Quota Borda system
The Quota Borda system or quota preference score is a voting system that was devised by the British philosopher Michael Dummett and first published in 1984 in his book, Voting Procedures, and again in his Principles of Electoral Reform.
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If proportionality is required in a Borda count election, a quota element should be included into the counting procedure, which works best in multi-member constituencies of either 4 or 6 members. The threshold used is the Droop quota; in a single-seat constituency, the quota is an absolute majority, i.e., more than half of the valid vote; in a 2-seat constituency, it is the smallest number more than a third; in a 3-seat, it's the smallest number more than one fourth; and in a 4-seat constituency, it is the smallest number greater than one fifth of the valid vote.
The four-seat selection goes as follows;
- Any candidate gaining a quota of 1st preferences is elected.
- Any pair of candidates gaining 2 quotas is elected. (A pair of candidates, Ms J and Mr M, say, gains 2 quotas when that number of voters vote either 'J-1, M-2' or 'M-1, J-2'.) If seats still remain to be filled, then, ignoring all those candidates who have already been elected;
- Any pair of candidates gaining 1 quota gains 1 seat, and the seat is given to the candidate of that pair who has the higher Modified Borda Count score.
- Any seats still remaining are given to those candidates with the highest Modified Borda Count scores.[1][2]
See also
References
- Designing an All-Inclusive Democracy by Peter Emerson, published by Springer Verlag, 2007, part I, pages 39-60, "A Pluralist Parliament for a Plural Society: The Quota Borda System, QBS" ISBN 978-3-540-33163-6 (Print) 978-3-540-33164-3 (Online)
- Voting Systems Archived 2008-05-16 at the Wayback Machine
External links
- On Dummett's 'Quota Borda System' Article by Markus Schulze.
- Single Transferable Vote with Borda Elimination: A New Vote Counting System Article by Chris Geller.