Automatic Mixed Member STAR Fusion?
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I was thinking about Marcus Ogren's "Fusion Voting on STAR Ballots" proposal, which replaces the traditional party endorsements listed under candidate names with the ratings parties officially recommend giving the candidate. Two Republicans may run, one with a 5, one with a 4 from the GOP. A voter may consider herself a moderate and give higher scores to a candidate who receives 2s from both of the duopoly parties. This set-up allows voters to think of themselves as members of a particular party, but in a way that defines relative position within and between parties - "I'm an X-Y Coalition voter. I am chiefly X, but still give great consideration to endorsements from party Y".
I realized mulling this over that, with this set-up, the parties effectively submit their own ballot! We can compare their scores directly to the voters and their factional score-clusters. Could this be used to generate a kind of Mixed Member Proportional-like system that supplements single-winner STAR district results automatically, where:
(1) Voters are grouped by score-proximate party, relative to which party's ballot their scoring most resembles
(2) "Party group" proportions are compared against the party membership (or party membership weighted by endorsements) of the winners, identifying the least represented
(3) Highest scoring unelected candidates from the parties of underrepresented party-groups are seated at-large until a desired proportionality threshold is reached(3) seems to result in candidates from 'parties that score similar to large clusters of voters that generally don't succeed in electing local winners' experiencing a strong incentive to be the most likeable candidate in their party to the general electorate, which could be beneficial given traditional concerns with PR. Another consequence is that this might result in reverse-engineering parties from unorganized factions. Identify a similarly voting, relatively unrepresented "natural party" in the electorate, and endorse according to their representative ballot (if candidates accept those endorsements). Run a couple likeable, high-name recognition candidates and you'll bypass much of the slower party-formation difficulties straight into representation, which could make parties more dynamic and incentivize 'constituent-seeking,' or just fall to strategic exploitation.
This is half-baked but I wanted to do something with the fact that fusion endorsement essentially signals a party's own STAR vote, which probably has undertheorized usefulness in Cardinal-PR theorizing.
As a side note— are there interesting party-based proportional score proposals I should read about? Party-reliance is less of a realistic proposal in the US but given academia's partyphilia I would hope there's some sketch of what that could look like. Here's one I just thought of:
Mixed Member Proportional Rep with a Score Ballot
Pick my local rep by STAR, then score the parties out of 5
Aggregate party scores are converted into a tradeable interparty asset ("Stars")
At-large seats are "purchasable" for some n stars
Parties need to meet an "ante" of a set number of seats to take their seat, avoiding fractionalizing
Parties then negotiate between each other, trade stars in exchange for concessions and legislative promises, even smallest parties get some pull this way
Larger parties weigh allowing fringe parties to buy additional seats under their umbrella, which gives them ultimate control over renegade radicals and a larger coalition at some risk
Parallels negotiations during the formation of a government in the case of parliamentary systems, so coalition governments can deliberately seat a "neutral independent coalition figure" to lead them -
@mendicant said in Automatic Mixed Member STAR Fusion?:
I realized mulling this over that, with this set-up, the parties effectively submit their own ballot! We can compare their scores directly to the voters and their factional score-clusters. Could this be used to generate a kind of Mixed Member Proportional-like system that supplements single-winner STAR district results automatically
Yes! That's very clever thinking! Similar systems are widely used in the EU and Australia, but based on FPP/STV
The system you seem to be proposing is slightly different, but closely related to two big concepts in academic literature:
- Open-list systems. In these systems, you vote for a candidate (instead of a party). Each party's vote total is equal to the number of votes cast for all the candidates in the party; seats are apportioned between parties based on their vote total, and then the candidates with the most votes are elected. For a simple example, I suggest looking up the panachage system, but this procedure can be adapted to work with any voting system: apportion seats proportionally between parties as the first step, then use the votes for individual candidates to decide who should win within each party.
- Biproportional representation (recently adopted in Switzerland). These systems elect candidates in such a way as to make local elections as representative as possible, subject to the constraint of full representativeness at the national level.
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@mendicant As I mentioned in another thread recently there is this score/MMP system, which I also made a video of.
Basically, you give a score to all the candidates standing locally, and can also give a separate score to any parties or independent candidates standing in the wider region.
The local candidate with the highest score (or STAR winner or whatever) is elected. Then the local areas are combined into one larger region for the top-up phase, A voter's party scores are given to all candidates standing for that party outside their local area. The rest of the seats are allocated in the most proportional way possible given those already elected. Probably using something like Phragmén.
Works with approval voting too.