The study of voting systems is a hobby of mine and I've encoding vote
gathering algorithms implementing them before, so this gives me a bit of
insight into the discussion at hand that I would like to share.  The goal
of any voting system is to reach a consensus, and while majority rule
(regardless of the amount of the majority) is appropriate for most issues,
it is not appropriate for all.  Specifically, it fails to work in any
situation where the group is being asked to reach a consensus on three or
more choices.

Ironically the choice put forth in this thread is just such an instance.
Stay at 50%+1, Go to 2/3rds, 3/4ths has been mentioned and 3/5ths is
another commonly required ratio.  Four choices.

The best method for dealing with this situation is a ranked choice ballot
and an instant run off vote. The ballot itself asks the voters to rank
their choices, not just stamp a single one. The votes are counted using the
expressed first choice on the ballot.  If the measure doesn't pass then the
option with the fewest supporters is disqualified. The ballots for that
option are recounted and the 2nd choice is added to the counts. If the
measure still doesn't pass this process is repeated, recursively until
there are only two candidate, in which case the one with the majority wins.

This method doesn't work directly with methods requiring a plurality other
than a simple majority, but it isn't meant to be applied in the same
situations.

I'm putting this forward because I worry the group might paint themselves
into a corner by requiring all issues require a super majority, because
that's going to fall apart when there are three or more possibilities.  The
methods can be combined, using ranked choice to determine which option will
be put up against the status quo, then a super majority vote to determine
if that option will be chosen over the status quo.

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