1, 2, Tower Hamlets Mayoral Voting Method

Oct 15, 2010 14:09

The voting method for Tower Hamlets' new mayor is the same as for all directly elected mayors in England: supplementary vote. (Wellington, mentioned yesterday, uses Single Transferable VoteVoters pick a first choice candidate and a second choice candidate. If one candidate gets over half of the first-choice votes, they become mayor. Simples ( Read more... )

politics, tower hamlets

Leave a comment

Comments 6

st_lemur October 15 2010, 13:40:07 UTC
Supplementary vote is quite a bad system; STV or AV would both be much better.

Reply

sierra_le_oli October 15 2010, 14:13:40 UTC
I would've preferred STV, but was wondering if that was the ease of familiarity. Under supplementary vote, I can just about guarantee that both my votes will be "lost" because I won't vote tactically. Not that that'll stop me from making my way to the voting booth on Thursday.

Reply

swaldman October 15 2010, 15:59:36 UTC
Am I right in thinking that this is a "simplified" AV, in that the only differences are that you can only express two preferences and that they drop all but the top two for the second round instead of eliminating candidates one by one? Or am I missing some other distinction?

Seems silly if so, because I can't see any reason for the "simplification" apart from making the count faster...

IIRC, STV ends up being equivalent to AV anyway when you're only electing to one position?

Reply

sierra_le_oli October 16 2010, 08:47:47 UTC
Yep.

Quicker count is cheaper and that's what it's all about these days. The disadvantage compared to AV is the tactical voting, I think. Can't bring myself to do it here.

Reply


Leave a comment

Up