round. You might have lost all your preferred candidates, but at least you have a final say about which villain you don't want!
@mikeanagnostou4399 Жыл бұрын
Mr. Beat! I would have liked to have seen you also evaluate proportional representation voting. It was very popular starting during the Progressive Era up through the 1930s in Municipal Elections throughout the country. The two major parties hated it since it blunted the effect of partisan voting in areas where they clearly dominated in party registration.
@NorbertSD Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised you didn't mention condorcet voting, which is my favorite type of voting system. It's a type of ranked-choice voting, but it's different from instant run-off voting. You rank all your favorite candidates in order, just like instant run-off voting, and then, when all ballots are in, it's determined, based on the rankings, who would win in each head-to-head matchup. If there were 4 candidates, A, B, C and D, it's determined who would win in a head-to-head matchup of only A vs. B, then A vs. C, A vs. D, B vs. C, B vs. D and C vs. D. Whichever candidate wins the most of those head-to-head matchup wins. It's my personal favorite type of voting because it allows voters to give the full range of their preferences as well as giving a boost to third party candidates. In a sense, it combines the best aspects of both approval voting and instant run-off voting. Its two biggest flaws are that if a voter doesn't rank every candidate, they won't have a say in certain head-to-head matchups, which may determine the actual winner. Also, if there's 3 candidates and they each win one head-to-head matchup, it fails to select a winner. In the case where the latter happens, I say it should switch to instant run-off voting and have the candidate who got the least first-choice votes have those votes distributed between those voters' second choice.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
I mentioned it at the end of this video actually.
@NorbertSD Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat Oh, my bad. I stopped watching after the "Thank you Patreon supporters!" message popped up.
@Hadar1991 Жыл бұрын
I understand the appeal of Condorcet/Smith/ISDA methods but I really don't like that they do not satisfy later-no-harm criterion and later-no-help criterion which makes me nervous to while ranking to not hurt my favourite candidate. So personally if IRV winner is not the same person as Condorcet/Smith/ISDA winner I would just do a run-off between those two. And using this approach makes strategic voting extremely hard (if not impossible) because IRV is resistant to burying and bullet voting while Condorcet methods are resistant to push-over voting, so trying to vote tactically seems to be always nullify by the potential run-off. Unless you find a way to screw both systems simultaneously
@Mutex50 Жыл бұрын
@@Hadar1991 I don't like judging a voting system JUST by if it fails a criteria, but how often if fails and how hard it fails. A Condorcet method doesn't fail LNH unless it creates a cycle which would be pretty rare. Even when it does fail, i will be a soft fail. When IRV on the other hand fails the favorite betrayal criterion, it fails hard and it is more likely to fail when there is polarization.
@Hadar1991 Жыл бұрын
@@Mutex50 To be honest, I would be a rare occurrence that IRV winner is not a ISDA winner, so I think that runoff between IRV and ISDA winners in the rare occurrence it is not the same person it is far better solution than debating for next 20 years if IRV or ranked pairs would be a better voting system. 😅 Oh, and all Condorset methods fail No-favourite-betrayal, only score/approval voting meets this criterion and I am against scores for reason I have described earlier. 😅
@LordWaterBottle Жыл бұрын
STAR voting seems great, and is probably better than instant runoff voting is, but I feel that the jump from plurality voting to STAR would be a lot easier with a halfway system for transition, literally pick one anything is better than plurality voting.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Approval voting is the most natural halfway system for that. It is visually like Plurality, but it teaches voters they can express an opinion on multiple candidates.
@DarthCookieKS Жыл бұрын
This should be shown in every high school US government class
@Game_Hero Жыл бұрын
i'd preffer one without his personal opinions putted in to truly have an educative value ad let students truly make their own mind without being teased to pick one based on his biaises.
@IONATVS Жыл бұрын
My Unalloyed favorites for legislatures are STV (like Ranked Choice, but implemented in Multi-Member districts instead of single-member districts, further discouraging gerrymandering and other strategic voting manipulation) and MMP (Some fraction of seats elected directly through one of the methods described in the video, and then the rest filled in through a Proportional Representation system) For Executive positions I would go for Ranked Choice or STAR-probably Ranked Choice simply because it’s easier to understand, which has value in transparently showing the public that the election was free and fair. And I think Approval has an excellent niche: bureaucratic, judicial, and other ideally nonpartisan oversight positions (if elected at all, ofc), where you’re supposed to be looking for a fair neutral arbiter that both the majority AND minority can agree on, and a “controversial” is inherently problematic.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
I really like how you view election methods as tools for specific situations, rather than latching on to one method as the holy grail to solve all problems. Too many people compare methods as being better or worse as a method, without considering the application. This is really why RCV has got some backlash as of late - it has been promoted to some states and jurisdictions as a means to an end, rather than a solution for their situation.
@margefoyle6796 Жыл бұрын
Love this video. I *think* I voted for RCV in one of the polls because it was the only one I'd heard of. Now you need to do another poll. I am one hundred percent for any type of voting that decreases or gets rid of gerrymandering entirely. However, I'm curious if you would agree that more complicated types of voting will turn off more of the voters that are not inclined to do their homework on the candidates? And how do you think the parties will deal with any of these?
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
The two major political parties already mostly hate RCV since it props up third party candidates. :/
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat RCV doesn't really help third parties, because it still suffers from the vote-splitting/spoiler effect when they become popular.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat Having seen it in practice and simulation, that is not true. IRV is mostly just a way for voters who vote for a third party candidate to not have their vote thrown away. It doesn't actually help third parties all that much. To get an idea of this, look at the difference between Australia's upper and lower houses: their upper house uses STV, which leads to relative proportionality and helps third parties get in. Their lower house uses IRV, and while there is certainly more third-party presence than anywhere in US government, it is still effectively a two-party system.
@luisfilipe2023 Жыл бұрын
I’m surprised you didn’t include party list proportional representation as that is the most common type of voting system in Europe
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
I made this video primarily for Americans and what's most likely to happen at the state level.
@trevinbeattie4888 Жыл бұрын
For congressional offices that would make sense, but we’d need to change some federal and a lot of state laws to combine single-seat districts into multi-member offices. I think that should be a topic for a whole other video.
@kevincronk7981 Жыл бұрын
I prefer ranked choice voting, but the difference which I personally care more about is the winner-takes-all system. Some form of proportional representation would be far better for Congress, and for presidential elections of course you're voting for THE president so there can only be 1 winner, but due to the election being winner-takes-all at the state level, we've got cases like Al Gore and Hillary Clinton losing despite the majority of people voting for them. I realize that sounds like it only hurts democrats, but I feel like it also screwed the Republicans over in the election where Ross Perot did really well (which I think was 1992)
@anniekallen4472 Жыл бұрын
Yay for STAR Voting! More fair, more transparent, doesn't require centralized tabulation. Best of all, it prevents vote-splitting. (RCV mitigates vote-splitting but doesn't prevent it.)
@Game_Hero Жыл бұрын
ultra-ultra-complicated, with tons of extra steps, and for that, never has a chance to be approved for and stay. Approval voting also prevents vote-splitting since you can vote for all parties with similar ideas if you want.
@anniekallen4472 Жыл бұрын
@@Game_Hero I don't think STAR Voting is too complicated. It's only two steps (scoring round and runoff round). But I do like Approval Voting too, so I fully support that.
@Game_Hero Жыл бұрын
@@anniekallen4472 it's too complicated for me, If I had to explain it to my grandma, she probably wouldn't get it, contrary to approval voting where it's really "vote, but for all boxes you want instead of just one". And what if you have difficulty writing clearly readable numbers, because of parkinson for instance? Also, the fact it will generate extra costs is an automatic lost for its chances to be approved and implemented (and more importantly, kept).
@anniekallen4472 Жыл бұрын
@@Game_Hero The ballot completion step is pretty simple in STAR Voting ("Score candidates on a scale of 0-5"). Most people have no problem understanding that. The numbers wouldn't be written in; It would be a set of bubbles. That being said, I understand your concern, and Approval Voting is absolutely the best voting method if simplicity is your priority. It's almost as accurate as STAR Voting (especially with an Approval primary plus Approval general election), so it's really great bang for your buck.
@johnchessant3012 Жыл бұрын
Everyone who took the time to do that survey and watch this video (including me), should all reach out to their STATE legislators to advocate for ranked-choice voting. States decide how elections are run within their borders (including federal elections), so that's where we should direct our energy if we want this to become a reality.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Definitely! I should have mentioned this in the video!
@joeyager8479 Жыл бұрын
I live near a Mid-size city in Ohio. The Mayor and council candidates all run on a single non-partisan ballot in the primary election. There are 12 councilmen, 6 from districts and 6 at large. For the 6 At Large; in the primary the voters vote for 12 candidates. The top 12 run in the general election and the top 6 get elected to city council. It's similar for the mayoral race; all run in the primary and the top two, regardless of party affiliation run in the general election. Since party affiliation doesn't mean a lot, the candidates need to run on issues and proposals. Many of them run as independents. I'm not sure if this could be applied nationally or even statewide, but I would prefer that all candidates appear on a single primary ballot regardless of party using RCV or STAR.
@TheGerkuman Жыл бұрын
Approval Voting is great for when you need a consensus pick, for example, where to go for lunch. You'll end up with an answer that will make most people at least somewhat happy.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Well spread the word then!
@1ucasvb Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat I think a good approach towards this topic in the future is to frame each method in terms of what problem it's actually trying to solve. RCV/IRV is a conflict-resolution method: there are multiple factions competing against one another, and none of them want to compromise unless forced to. You want to ensure the dominant faction wins. You achieve this by forcing the smaller factions to compromise one by one, until a majority faction is found. Score/Approval are a semi-competitive consensus method: there are multiple factions, but they have a choice to compete or not. You want to find the biggest overlap between the factions willing to cooperate. If they want to cooperate, the winner's approval will be large, possibly >50%. If they do not want to cooperate, it will be small, and you have a very factional situation. In that case, the winner will be the dominant faction. STAR is a competitive consensus method: There are factions, they can cooperate or not, but you make an effort to get them to cooperate first. If they do, the best compromise is chosen and the majority faction still has veto power. If they don't cooperate, the majority faction gets its way anyway, so it's still fine. I think the above descriptions really highlight the differences in the voting methods in terms that are understandable to a regular person. These are basically human descriptions of the mathematics underlying each method.
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
Yeah it's great for quick consensus elections. CGP Grey has a video about it. You could even do Score voting by counting thumbs up as +1, thumbs down as -1, and averaging out sideways or hidden thumb.
@rossjennings47553 ай бұрын
I strongly agree with this. I used to be part of a board game group full of nerds where we would start every session by voting for the game we wanted to play using ranked-choice voting (STV). Eventually we ended up switching to approval voting because it was easier to figure out how you wanted to vote, and easier to tally up the results at the end. My feeling was that it worked better overall.
@cyrollan Жыл бұрын
I love you Mr. Beat. Your confident, funny, and informative delivery is tough to "beat" in this age.
@snicketso5164 Жыл бұрын
In the votings to pick which was my favorite, I picked Ranked Choice Voting. After watching the video I think that STAR voting is the best. The reason I didn’t vote for it, and I assume why others didn’t rank it number one either, is because I didn’t really understand it. Thanks for making the video and allowing us to vote!
@jackbaxter2223 Жыл бұрын
What stops STAR voting from resulting in a minority of super passionate zealots from simply running two identical candidates and forcing the final 1v1 to be between them and themselves?
@ziggy1179 Жыл бұрын
Came here to answer the question before watching: approval is best. Let's see if I need to change my answer after watching the video. I didn't consider ballot tampering. That makes me think a bit. The best thing about approval is ease of use and familiarity. But if the only way to make it tamper proof is to force someone to mark "disapprove" for the remaining candidates, that throws ease of use out the window.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Technically ballots can be tampered in the current Plurality system. The difference is what happens afterwards: in Approval the vote is counted. In Plurality it is spoiled. I'm honestly not sure which is worse: In Approval, your ballot is guaranteed to be counted toward the candidates you voted for. But in Plurality, it is easier to catch. A solution could be to issue voters sets of matching bar-coded stickers to use instead of filling in bubbles. If the stickers on the ballot don't match, the problem can be caught. The glue on the stickers could also be dyed to make it harder for ballots to be tampered by removing stickers. This would be a beneficial security upgrade for all voting methods.
@souptime8635 Жыл бұрын
My favourite type of voting is proportional representation. My suggestion would be that every state function as a single constituency. Therefore, there would be 50 constituencies, with variation in amount of seats. So 52 seats can be appointed out to candidates/candidate lists (parties) in California. So a Californian party could be representated in Congress, if they get 1,93% of the Californian votes. Likewise, Kansas gets 4 seats, which are distributed proportional to the statewide votes. Although local communities are not representation in the same way as under FTPT, it is difficult to argue that a community is small when the district's population is about 733.085 (more than the population of Wyoming). By adopting PR in each state we can elimate gerrymandering and represent the cummultative interests of each state gets representated.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
I like it
@Hadar1991 Жыл бұрын
European here - proportional voting sucks, because you are never voting for people but for parties. You think that US congressman vote to much accordingly to party lines? In proportional representation you could just have party leaders in the Congress, each with different number of votes assigned to them. Because in proportional representation it is impossible to win a seat as independent (because you have to have a whole party, because you vote for parties not people) so the leader can always kick out someone from party and his carrier is over or he has to join the other party. No whip needed, because if you vote against your party leader you will stop be congressman after the term. FPTP has massive problems, but USA and UK politicians as faaaaaaaaaaaar more independent than those in proportional representation countries. Oh, and forget that in proportional system anybody tries to do anything for his constituency - there is no incentive to do so because you are voting for party not for people and the party leaders decide who the people will be.
@catprog Жыл бұрын
@@Hadar1991 Australia senate here. You can vote for a party above the line or individuals below the line. The party vote then ranks the candidates from 1-x and they are then treated as individuals. Yes it ends up being party list but occasianly their are supprises. -- My suggesion to improve the senate system would be to assign the party votes to the individauls equally.
@Hadar1991 Жыл бұрын
@@catprog Australian Senate uses STV which is not a strictly proportional system. STV is somewhat proportional but in essence it is a majoritarian system using ranking voting. The more members are in district the more proportional it became, but it is also true for FPTP in multi-member districts. Your Senate STV is way better system than any proportional system in continental Europe. Usually saying "proportional system" people (at least in Europe) have in mind party-list proportional representation.
@FreeJaffa92 Жыл бұрын
Most other voting systems have implications on legislator construction vs just the voting process you discussed. We need a head to of the other voting systems. 1. MMP+ (IRV or STV) 2. STV 3.MMP 4. Full party proportional 5. IRV
@Arnordor36 Жыл бұрын
i think that RCV strikes the best balance between accuratly reflecting peoples views and not being too complicated. The last NYC mayoral election was done via RCV and i had a much easier time explaining it to my elderly mom than a voting method where u have to score candidates. Ranking things is more intuitive than scoring things
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Glad to hear it!
@pax6833 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. I think the best system is one which is geared toward low information voters and one which is familiar to the general public. RCV may not strictly be the best if measured in a study, but we do not elect people in studies, we elect them in elections, which are messy. It may be much harder to even implement star voting compared to ranked choice voting. A less than perfect system is better than no system.
@punditgi Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the clear explanation! 😊 You never miss a beat! 🎉😊
@TPChatter Жыл бұрын
You have convinced me. I know like STAR more than RCV!
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Woahness. I'm so glad to hear it!
@xezzee Жыл бұрын
Ranked is worst < Approval < Score < STAR < STAR but scoring from -3 to +3 would be the best. STAR Voting should be represented -3 to +3 instead of 0 to 5 which would be the most accurate voting system. + score means people like you and - score means people hate you. Then just pick the two most popular and compare all votes between the two who won more votes. Not perfect by no means but just solid system. Ranged Vote is just two parties telling people to place the party candidate as 2 spot and vote your favored as 1 giving you the illusion of choice while betting that no one will just instantly win. If no one wins with 50% votes it becomes two party vote and having multiple candidate where only the spot 1 matters you almost never have instant win which is why Ranked vote is just two party vote.
@PiousMoltar Жыл бұрын
I hadn't heard of STAR before, but it's now my favourite.
@thesdfrommw9311 Жыл бұрын
Video idea: Your top 10 favorite/least favorite Supreme Court decisions. If you want to narrow them down you can focus on the ones in your Supreme Court briefs!
@andrewjgrimm Жыл бұрын
As an Australian, I largely like preferential voting, but there’s been two problems I can identify. One is “preference harvesting” in upper house elections. This has been eliminated by getting rid of voting for one box above the line. The other is “running dead”, where one major party tries to get fewer votes so that they can give their preference to an independent who will defeat the other major party candidate. A system rewarding such behaviour irks me.
@mrewan6221 Жыл бұрын
Yes, the single "1" Above the Line was the worst thing that happened. I think it was NSW upper house that started it. They elect 21 state-wide candidates every four years. The election forms are enormous. You had to number every single box. Any error invalidated the whole paper. It was also difficult for the counters to actually count. So they brought in the ATL system, in effect a "standard numbering" for the whole of below the line. There was a recent NSW election with 346 candidates. Imagine how many spoiled votes there would have been without ATL. But they let the parties decide the "standard numbering". Micro parties worked out the "preference whispering" scheme. In last November's state election in Victoria this was still rampant. There are 8 upper house divisions, each with five members. Eight micro parties got together and allocated thier preferences in such a way that each of the eight parties would get one division where they would - after preference flows - get all of the votes from all eight parties. They all hoped it would be enough votes to win the fifth seat (maybe with some overflow votes from other candidates). This actually happened in Northern Metropolitan. Too bad for the voters and who they thought they were getting! But the correct solution has now been put in place. The (Federal) Senate changed ATL so that a "1" just means "number all of the party in this column below the line from 1 to whatever, but no-one else". Then we can put "2", meaning "then number all of the party in this column", 3, 4, 5, etc all above the line. All multi-member elections do it this way now (except VIctoria state). We also no longer have to number every box below the line in any multi-member election. This elminates "Preference havesting", and might also eliminate "dead running"? I think we have a pretty robust system in Australia with preferential voting. But I suspect New Zealand's multi-member proportional system (one vote for a local member, and one vote for a party) might be better (although I'd want to change the "local candidate" vote from plurality to preferential). I'd keep the Australian Senate system for multi-member elections.
@HiHello-dj8if Жыл бұрын
A simple fix for score voting regarding low turnout is to use the sum by itself instead of the average. Ultimately, I think that assembling people at random would be more beneficial than any voting method because politicians wouldn’t be able to afford ignoring the minority (sometimes minorities get lucky), the voters would be able to meet the candidates, money for advertising and debates would be unnecessary, and it’d be easier to make hundreds of people to research the candidates properly than to make the whole population do so.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Thank you for bringing this up!
@pascalausensi9592 Жыл бұрын
Electoral College version 2.0, now with random electors!
@1ucasvb Жыл бұрын
Yes. The argument for the "unknown candidate with high average" is really disingenuous because this is not the version of score voting anyone is seriously promoting.
@HiHello-dj8if Жыл бұрын
@@pascalausensi9592 Random electorates run the risk of giving power to people like Nazis every once in a while. In the House of Representatives, this isn't a real concern because individual representatives have little power especially new guys. However, it would be a concern for the Presidency, so I think that the eligible pool should be restricted a bit both for security and professionalism.
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
That's what STAR actually does.
@blakeives5509 Жыл бұрын
Weighted Average voting is the best! Everyone gives a grade (ex. 0-5 w/ 5 being best) to all eligible candidates. Then the average grade for any given candidate is multiplied by the percentage of voters who gave them a positive score (1-5). Ex. - A candidate’s average score is 4.5 but only 82% of people voted positively for them. 4.5*82%=3.69 weighted average. The candidate with the highest weighted average wins. Weighted average voting encourages everyone to vote exactly how they feel about the candidates and selects the most generally liked candidate. Not enough votes - can’t win; too polarizing - can’t win. Weighted average voting selects the candidate that is most acceptable/liked by most people.
@meeksource4047 Жыл бұрын
Once again another banger video. I hadn't even heard of STAR voting what with all the hype around RCV supported by movements like RepresentUs and Forward Party and whatnot; my eyes have been opened!
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
Now go talk to RepresentUs and Forward Party and convince them to push better systems than RCV. :D RCV is especially bad for the Forward Party because it suffers from the center-squeeze effect, which hurts moderate/centrist candidates.
@smurftums Жыл бұрын
As a resident of Tasmania, Australia I very much like the Hare-Clark method of voting that is used in lower house elections in the state. :)
@cal4837 Жыл бұрын
Even approval voting seems like it’d be a meaningful upgrade over the current plurality method, and approval looks wimpy and ineffective next to the rest of the options outlined here. This needs to change!
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Yep, they are all so much better than what we got now
@aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa790 Жыл бұрын
The thing I don't like about ranked choice voting (and other forms of voting) is that 50% isn't a majority. It's half. I don't want a winner who has slightly more than half of the vote to win. It's divided. A 70% vote would be better for an automatic winner. Also, the lack of keeping people who are "2nd best". If the top choices are divided by a majority of people but a candidate got more number 2 votes and the number 2 is liked (such as in STAR), then person should win. They got more votes overall then the top ones. It doesn't matter if they were the second choice, if a majority of people can agree on that candidate and not the others, then pick them.
@ryanlargent9320 Жыл бұрын
15:12 not sure if this map is accurate, I believe Nevada passed in a 2022 referendum of an augmented version of Alaska’s system (top 5 general instead of Alaska’s top 4). Correct me if I’m wrong, thanks for your videos!!
@be1tube Жыл бұрын
My favorite voting method is ranked choice voting (with tied ranks allowed) where the Condorcet candidate is chosen if it exists and IRV is used when it doesn't. However, I hadn't considered STAR voting.
@michaeljmeyer3 Жыл бұрын
I had a strong preference towards Ranked Choice going into this video. I had felt as though Star voting had a level of complexity to it that did not offset the potential gains from accuracy. Arguably, limited research on my part, and more intuition. Your awesome presentation here changed my mind, I rank Star higher than Ranked choice.
@duncansiror5033 Жыл бұрын
How is STAR more complex than RCV? STAR only ever has two rounds. Scoring is part of our lexicon already. 5 star hotel, 5 star restaurant, 5 star recruit.
@michaeljmeyer3 Жыл бұрын
@@duncansiror5033 It is confusing for the person casting the votes. I mean, for many, it will not be confusing. But the method used to score is just slightly more complex for the voter. And remember, we have voters who are not primarily English's speakers and of all different walks of life. They might intuit it as being a ranked choice type situation, where each candidate must be assigned a different score. I mean - it is amazing how many deviations from intended use you will get. Any designer, implementor, or support person will know the headaches that a single degree of complexity can add. (And that is before the political talking heads get involved )
@Raphael11001 Жыл бұрын
@@duncansiror5033 If you don't score one of the candidates, does it get removed from the sample size or does it automatically receive a score of zero?
@duncansiror5033 Жыл бұрын
@@Raphael11001 I'm almost certain it counts as zero
@joshuaschluter6802 Жыл бұрын
In theory, you could do approval voting by picking "yes" or "no" for every candidate (with each candidate having both a "yes" or "no" bubble next to it). That would make it much harder for someone to add candidates to your ballot, since you filled in "no". Still, that might negate at least one of the advantages (I don't know if that would be "compatible with current elections"). Honestly, I just like approval voting (and kinda dislike RCV/IRV). Still, I'd be happy to replace plurality in any case.
@Heartbreaker13579 Жыл бұрын
Prior to watching this, Ranked Choice was my favorite, as it had the most manageable flaws. But STAR voting is definitely my favorite now, having learned about it. It's Ranked Choice but with better logistics.
@BS-vx8dg Жыл бұрын
STAR voting may be "best", but we have to do *something* to get rid of first-past-the-post. That seems to me to be ranked choice voting. But even RCV can be screwed up. For example, the ostensibly-RCV system adopted in Alaska for its primaries is a monstrosity that actually exacerbates the problems inherent in plurality voting.
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
Yeah, keep spreading the word. Most people don't understand RCV and think it makes it safe to honestly rank the candidates, so they like it based on a misundertanding.
@Norfirio Жыл бұрын
One thing people will point out with ranked choice re: election security, is that it is impossible to tabulate locally, so I would disagree with the point that it's more secure than approval voting or score voting. If we, for example had nation-wide RCV to pick the president, then the US government would have to run the election, collect all the ballots from the states, and then run millions of ballots in one centralized location. With score, approval, or STAR, the results are precinct summable, so you can have each local government tabulate, send the results to the state, then the state tabulates and sends the results to the US gov't, etc. which helps with security since it's simpler to audit.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Yep. And considering we're a military superpower, we have to be really concerned about security. We can't have Russia or China putting their toe on the scale, or even give people more reason to worry about that happening. Plurality is summable, and yet many people sincerely believe our two latest presidents were/are foreign assets.
@crablegs21 Жыл бұрын
I’d be interested to do some more voting tests with more typically polarizing votes like ice cream flavor
@humblemovies6259 Жыл бұрын
Ranked choice is so rad, makes my mouth water
@DGAMINGDE Жыл бұрын
I think showing alternative voting system is really important, but there is still a massive amount of systems missing. All these system assume, that voting for individual candidates needs to be fair, however most western democracies either have a system where voters vote for parties (an organization created by multiple candidates based of similar interests), a system where it is possible to vote for a candidate AND a party (like Germany or New Zealand) or a system where people can vote for a party, or a candidate in your district (Denmark). I honestly believe the Danish system is far superior to any candidate voting system, as party groups are fairly represented based on the number of votes they got, parties are naturally forced to form coalitions with others and the people that want can still vote for an individual candidate (it's a problem that in the U.S. people just cannot vote for an entire party that is closer to their ideology).
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Right on. I'll admit this video is VERY American-centric. I hope to explore the Danish system in a future video.
@DGAMINGDE Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat I wouldn't call it America-centric. That's like saying, this video is Irish centric, because Ireland uses STV. Most election systems work the same in different countries and I believe the systems I named would actually benefit the U.S..
@DGAMINGDE Жыл бұрын
@@lllluka Gonna be honest, I feel like you are too harsh on political parties. There is a reason why many candidates choose political parties. 1. They are still broadly alligned with the goals of the party. You probably have preconceptions about what the parties stand for, while you ignore them on a personal level. 2. Voting for a person is never a long term solution. I would actually personally not vote for independents on principal, as I don't believe they are able to communicate their ideas with similar minded other politicians. I don't want to vote for someone I personally like, but that is not able to have "successors" from a party and has passed away when I am 40. 3. I support a proportional representation without any electoral threshold and compensation seats for full proportionality. In that system a large number of political parties will be presented (even more than in Finland). 4. Feels a bit ironic that you would vote for a person and can't even get on board with their reasons to join a party. 5. Having independent candidates is completely intransparent to overall voters. Having organized groups makes it easier for voters to understand ideologies of different parties. If there are 10 independent candidates in every electorate, almost nobody would have to time to look into all electoral programs. Also independent candidates may not be an option in your region, if they are running in another part of the country.
@DGAMINGDE Жыл бұрын
@@lllluka While the Irish system is better than many others, it again leads to unproportionality of the result.
@DGAMINGDE Жыл бұрын
@@lllluka Yes, but politics is never a one person show groups of individuals work with each other. In an electoral system like the Dutch one it is very easy to form new political parties, that can still be representeted, if they get a very low amount of votes. If these candidates are really that different from their parties as you think, they have the freedom to form their own parties. I also like a variety of candidates from different political parties and voted for a party that has members I believe are horrible, but that doesn't make me complain against the functions of parties lol
@alohatigers1199 Жыл бұрын
Never heard of Star voting but I’ll choose that over whatever we have now. There are other options like the one comment I read where A vs B/C/D, B vs A/C/D, C vs A/B/D, and D vs A/B/C. I like that head to head match ups and see which is the better candidate. I’ll choose that one.
@Steve-nuru887 күн бұрын
Condorcet voting
@tedzards509 Жыл бұрын
As for ranked choice voting: If A is everyones second choice but B gets 51% of first votes, I wouldn't say B is necessarily the supposed winner.
@1ucasvb Жыл бұрын
Yes, this is a very important point. The fact RCV only looks at #1 rankings easily misses cases where a better candidate is eliminated too early. Deeper down, this is actually a criticism of majority rule in general, and it's really a very glaring issue with it as a democratic principle, as a majority of preference is not the same thing as majority of support. Favoritism is not the same thing as support.
@tarmotaipale5704 Жыл бұрын
One notable thing about score voting is it rewards you for any positive publicity and punishes for negative publicity. Other voting systems (including approval!) often reward controversial figures since one side of the aisle are going to vote for them and the other side won't. This will also give a chance to the less known parties and candidates but may also skew the results towards them if voters other than those who like this fringe party pay no attention to it. Thus, this aspect of score voting, namely no publicity being better than negative publicity, may be a strength or a weakness, depending on your perspective
@chrisgenovese8188 Жыл бұрын
mr. beat is ranked #1 in our hearts.
@tckoppang9 ай бұрын
I think the problem Star Voting has is that it's more difficult for people to understand the math/system that takes place during the tally. If people are confused about how the result is calculated, then they are less likely to accept the election as valid -- which is a bummer.
@yaitz3313 Жыл бұрын
The biggest problem with unconventional voting methods is the fact that perception of fairness in an election is arguably more important then fairness itself. By being more complex, unconventional voting methods reduce the perception of fair democracy, and make people feel like choosing leaders is a complex byzantine process that they don't understand.
@blakekaveny Жыл бұрын
Non of these are really taht complex though.
@x999uuu1 Жыл бұрын
I mean many european countries have MMP systems that are all more complex than any mentioned here and they're fine. I expect that after the first couple of elections, Americans would get used to it
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Yeah. Complexity is a serious issue. That's why I support Approval voting - it uses the same ballots and machines as Plurality, and works roughly the same as a lot of school board and city council elections.
@williamsutter2152 Жыл бұрын
Blimey, your viewers should come live in Oz. We use RCV in all single-winner elections and single transferable vote for all multi-winner elections. But I will say, we have had gerrymanders despite using RCV. One premier even managed to stay in power for close to 20 years thanks to it. Fortunately, we have no gerrymanders anymore but that is thanks to having independent commissions draw the electoral boundaries.
@thereta3933 Жыл бұрын
*Cries in Schulze voting*
@DarinLawsonHosking Жыл бұрын
This is the first I have heard about star voting but a very vocal ranked choice voting advocate but this has me leaning towards star voting. Will have to look into it more. Thanks
@JoyceyNotus Жыл бұрын
In Ireland we take ranked choice voting one step further (we call in single transferable vote). We have multiple seat constituencies with 3, 4 or 5 TDs (what we call MPs. This makes gerrymandering even harder as severely limiting the effectiveness of packing and splitting. The outcome of seats is very reflective of the vote. MMP would probably get a similar or slightly more accurate seat to vote result but there are 2 reasons why I dislike MMP. 1) It makes political parties mandatory and they are a part of the process. I find parties policy tends to be decided by a few centre members and is forced on backbenchers or similar but not exactly confirming candidates. In my view this erodes debate and is anti-democratic. 2) Most MMP systems have a minimum seat threshold to gain access. This can be manipulated by autocrats to bar smaller opposition parties or repress minorities like in Turkey for example. A candidate that is extremely popular with a local issue could get the most votes of any politician but be rejected because he's not in a successful party. The Irish system isn't perfect. No voting system can defeat stupid voting practices. We largely used to vote based on 1920s issues until 2011. Our system is slow to get results and forming a governing majority can be difficult. Honestly though, the slow boring nature of the count prevents entertainment style politics and STV and multiparty constituencies help prevent (but not entirely stop) extreme candidates.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
The RCV system in America has some serious problems because of being used for single winner elections. STV was never meant for single winners. It was created for proportional results in multi seat elections.
@JohnSmith-iv8zm Жыл бұрын
I live in MA and voted against ranked choice voting because I didn’t understand it. Thanks for explaining how it’s better than some, but not all systems.
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
The bottom line is, we gotta get rid of plurality voting.
@phil3924 Жыл бұрын
@@iammrbeat if you’re for it I’m against it.
@Hoagsgalaxynetwork Жыл бұрын
While Star voting does seem to be a better option I just want to see plurality voting face extinction, so I will continue pushing people to support ranked choice as it is more commonly known and already has a small foothold. Baby steps
@eyescreamcake Жыл бұрын
But it doesn't actually fix anything. We're going to get locked into the status quo. :(
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
The reason FairVote promotes IRV is that they view it as a step toward STV, not that they considered IRV a good method at the outset. I should also point out that IRV has been in the public eye for much, much longer than STAR, yet STAR is growing in popularity by leaps and bounds.
@synthstatic9889 Жыл бұрын
Tyranny of the majority is not a thing but tyranny of the plurality definitely is.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
@@synthstatic9889 They are both a thing.
@synthstatic9889 Жыл бұрын
@@galiantus1354 Except the alternative to tyranny of the majority is to create anti-majoritarian mechanisms that effectively allow a minority to rule over the majority by perpetuating an increasingly intolerable status quo.
@winston.sullivan Жыл бұрын
If we're talking about elections with only a single winner then ranked choice is my fav with STAR and approval having uses in certain situations. However, when it comes to legislative elections, ranked choice is only a slight improvement as it lacks proportionality, which can only be achieved in multi-member districts. For that purpose, Single Transferrable Vote and Mixed Member Proportional are clearly the best choices.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
I'm glad to see someone else shares my view of RCV for obtaining proportional results. It was never meant to be a single-winner method.
@nicolascampos1442 Жыл бұрын
as a political scientist a YouGov sponsor is such a flex
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
lol yeah it was a good fit
@gFamWeb Жыл бұрын
A note on approval voting and poll workers bubbling in more bubbles. We could add a final set of bubbles with numbers and the voter indicates the *number* of bubbles they bubbled. Sort of like a checksum. This would at least catch possible bad actors, but unfortunately doesn't help with what to do in those scenarios when they are caught.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Technically poll workers can already do that, it just spoils the ballot. But security is still an important consideration. One solution I've thought of is giving each voter a set of matching bar-coded stickers, to use instead of filling in bubbles. It's a more uniform marking for a machine to read, and mismatched stickers could be immediately identified and not tallied. It would aid both in catching bad actors and ensuring your vote is counted.
@danzwku Жыл бұрын
when I first heard about ranked choice voting without hearing how it was going to be implemented specifically, I imagined that it was going to be something like score voting. Thanks for the video! Now I know I support score and star voting over RCV edit: did the people who voted in this video actually understand the other options or did they just go for RCV just because they know it lol
@Ratchet4647 Жыл бұрын
In the request, they were supposed to be familiar with them or, if not, watch the respective videos he made for them.
@LeftoverPat Жыл бұрын
My cover band and I have tried everything to vote on songs. Score voting has worked best for us!
@francisluglio6611 Жыл бұрын
How do you know it worked best? Did you guys vote on that?
@dontcomply3976 Жыл бұрын
Probably works well with a small group of people, it wouldn't scale up well.
@Bellerophon17 Жыл бұрын
Where I'm from (Ireland), we have ranked voting, but for multi-seat constituencies. I think the multi-seat vs single-seat element is important. Multi-seat seems (i.e. I'm saying this without any study on the topic) to avoid the binary choices that the USA and even the UK seem to suffer from, and helps make everyone's voice count in the way ranked is supposed to. For example, my home 4 seat county typically ends up with 1 seat to big centre-right party A, 1 seat to big centrist party B, 1 independent and 1 seat to any of of A/B/left-leaning party. Of course, electing useless politicians knows no borders and surmounts all voting systems.
@cunningham-code Жыл бұрын
Yup! In NJ we want to use RCV for our positions that have to be single-seat, but for our assembly, we want to use STV.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
Yeah I don't think the method of runoffs used in RCV is great for single seats. It was meant to achieve proportionality in multi-winner elections, not select single winners.
@MicaiahBaron Жыл бұрын
Absolutely not surprised Ranked Choice won; it's all of the place in a lot of popular content among people dissatisfied with Plurality, while Star hasn't been used in the real world yet. Honestly, even if Star is still overall better just managing to get Ranked Choice would be a huge win.
@cunningham-code Жыл бұрын
To those who like Ranked-Choice Voting, consider finding a non-partisan advocacy group advocating for RCV in your state. In NJ, for example, we have Voter Choice NJ (which full disclosure I am apart of).
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
Good advice, Jack
@theyoungcentrist9110 Жыл бұрын
I’m already apart of a group in California to help expand this voting method all across the golden state. It’s called the Cal RCV coalition. So anyone that lives in California help us bring ranked choice voting to our state.
@tomrogue13 Жыл бұрын
@@theyoungcentrist9110 would you know of similar orgs in the other states by chance?
@theyoungcentrist9110 Жыл бұрын
@@tomrogue13 In Georgia, there is another advocacy group know as Better Ballot Georgia to bring RCV to the peach state.
@A.Martin Жыл бұрын
Mixed member proportional, but further, for the districts instead of the usual FPTP, use a multi member district with STV
@munjee2 Жыл бұрын
My favourite is actually single transferable vote
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
It's a form of RCV. I think most people would agree with you.
@that_oneguy00 Жыл бұрын
Imagine having this guy as your history teacher! I would love school a lot more
@SSand4 Жыл бұрын
I'm not on social media, so here's my vote: Up until now Ranked Choice had been my favorite, but since you took more than a minute to more fully explain STAR, I think that's now my favorite since it allows for multiple candidates to be given the same score, while also being able to give people you want as far from office as possible a big bold *0.*
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
I really like STAR. It uses all the information you put on your ballot.
@skippymaster57 Жыл бұрын
One of the best real life examples of Ranked voting is the one here in Australia. We call it Preferential voting. In State and Federal voting we have the choice of voting 'above the line' ie. I will choose the party that I want first, then second then third up to at least the 6th favourable parties: The party decides the next preferred party as per their 'How to Vote cards' provided at the polling place. OR, I can choose to vote 'below the line' and choose at least 6 of MY best preferences OR I can choose EVERYONE I choose, from 1st to last (this can be a large number as a Federal Senate vote can have more than 30-40 people to choose from, some from a party and some independents). I like the idea that my vote will be counted and my preferences are respected, and I, and everyone else gets to do the same, even if I don't agree with their policies. I also like the idea of compulsory voting here in Australia, as it gives a valid and accurate result with no ambiguity as to who wins and who loses. It is administered by an Independent body called The Australian Electoral Commission with no connection to ANY Political party or State. We also don't vote for the leader of the country, as their role is to lead the party and not be able to overrun what the majority of the people in the party members want. To explain, here is a KZbinr, David with the channel Auspol Explained which gives a very good demonstration of the process: kzbin.info/www/bejne/ioSqfnWjf5WCors
@LuisTheFilmHack Жыл бұрын
Star voting is my favorite. I think the only drawback is that some voters will claim its multistep method is somehow unfair.
@celiabrickell2500 Жыл бұрын
Also it's multiple steps could/would lead to many/more charges od voter fraud. We know who would cry the loudest about that!
@1ucasvb Жыл бұрын
@@celiabrickell2500How so? It's exactly the same ballots. There aren't two elections, people cast the ballots just once.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
@@celiabrickell2500 STAR still uses fewer rounds than RCV and produces more justifiable results. So the magnitude of any backlash against STAR on the grounds of fraud will be very mild by comparison.
@SpinDlsc Жыл бұрын
I have come to the conclusion after now watching 15 of Mr. Beat's videos that he is a dork - but a likeable one. Thanks for the content, and for approaching politics and economics from a more pragmatic lens.
@valkxz7430 Жыл бұрын
I always thought a combination between ranked-choice and approval voting would be the best. It allows the voter to pick more than one candidate they like with the ability to specify how much they prefer them compared to the others. For the candidates they've never heard of or don't like, they can leave the boxes empty.
@cosmojg Жыл бұрын
Sounds like STAR to me!
@Skywake Жыл бұрын
It's called optional preferential voting, some states in Australia have this. You're asked to number as many boxes as you want and if when counting your vote you "run out of numbers" your vote exhausts. I'm personally not a fan because where it exists the major parties run "just vote 1" campaigns which pulls us just that little bit more towards plurality voting. But it could be a good option to replace plurality, especially if you have savings provisions where someone ticking the box for 1 candidate "counts" as a 1
@malafunkshun8086 Жыл бұрын
Ranked choice voting may be the easiest to implement at the moment, based on familiarity. But star voting may be the way to go, especially after your analysis of it. Beat. One things for sure, however. Any other voting method would be an improvement over plurality voting. Aloha 🤙🏼
@trevinbeattie4888 Жыл бұрын
The STAR Voting campaign will be starting a petition this summer to get this system back on the Oregon ballot for next year’s election! The last time it came up it was only defeated by a small margin; hopefully this time around more people will be aware of the awfulness of plurality voting and vote for change.
@danwylie-sears1134 Жыл бұрын
Before watching, I like anything that's not winner-take-all. But I have a couple of favorites. First, tiered representation. Every citizen is a tier-zero representative, and everyone can designate one person. For any N, a tier N representative becomes a tier N+1 designated by nine other tier N representatives. Laws can be passed by supermajority at any tier, with those made at lower tiers overruling those made at higher tiers if the laws conflict. This seems as though it would put a premium on organization, and lead to a coalition-of-coalitions political structure with many small political parties grouped into larger ones, culminating in one ruling coalition. The institutional structure would probably have a de-facto executive council as the highest level, whose members are chosen from among a de-facto legislature that's a bit more than ten times larger, and a combination of advisory body and de-facto standing constitutional convention that's something over a hundred times as large as the executive council. The barrier to entry at the bottom tiers would be extremely low: just get ten or a hundred citizens together and organize yourselves. The barrier would also be low for small parties to jump from one coalition to another. Second, self-selected constituencies in place of geographic districts, with ordinary primaries and plurality general elections within each constituency. When you register to vote, or at any time up to a specified number of days before each election, you can choose which of your state's House seats you want to vote for. This seems as though it would lead to roughly proportional representation, with small parties encouraging their members to all register for the same seat, or the same few seats, however many they think they can get. At equilibrium, all constituencies would be about the same size (because it takes fewer people to win a smaller constituency, so those would be the ones that parties target to get their supporters to register into), and each seat would be contested by two parties with broadly similar views (because the Duverger's Law pattern would still apply somewhat within a constituency). It wouldn't do anything about the disproportional advantages of incumbency, though. Majority (meaning instant-runoff) voting is an improvement over winner-take-all plurality, but probably not a big improvement. Multi-member super-districts would probably make more of a difference. Now to see what the video has to say.
@danwylie-sears1134 Жыл бұрын
After watching, I'm kind of surprised that there's no mention of party-list proportional representation, or of instant-runoff voting where the candidate designates who their votes will go to if they're eliminated. To me, it's more important to get rid of the winner-take-all part than the plurality-voting part.
@galiantus1354 Жыл бұрын
What you are proposing are forms of what's called liquid democracy. It goes beyond just proportional representation in the legislature, and focuses on giving individual voters a direct line to decision-making. I am personally ambivalent toward it, though I could see it being useful for organizing a lower house in a bicameral legislature.
@SiVlog1989 Жыл бұрын
In an ideal world, I'd choose ranked choice preference voting (ranking the candidates in terms of who each person voting would most like to win, if they don't win a majority, then it goes to second preference and so on). It means that people voting for the candidate they want rather than the one they dislike the least is less of a waste. It won't happen unfortunately, as the saying goes, Turkeys won't vote for Christmas
@cunningham-code Жыл бұрын
I'd have to push back on "it's not happening", I am part of a group advocating for RCV in NJ and we've been able to get Republicans and Democrats to support the reform. Find a non-partisan advocacy group for RCV, no matter your background, they could probably use your help.
@SiVlog1989 Жыл бұрын
@Jack C sadly, I don't think I'd be much use, I'm on the other side of the pond so to speak, in the UK. I'd love to see it happen in the UK, but given the vested interest in the First Past the Post system we have here, in both the Conservative Party and the Labour Party, that's what I was getting at with "it won't happen"
@cunningham-code Жыл бұрын
@@SiVlog1989 Fair point, lol. You had a chance in the recent-ish past to switch to IRV, so no doubt the demand is still there, and the support for smaller parties in the UK is much stronger in the US - so all the more reason to try and get involved where you can. It can be easy to get lost in the national fights, but even just getting your town council to use RCV is a great change. Best of luck!
@iammrbeat Жыл бұрын
But it's already happening across the country!
@SiVlog1989 Жыл бұрын
@Mr. Beat not here in the UK unfortunately, neither the Conservative Party nor the opposing (at the moment) Labour Party, have any real incentive to change First Past the Post. They're only interested in maintaining their positions as leading parties, not in giving a real choice for people to rank their preferences
@lawden21010 ай бұрын
Before talking about electoral systems, it's good to be reminded of Arrow's impossibility theorem!
@flounder4285 Жыл бұрын
My initial vote would be ranked choice voting. After watching this video i think I’m on the fence with that and star voting. There’d be a huge learning curve to implement it but from what I understand it sounds promising
@jackbaxter2223 Жыл бұрын
Personally, i don't think that STAR eliminates the downsides of Score voting sufficiently for me to rank it above RCV.