Condorcet Voting
In one sentence, Condorcet Voting means that candidate who most people prefer to the other candidates wins. In another sentence, the winner is the candidate who would defeat all of the alternative candidates in a one on one election. While the basic idea is quite simple, figuring out who the Condorcet winner is, and deciding who the winner is if there is no single Condorcet winner is not obvious. Taijitu has adopted Condorcet Voting in the past, but later abandoned it in favor of Instant Runoff Voting.
Contents
Theory
How to Vote
Voting in a Condorcet election is a tiny bit more complicated than voting in a plurality vote election, but exactly the same as in any other preferential system such as Instant Runoff Voting.
In a plurality election, one in theory simply votes for one's favorite candidate and the candidate with the most votes wins. However, because supporters of candidates who are believed to "have no chance" can still prefer one of the "mainstream" candidates to the other, they end up voting for someone who is not their favorite at all, based on who they guess "has a chance".
In a Condorcet election, you simply write down candidates in the order you prefer them. For example, Green voters in Florida in 2000 might vote:
- Nader
- Gore
or
- Nader
- Gore
- Bush
While Buchanan voters might vote:
- Buchanan
- Bush
- Gore
- Nader
How to Count
History
Originally Taijitu's election method was specified to be Plurality voting. The very first amendment to the first Constitution of Taijitu was the institution of Condorcet Voting. By fiat, it was decided that the Condorcet method to use would be Schulze, where cycles are resolved by looking at the size of victory margins and dropping the weakest margins from consideration.
There were several Delegate and Speaker elections under Condorcet voting, until there was a disputed election in which there was disagreement over how to count the result. As a result, it became apparent that most voters did not actually understand the system of Condorcet voting Taijitu was using.
Following that, Instant Runoff voting and Plurality voting were both proposed, and neither passed. Then a coup d'etat changed constitutions and the new constitution used Instant Runoff voting. This was kept when the rest of the coup constitution was replaced with the original constitution.
Condorcet Voting for Delegate was re-proposed in the Third Party Congress of the Progressive Party by Eluvatar.