Re: Election problems
Posted: 09 May 2019, 23:21
Tomliner - Back in the 1970s, there was a movement encouraging people to do just as you suggest. That made their votes 'informal' and they would not be counted. At that time, to win an election you needed 'a simple majority of the formal vote', so in theory if everyone voted informal, no candidate could be elected. The pollies reacted by dropping the word 'formal' from the winning requirement.
Mike - A couple of years ago I asked the Electoral Reform Commission to let us put a zero against any candidate on the ballot paper, to mean that candidate was not wanted in any circumstance, and that each zero would cancel out one primary vote for that candidate. Preferential voting does not give me the right to say NO, so if there happens to be someone I want elected, I cannot vote for them unless I also express some degree of support for the other candidates, most of whom I don't want on the same planet, never mind sitting in the parliament. The ERC replied that my system would be "unfair to the candidates"...makes me wonder whose side the ERC is on
MikeW
Mike - A couple of years ago I asked the Electoral Reform Commission to let us put a zero against any candidate on the ballot paper, to mean that candidate was not wanted in any circumstance, and that each zero would cancel out one primary vote for that candidate. Preferential voting does not give me the right to say NO, so if there happens to be someone I want elected, I cannot vote for them unless I also express some degree of support for the other candidates, most of whom I don't want on the same planet, never mind sitting in the parliament. The ERC replied that my system would be "unfair to the candidates"...makes me wonder whose side the ERC is on
MikeW