Anthony Towns writes:
> That's not really legitimate STV since when a vote ranks two candidates
> equally I count it towards both totals, which is why 231+237 = 468 which
> is more than the total number of votes (421), but it's the best we can
> do, I think.
Nah, here are the results from my WebV
Anthony Towns wrote:
> If I remember how my script works well enough to use it correctly,
> the "clone" candidates (ones that a lot of voters rank next to each other)
> were:
>
> 326 votes (77%), Ari and Ted
That's very unfair to Zeke.
Regards, Frank
--
Frank Küster
Single Molecule Spectro
Anthony Towns wrote:
> So, by the looks of things, we get the same result with either
> American-style voting (only the first ranked candidate counts)
Actually, by American-style voting, several of the candidates would have
needed to band together to geta bigger share of the votes, with the ones
p
Some quick analysis of the tally sheet:
First preference votes:
152 Anthony
122 Steve
75 Andreas
70 Jeroen
48 Bill
9 Ari
4 Ted
14 NOTA
(that counts 48 votes that ranked two or more options equal first
multiple times)
Using STV (aka IRV, which .au uses fo
> "Anthony" == Anthony Towns writes:
[...]
Anthony> Another interesting question, especially given we had two
Anthony> candidates who were planning on working together to lead Debian
Anthony> should either be elected, is how closely together candidates
Anthony> were ranked. If you count two
Anthony Towns wrote:
> Anyway. I think it's always interesting to analyse the voting a little
> beyond just "who won". Anyway, some (IMHO) interesting implications from
> this vote.
Indeed, it is interesting (as have been your occasional ubuntu
commentaries on your web site). Thanks for compili
Hello world,
(Hrm, vote.debian.org has the 2005 elections out of order on the sidebar)
Anyway. I think it's always interesting to analyse the voting a little
beyond just "who won". Anyway, some (IMHO) interesting implications from
this vote.
First, in spite of some quite disparate choices, and a
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