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Voting methods in deliberative assemblies

Deliberative assemblies – bodies that use parliamentary procedure to arrive at decisions – use several methods of voting on motions (formal proposal by members of a deliberative assembly that the assembly take certain action). The regular methods of voting in such bodies are a voice vote, a rising vote, and a show of hands. Additional forms of voting include a recorded vote and balloting.

Regular methods Edit

Voice vote Edit

Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised (RONR) states that a voice vote (viva voce) is the usual method of voting on any motion that does not require more than a majority vote for its adoption.[1] It is considered the simplest and quickest of voting methods used by deliberative assemblies. The chair of the assembly will put the question to the assembly, asking first for those in favor of the motion to indicate so verbally ("aye" or "yes"), and then ask those opposed to the motion to indicate so verbally ("no"). The chair will then estimate which side had more members.

Rising vote Edit

A simple rising vote (in which the number of members voting on each side rise to their feet) is used principally in cases in which the chair believes a voice vote has been taken with an inconclusive result, or upon a motion to divide the assembly. A rising vote is also often the normal method of voting on motions requiring a two-thirds vote for adoption. It can also be used as the first method of voting when only a majority vote is required if the chair believes in advance that a voice vote will be inconclusive.[2] The chair can also order the rising vote to be counted.[3] Another use is on a resolution honoring or in memory of a notable person, when the assembly stands in honor or remembrance.[4]

Show of hands Edit

A show of hands is a method of public voting, often used in small boards, committees or also informal gatherings, or some larger assemblies.[3] Members raise their hands to indicate support for the motion, then for opposition to it. The chairperson assesses which side had the most hands, sometimes by counting them individually. This method is more precise than a voice vote and ensures that each member's vote is counted equally (no advantage for shouting louder). However, it is not a full division of the assembly, and can produce a larger number of abstentions than a rising vote.[5]

Recorded vote Edit

A recorded vote is a vote in which the votes (for or against) of each member of the assembly are recorded (and often later published). RONR explains:[6]

Taking a vote by roll call (or by yeas and nays, as it is also called) has the effect of placing on the record how each member, or sometimes each delegation, votes; therefore, it has exactly the opposite effect of a ballot vote. It is usually confined to representative bodies, where the proceeds are published, since it enables constituents to know how their representatives voted on certain measures. It should not be used in a mass meeting or in any assembly whose members are not responsible to a constituency.

Recorded votes may either be taken by actually calling the roll (a task typically ordered by the chair and performed by the secretary) or, in some assemblies, by electronic device.[7]

Signed ballot Edit

A signed ballot is sometimes used as a substitute for a roll call vote. It allows the members' votes to be recorded in the minutes without the chair having to call the names of each member individually.[6] A motion to use a signed ballot is one of the motions relating to methods of voting and the polls.

Balloting Edit

Balloting is a form of voting in which the secrecy of the member's choices is desired. Members mark their choices on pieces of paper (or electronic devices tailored for such a purpose) and deposit the paper into a ballot box. This procedure is typically the usual method in elections. Robert's Rules of Order states that if a candidate does not receive a majority vote, the balloting is repeated until a candidate obtains a majority vote.[8] Exceptions to this rule must be stated in the organization's rules.[9] Such exceptions may include preferential voting, cumulative voting, and runoffs.

Repeated balloting Edit

Repeated balloting is done when no candidate achieves a majority vote. In this case, no candidates are involuntarily eliminated. Mason's Manual states, "In the absence of a special rule, a majority vote is necessary to elect officers and a plurality is not sufficient. A vote for the election of officers, when no candidate receives a majority vote, is of no effect, and the situation remains exactly as though no vote had been taken."[10] Demeter's Manual states, "The fact that a majority (or a plurality) of the votes are cast for an ineligible candidate does not entitle the candidate receiving the next highest number of votes to be declared elected. In such a case, the voters have failed to make a choice, and they proceed to vote again."[11]

Repeated balloting allows a dark horse or compromise candidate, who received few votes in the first round, to become the candidate that opposing factions agree to settle on.[8] Moreover, it can prevent a candidate who is opposed by the majority of the electorate from being elected, as might happen under plurality.[12]

A disadvantage is that if no one drops out of the race, and the voters are unwilling to switch sides, balloting can theoretically go on forever. In the U.S. presidential election of 1800, Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr were tied at 73 electoral votes each, and in accordance with the Constitution the election was determined via a contingent election in the House of Representatives, where it took six days of debate and 36 ballots to elect Jefferson as the winner.[13]

Between rounds of balloting, members can make motions to help the assembly complete the election within a reasonable time. For instance, the assembly may vote to drop the candidate having the lowest vote after each successive vote, or reopen nominations for the office in order to secure a candidate on whom the majority can agree. This can help break a deadlock.[14] In the 1855-56 election for Speaker of the House, the chamber, which had been deadlocked for 129 ballots, adopted a plurality rule stating that, if after three more ballots no one garnered a majority of the votes, the person receiving the highest number of votes on the next ensuing ballot would be declared to have been chosen speaker. On the decisive 133rd ballot, Nathaniel P. Banks received the most votes, 103 votes out of 214, or five less than a majority, and was elected speaker.[15][16]

Preferential voting Edit

Preferential voting allows members to vote on more than one proposal or candidate at a time, and to rank the various options in order of preference.

Robert's Rules of Order states that preferential voting "affords less freedom of choice than repeated balloting, because it denies voters the opportunity of basing their second or lesser choices on the results of earlier ballots, and because the candidate or proposition in last place is automatically eliminated and may thus be prevented from becoming a compromise choice."[17] In any case, preferential voting can be used only if the bylaws specifically authorize it.[9] Elimination of the candidate with fewest votes is a feature of instant runoff voting, but not of all preferential voting methods.

Cumulative voting Edit

Cumulative voting allows members to cast more than one vote for a candidate.

Regarding this method of voting, RONR states, "A minority group, by coordinating its effort in voting for only one candidate who is a member of the group, may be able to secure the election of that candidate as a minority member of the board. However, this method of voting, which permits a member to cast multiple votes for a single candidate, must be viewed with reservation since it violates the fundamental principle of parliamentary law that each member is entitled to one and only one vote on a question".[18]

Runoffs Edit

A runoff is when a second round of voting is held where the lowest vote-receiving candidates or all but two candidates are eliminated after the first round.

RONR states, "The nominee receiving the lowest number of votes is never removed from the ballot unless the bylaws so require, or unless he withdraws – which, in the absence of such a bylaw, he is not obligated to do. The nominee in lowest place may turn out to be a 'dark horse' on whom all factions may prefer to agree".[8]

Motions relating to methods of voting and the polls Edit

Motions relating to methods of voting and the polls (RONR)
ClassIncidental
In order when another has the floor?No
Requires second?Yes
Debatable?No
May be reconsidered?To close polls, no; to reopen polls, negative vote only; all others, yes
Amendable?Yes
Vote requiredMajority, except two-thirds for motion to close polls

Motions relating to methods of voting and the polls are incidental motions used to obtain a vote on a question in some form other than by voice or by division of the assembly; or to close or reopen the polls. For instance, a motion can be made to vote by ballot.[19]

These motions generally cannot be used to specify alternative forms of voting such as cumulative voting or preferential voting.[20][21] Those methods can only be done through a provision in the bylaws. Likewise, proxy voting is generally prohibited, except in situations in which membership is transferable, as in stock corporations and even then, only by authorization in the bylaws.[22]

Voting systems in legislatures Edit

Many legislative bodies use electronic voting systems for recorded votes.

Ancient Rome Edit

In the various types of legislative assemblies (comitia) of the Roman Republic, the voting was preceded by a contio (public meeting at which issues or candidates were presented). After the presiding magistrate called an end to this, citizens were dispersed into roped-off areas and were called forth in groups across raised gangways. Initially, each voter gave his vote orally to an official who made a note of it on an official tablet, but later in the Republic, the secret ballot was introduced, and the voter recorded his vote with a stylus on a wax-covered boxwood tablet, then dropped the completed ballot in the sitella or urna (voting urn), sometimes also called cista.[23]

United States Edit

United States House of Representatives Edit

 
The U.S. House of Representatives taking a roll-call vote to elect its speaker for the 112th Congress, as broadcast by C-SPAN.

In 1869, Thomas Edison filed for a patent on the first electric vote recorder, and demonstrated the system to the United States Congress.[24] The first proposal for automated voting in Congress was made in 1886.[24] Over the next 84 years, fifty bills and resolutions to establish an automatic, electrical, mechanical, or electronic voting system in Congress were introduced.[24] The Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970 authorized electronic voting for the first time.[24] Electronic voting was first used in the House on January 23, 1973, to record a quorum call.[24]

Under the system implemented in the 1970s, members of the House may vote at any one of a number of stations located throughout the chamber. Each member has a small plastic card, punched identically on either end.[24] To cast a vote, the representative inserts the card into the station in any direction and presses one of three buttons: "Yea," "Nay," or "Present."[24]

The representative's vote is then displayed in two summary panels above the press gallery seats and to the right and left of the speaker's dais. The panel shows the member's name and a light corresponding to how that member voted (green for yea, red for nay, and amber for present), keeps a running count of vote casts, and displays time remaining for a vote (most votes are held open for at least fifteen minutes).[24] The system as used today is much the same as that used in the 1970s, although today, member's voting cards are magnetic stripe cards that contain identification information.[24] Once a representative has voted, he or she may check the vote by reinserting the card and seeing which light is illuminated at the voting station.[24] For the first ten minutes of a vote, a representative may also change his or her vote by reinserting the card to change the vote.[24] If a representative wants to change his or her vote in the last five minutes of a fifteen-minute vote, the representative must use a teller card in the well of the House.[24] A tally clerk then manually enters the vote into the electronic voting system.[24]

In 1977, the electronic voting system was updated to be compatible with the House's newly installed closed-circuit television system showing the House chamber. The updates enabled in-progress voting counts to be displayed on the closed-circuit TV system.[24] In-progress vote counts are now also shown on C-SPAN.[24]

United States Senate Edit

The three means of voting in the Senate are voice, division, and "the yeas and nays" (recorded votes or roll-call votes).[25]

On a voice vote, the presiding officer first asks those in favor to say "aye," and then opposed to say "no."[25] The presiding officer then announces who appeared to win the vote ("The ayes [noes] appear to have it.").[25] One variation of a voice vote is for the presiding officer to state: "Without objection the amendment [bill, resolution, motion, etc.] is agreed to [or not agreed to]."[25] If any senator objects to the presiding officer's determination, a vote will occur by another method (usually a recorded vote).[25]

A division vote (taken by having each side stand) is rare in the Senate, but may be requested by any senator or ordered by the presiding officer if the outcome of the voice vote is doubtful.[25] Like the voice vote, a division does not provide a record of how each senator voted. The chair announces the result of a division vote. As in a voice vote, any senator may ask for a recorded vote.[25]

The third method is a recorded vote ("the yeas and nays"), currently taken by a roll call.[25] The clerk calls the roll of senators alphabetical by name, and each Senator individually responds.[25] Following the call, the clerk then identifies those who voted in the affirmative and those in the negative.[25] The time limit for roll-call votes is nominally fifteen minutes as set by unanimous consent at the start of a two-year Congress, but votes are sometimes held open for longer so that senators may arrive.[25]

Unlike the House, the Senate does not use electronic voting.[25][26] In December 2013, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid suggested that he would not be opposed to setting up an electronic system similar to that used in the House, but also stated that he didn't see any change occurring "in the near future."[26] Use of an electronic system would make it possible for the Senate to vote more quickly during "vote-a-rama" sessions on amendments to budget resolutions.[26]

S. Res. 480, a Senate resolution passed in 1984,[27] created a standing order of the Senate requiring that each senator vote from his or her assigned desk. The resolution was sponsored by Democratic Senator Jennings Randolph of West Virginia. However, the rule is widely ignored, and senators typically vote while milling about the Senate chamber. All senators do vote from their desks, however, when asked to do so by the Senate majority leader. This typically is done on particularly solemn or important votes. The Senate Historical Office maintains a list of occasions when senators voted from their desks: these included the passage of the Affordable Care Act and Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act; the confirmation votes of Supreme Court justices; and votes on articles of impeachment.[28][29][30]

State legislatures Edit

 
The Wisconsin State Assembly chamber, with the electronic vote board on the wall. In 1917, the Wisconsin State Assembly became the first state legislative chamber to adopt an electronic voting system.

Many state legislatures use electronic voting systems for recorded votes. The first state legislative chambers to install electronic voting systems were the Wisconsin State Assembly (1917), Texas House of Representatives (1919), and Virginia House of Delegates (1923).[31] Electronic voting systems continued to spread, and by 1980, nearly half of legislatures used such a system.[31]

Today, almost two-thirds of the legislative bodies have installed electronic voting systems.[31] About 40 percent of chambers have made updates to their system since 1990.[31]

Electronic voting systems typically have voting controls at the front desk and running vote total displays.[31] The National Conference of State Legislatures has reported on various differences in state electronic voting-systems:

  • In more than half of chambers, the clerk or secretary opens and closes the roll-call system. In seventeen chambers, the presiding officer opens and closes the system; in five chambers, the reading clerk opens and closes the system, and in nine chambers, some other legislative staffer opens and closes the system.[31]
  • In 36 chambers, electronic roll-call votes are not subject to change. In one-third of chambers, however, changes are allowed if requested at the time of the vote. Seventeen chambers allow a roll-call vote to be changed upon a member's request at a later time.[31]
  • In 42 chambers, a running vote total is displayed to the chamber; running vote totals appear on the presiding officer's monitor in 62 chambers and on the clerk's monitor in 59.[31]

More sophisticated electronic voting systems are sometimes linked to other technology to assist the legislatures in their work:

  • In 48 chambers, the voting system is linked to journal production.[31]
  • In 40 chambers, the voting system is linked with the calendar.[31]
  • In 24 chambers, the system has a debate timer.[31]
  • In ten chambers, the presiding officer has a monitor displaying which legislators wish to speak and the order of the requests.[31]

A minority of state legislative chambers do not use an electronic voting system. Fourteen chambers use a traditional manual roll-call system in which the clerk calls the roll orally, records each member's vote on paper, and then tallies the ayes and nays.[31] Twelve chambers use a hybrid system in which the clerk orally calls the roll, but each member's vote is then entered into a system.[31]

United Kingdom Edit

Parliament of the United Kingdom Edit

 
The House of Lords votes on the Parliament Act 1911

In the Parliament of the United Kingdom (Westminster), at the close of debate, the presiding officer of the chamber—the Speaker of the House of Commons or the Lord Speaker of the House of Lords—"puts the motion" by asking members to call out their votes, typically saying "As many as are of that opinion, say 'aye'". The supporters of the measure shout "aye". The Speaker then says, "Of the contrary, 'no'" and the opponents of the measure shout "no". The Speaker then makes a determination of which side has won ("I think the Ayes [or Noes] have it.").[32][33]

If the result of the vote is unclear (or challenged by any member of the house), the Speaker will call for a division of the house.[32][33] Once a division has been called, the order "Clear the Lobby" is given in the Commons, and division bells ring out throughout the Parliamentary Estate to alert members that a vote is to take place.[32][33] Members then physically separate themselves into the division lobbies, the Aye lobby to the Speaker's right and the No lobby to the Speaker's left.[32][33] As members pass through the lobbies, clerks record their names and they are counted by tellers.[32][33] Members have eight minutes to vote before the doors to the division lobbies are locked.[33] In the Commons, the tally is complete, the tellers approach the presiding officer and announce the tally, and then the Speaker or Lord Speaker announces the result.[32][33]

Some votes are "deferred" and instead conducted by means of an open ballot done at a convenient time for members. This is typically done for minor or technical legislation and is not permitted to be done for Bills.[34]

The House of Lords follows are similar procedure, though the words "aye" and "no" are replaced by "content" and "not content" and the order given before a division is "Clear the Bar".[33] Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the Lords now vote electronically but members must be physically present in Parliament in order to do so, unless special dispensation is obtained.[34]

Before 2020, proposals to adopt electronic voting in Parliament were considered but rejected.[33]For a temporary period between 22 April and 20 May 2020 due to COVID-19, Parliament sat virtually and the both houses conducted electronic voting known as "virtual divisions".[34] Although this no longer applies in the House of Commons, the count in that house is now counted and verified by electronic means of members scanning their passes as they enter a division lobby.[34]

Devolved assemblies Edit

Among the devolved assemblies, the Northern Ireland Assembly uses the Westminster mode of voting; members use "Aye" and "No" lobbies unless a unanimous voice vote is taken. By contrast, the Scottish Parliament (Holyrood), National Assembly for Wales and States of Jersey use electronic voting systems.[35]

European Parliament Edit

In the European Parliament, decisions are usually made by show of hands. If the show of hands leads to a doubtful result, the vote is taken by standing and sitting. If this, too, leads to a doubtful result, the vote is taken by roll call. (A roll-call vote is also taken if any political group or any 21 members request). The president of the European Parliament may also decide to hold a vote using the Parliament's electronic voting system. Electronic voting systems are installed in each of the European Parliament's two locations: Strasbourg and Brussels.[36]

If at least 20% of the Parliament requests it before voting begins, the vote will be taken by secret ballot.[37]

Russian State Duma Edit

In the Russian State Duma, relatively few roll call votes have been published that identify individual deputies' votes.[38] The votes of individuals are recorded only if the voting is open and the electronic method is used.[38] While not all votes are officially roll call votes, every time a deputy electronically votes a computer registers the individual deputy's vote.[39]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Robert, Henry M.; et al. (2011). Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised (11th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Da Capo Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-306-82020-5.
  2. ^ Robert 2011, p. 46
  3. ^ a b Robert 2011, p. 47 Robert's Rules Online: Art. VIII. Vote.
  4. ^ See for example, https://journals.house.texas.gov/HJRNL/88R/HTML/88RDAY26FINAL.HTM where the Texas Legislature uses the practice in memory of notables.
  5. ^ Robert 2011, p. 53
  6. ^ a b Robert 2011, p. 420
  7. ^ Robert 2011, p. 422
  8. ^ a b c Robert 2011, p. 441
  9. ^ a b Robert 2011, p. 423
  10. ^ National Conference of State Legislatures (2000). Mason's Manual of Legislative Procedure, p. 391
  11. ^ Demeter, George (1969). Demeter's Manual of Parliamentary Law and Procedure, Blue Book, p. 213
  12. ^ Sturgis, Alice (2001). The Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure, 4th ed., p. 135 (TSC)
  13. ^ "Electoral College & Indecisive Elections". history.house.gov. Office of the Historian, U.S. House of Representatives. Retrieved April 5, 2019.
  14. ^ TSC, p. 211
  15. ^ "The Election of Speaker". The New York Times. January 10, 1860. Retrieved April 5, 2019 – via The Times's print archive.
  16. ^ Jenkins, Jeffery A.; Nokken, Timothy P. (February 2000). "The Institutional Origins of the Republican Party: Spatial Voting and the House Speakership Election of 1855–56" (PDF). Legislative Studies Quarterly. 25 (1): 114, 128–130. doi:10.2307/440395. JSTOR 440395. Retrieved April 5, 2019.
  17. ^ Robert 2011, p. 428
  18. ^ Robert 2011, pp. 443–444
  19. ^ Robert 2011, p. 283
  20. ^ Robert 2011, p. 263
  21. ^ Robert 2011, p. 426
  22. ^ Robert 2011, pp. 428–429
  23. ^ The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization (eds. Simon Hornblower, Antony Spawforth, Esther Eidinow: Oxford University Press, 2014), p. 267.
  24. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jacob R. Straus, Electronic Voting System in the House of Representatives: History and Evolution, Congressional Research Service (Feb. 11, 2008).
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Walter J. Oleszek, Voting in the Senate: Forms and Requirements, Congressional Research Service (May 19, 2008).
  26. ^ a b c Niels Lesniewski, Voting by Electronic Device — in the Senate?, Roll Call (December 4, 2013).
  27. ^ S.Res. 480
  28. ^ Sean Sullivan, All 100 Senators voted on the immigration bill from their desks. That's a rarer occurrence than you might think, Washington Post (June 28, 2013).
  29. ^ Voting from Desk in the Senate Chamber, Senate Historical Office.
  30. ^ Richard Cowan & Thomas Ferraro, Senate passes sweeping immigration legislation, Reuters (June 27, 2013).
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Roll Call Voting Machines and Practices, National Conference of State Legislatures.
  32. ^ a b c d e f E. E. Reynolds, Ourselves and the Community (Cambridge University Press, 3d ed. 1950), pp. 125-26.
  33. ^ a b c d e f g h i Divisions, Parliament of the United Kingdom.
  34. ^ a b c d "Divisions". Parliament of United Kingdom. from the original on 28 October 2022. Retrieved 6 January 2023.
  35. ^ How does Holyrood's electronic voting system work?, BBC News (September 23, 2016).
  36. ^ Michael Palmer, The European Parliament: What It Is, What It Does, How It Works (Pergamon: 1981), pp. 91, 94.
  37. ^ "Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament - February 2013 - Rule 169 - Voting by secret ballot". 2013-01-31. Retrieved 2018-09-25.
  38. ^ a b Chandler, Andrea (2004). Shocking Mother Russia: Democratization, Social Rights, and Pension Reform in Russia, 1990-2001. University of Toronto Press. p. 97. ISBN 0-8020-8930-5.
  39. ^ Ostrow, Joel M. (2000). Comparing Post-Soviet Legislatures: A Theory of Institutional Design and Political Conflict. Ohio State University Press. pp. 24–25. ISBN 0-8142-0841-X. LCCN 99-059121.

External links Edit

  • Robert's Rules of Order on Preferential Voting, Fairvote.

voting, methods, deliberative, assemblies, deliberative, assemblies, bodies, that, parliamentary, procedure, arrive, decisions, several, methods, voting, motions, formal, proposal, members, deliberative, assembly, that, assembly, take, certain, action, regular. Deliberative assemblies bodies that use parliamentary procedure to arrive at decisions use several methods of voting on motions formal proposal by members of a deliberative assembly that the assembly take certain action The regular methods of voting in such bodies are a voice vote a rising vote and a show of hands Additional forms of voting include a recorded vote and balloting Contents 1 Regular methods 1 1 Voice vote 1 2 Rising vote 1 3 Show of hands 2 Recorded vote 2 1 Signed ballot 3 Balloting 3 1 Repeated balloting 3 2 Preferential voting 3 3 Cumulative voting 3 4 Runoffs 4 Motions relating to methods of voting and the polls 5 Voting systems in legislatures 5 1 Ancient Rome 5 2 United States 5 2 1 United States House of Representatives 5 2 2 United States Senate 5 2 3 State legislatures 5 3 United Kingdom 5 3 1 Parliament of the United Kingdom 5 3 2 Devolved assemblies 5 4 European Parliament 5 5 Russian State Duma 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksRegular methods EditVoice vote Edit Main article Voice voteRobert s Rules of Order Newly Revised RONR states that a voice vote viva voce is the usual method of voting on any motion that does not require more than a majority vote for its adoption 1 It is considered the simplest and quickest of voting methods used by deliberative assemblies The chair of the assembly will put the question to the assembly asking first for those in favor of the motion to indicate so verbally aye or yes and then ask those opposed to the motion to indicate so verbally no The chair will then estimate which side had more members Rising vote Edit Main article Division of the assemblyA simple rising vote in which the number of members voting on each side rise to their feet is used principally in cases in which the chair believes a voice vote has been taken with an inconclusive result or upon a motion to divide the assembly A rising vote is also often the normal method of voting on motions requiring a two thirds vote for adoption It can also be used as the first method of voting when only a majority vote is required if the chair believes in advance that a voice vote will be inconclusive 2 The chair can also order the rising vote to be counted 3 Another use is on a resolution honoring or in memory of a notable person when the assembly stands in honor or remembrance 4 Show of hands Edit A show of hands is a method of public voting often used in small boards committees or also informal gatherings or some larger assemblies 3 Members raise their hands to indicate support for the motion then for opposition to it The chairperson assesses which side had the most hands sometimes by counting them individually This method is more precise than a voice vote and ensures that each member s vote is counted equally no advantage for shouting louder However it is not a full division of the assembly and can produce a larger number of abstentions than a rising vote 5 Recorded vote EditA recorded vote is a vote in which the votes for or against of each member of the assembly are recorded and often later published RONR explains 6 Taking a vote by roll call or by yeas and nays as it is also called has the effect of placing on the record how each member or sometimes each delegation votes therefore it has exactly the opposite effect of a ballot vote It is usually confined to representative bodies where the proceeds are published since it enables constituents to know how their representatives voted on certain measures It should not be used in a mass meeting or in any assembly whose members are not responsible to a constituency Recorded votes may either be taken by actually calling the roll a task typically ordered by the chair and performed by the secretary or in some assemblies by electronic device 7 Signed ballot Edit A signed ballot is sometimes used as a substitute for a roll call vote It allows the members votes to be recorded in the minutes without the chair having to call the names of each member individually 6 A motion to use a signed ballot is one of the motions relating to methods of voting and the polls Balloting EditSee also Secret ballotBalloting is a form of voting in which the secrecy of the member s choices is desired Members mark their choices on pieces of paper or electronic devices tailored for such a purpose and deposit the paper into a ballot box This procedure is typically the usual method in elections Robert s Rules of Order states that if a candidate does not receive a majority vote the balloting is repeated until a candidate obtains a majority vote 8 Exceptions to this rule must be stated in the organization s rules 9 Such exceptions may include preferential voting cumulative voting and runoffs Repeated balloting Edit Repeated balloting is done when no candidate achieves a majority vote In this case no candidates are involuntarily eliminated Mason s Manual states In the absence of a special rule a majority vote is necessary to elect officers and a plurality is not sufficient A vote for the election of officers when no candidate receives a majority vote is of no effect and the situation remains exactly as though no vote had been taken 10 Demeter s Manual states The fact that a majority or a plurality of the votes are cast for an ineligible candidate does not entitle the candidate receiving the next highest number of votes to be declared elected In such a case the voters have failed to make a choice and they proceed to vote again 11 Repeated balloting allows a dark horse or compromise candidate who received few votes in the first round to become the candidate that opposing factions agree to settle on 8 Moreover it can prevent a candidate who is opposed by the majority of the electorate from being elected as might happen under plurality 12 A disadvantage is that if no one drops out of the race and the voters are unwilling to switch sides balloting can theoretically go on forever In the U S presidential election of 1800 Thomas Jefferson and Aaron Burr were tied at 73 electoral votes each and in accordance with the Constitution the election was determined via a contingent election in the House of Representatives where it took six days of debate and 36 ballots to elect Jefferson as the winner 13 Between rounds of balloting members can make motions to help the assembly complete the election within a reasonable time For instance the assembly may vote to drop the candidate having the lowest vote after each successive vote or reopen nominations for the office in order to secure a candidate on whom the majority can agree This can help break a deadlock 14 In the 1855 56 election for Speaker of the House the chamber which had been deadlocked for 129 ballots adopted a plurality rule stating that if after three more ballots no one garnered a majority of the votes the person receiving the highest number of votes on the next ensuing ballot would be declared to have been chosen speaker On the decisive 133rd ballot Nathaniel P Banks received the most votes 103 votes out of 214 or five less than a majority and was elected speaker 15 16 Preferential voting Edit Main article Ranked voting systemPreferential voting allows members to vote on more than one proposal or candidate at a time and to rank the various options in order of preference Robert s Rules of Order states that preferential voting affords less freedom of choice than repeated balloting because it denies voters the opportunity of basing their second or lesser choices on the results of earlier ballots and because the candidate or proposition in last place is automatically eliminated and may thus be prevented from becoming a compromise choice 17 In any case preferential voting can be used only if the bylaws specifically authorize it 9 Elimination of the candidate with fewest votes is a feature of instant runoff voting but not of all preferential voting methods Cumulative voting Edit Main article Cumulative votingCumulative voting allows members to cast more than one vote for a candidate Regarding this method of voting RONR states A minority group by coordinating its effort in voting for only one candidate who is a member of the group may be able to secure the election of that candidate as a minority member of the board However this method of voting which permits a member to cast multiple votes for a single candidate must be viewed with reservation since it violates the fundamental principle of parliamentary law that each member is entitled to one and only one vote on a question 18 Runoffs Edit Main article Two round systemA runoff is when a second round of voting is held where the lowest vote receiving candidates or all but two candidates are eliminated after the first round RONR states The nominee receiving the lowest number of votes is never removed from the ballot unless the bylaws so require or unless he withdraws which in the absence of such a bylaw he is not obligated to do The nominee in lowest place may turn out to be a dark horse on whom all factions may prefer to agree 8 Motions relating to methods of voting and the polls EditMotions relating to methods of voting and the polls RONR ClassIncidentalIn order when another has the floor NoRequires second YesDebatable NoMay be reconsidered To close polls no to reopen polls negative vote only all others yesAmendable YesVote requiredMajority except two thirds for motion to close pollsMotions relating to methods of voting and the polls are incidental motions used to obtain a vote on a question in some form other than by voice or by division of the assembly or to close or reopen the polls For instance a motion can be made to vote by ballot 19 These motions generally cannot be used to specify alternative forms of voting such as cumulative voting or preferential voting 20 21 Those methods can only be done through a provision in the bylaws Likewise proxy voting is generally prohibited except in situations in which membership is transferable as in stock corporations and even then only by authorization in the bylaws 22 Voting systems in legislatures EditMany legislative bodies use electronic voting systems for recorded votes Ancient Rome Edit Further information Legislative assemblies of the Roman Republic Legislative assemblies of the Roman Empire and Legislative Assemblies of the Roman Kingdom In the various types of legislative assemblies comitia of the Roman Republic the voting was preceded by a contio public meeting at which issues or candidates were presented After the presiding magistrate called an end to this citizens were dispersed into roped off areas and were called forth in groups across raised gangways Initially each voter gave his vote orally to an official who made a note of it on an official tablet but later in the Republic the secret ballot was introduced and the voter recorded his vote with a stylus on a wax covered boxwood tablet then dropped the completed ballot in the sitella or urna voting urn sometimes also called cista 23 United States Edit Further information United States Congress History of the United States Congress and Procedures of the United States Congress United States House of Representatives Edit Further information United States House of Representatives History of the United States House of Representatives and Procedures of the United States House of Representatives nbsp The U S House of Representatives taking a roll call vote to elect its speaker for the 112th Congress as broadcast by C SPAN In 1869 Thomas Edison filed for a patent on the first electric vote recorder and demonstrated the system to the United States Congress 24 The first proposal for automated voting in Congress was made in 1886 24 Over the next 84 years fifty bills and resolutions to establish an automatic electrical mechanical or electronic voting system in Congress were introduced 24 The Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970 authorized electronic voting for the first time 24 Electronic voting was first used in the House on January 23 1973 to record a quorum call 24 Under the system implemented in the 1970s members of the House may vote at any one of a number of stations located throughout the chamber Each member has a small plastic card punched identically on either end 24 To cast a vote the representative inserts the card into the station in any direction and presses one of three buttons Yea Nay or Present 24 The representative s vote is then displayed in two summary panels above the press gallery seats and to the right and left of the speaker s dais The panel shows the member s name and a light corresponding to how that member voted green for yea red for nay and amber for present keeps a running count of vote casts and displays time remaining for a vote most votes are held open for at least fifteen minutes 24 The system as used today is much the same as that used in the 1970s although today member s voting cards are magnetic stripe cards that contain identification information 24 Once a representative has voted he or she may check the vote by reinserting the card and seeing which light is illuminated at the voting station 24 For the first ten minutes of a vote a representative may also change his or her vote by reinserting the card to change the vote 24 If a representative wants to change his or her vote in the last five minutes of a fifteen minute vote the representative must use a teller card in the well of the House 24 A tally clerk then manually enters the vote into the electronic voting system 24 In 1977 the electronic voting system was updated to be compatible with the House s newly installed closed circuit television system showing the House chamber The updates enabled in progress voting counts to be displayed on the closed circuit TV system 24 In progress vote counts are now also shown on C SPAN 24 United States Senate Edit Further information United States Senate and History of the United States Senate The three means of voting in the Senate are voice division and the yeas and nays recorded votes or roll call votes 25 On a voice vote the presiding officer first asks those in favor to say aye and then opposed to say no 25 The presiding officer then announces who appeared to win the vote The ayes noes appear to have it 25 One variation of a voice vote is for the presiding officer to state Without objection the amendment bill resolution motion etc is agreed to or not agreed to 25 If any senator objects to the presiding officer s determination a vote will occur by another method usually a recorded vote 25 A division vote taken by having each side stand is rare in the Senate but may be requested by any senator or ordered by the presiding officer if the outcome of the voice vote is doubtful 25 Like the voice vote a division does not provide a record of how each senator voted The chair announces the result of a division vote As in a voice vote any senator may ask for a recorded vote 25 The third method is a recorded vote the yeas and nays currently taken by a roll call 25 The clerk calls the roll of senators alphabetical by name and each Senator individually responds 25 Following the call the clerk then identifies those who voted in the affirmative and those in the negative 25 The time limit for roll call votes is nominally fifteen minutes as set by unanimous consent at the start of a two year Congress but votes are sometimes held open for longer so that senators may arrive 25 Unlike the House the Senate does not use electronic voting 25 26 In December 2013 Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid suggested that he would not be opposed to setting up an electronic system similar to that used in the House but also stated that he didn t see any change occurring in the near future 26 Use of an electronic system would make it possible for the Senate to vote more quickly during vote a rama sessions on amendments to budget resolutions 26 S Res 480 a Senate resolution passed in 1984 27 created a standing order of the Senate requiring that each senator vote from his or her assigned desk The resolution was sponsored by Democratic Senator Jennings Randolph of West Virginia However the rule is widely ignored and senators typically vote while milling about the Senate chamber All senators do vote from their desks however when asked to do so by the Senate majority leader This typically is done on particularly solemn or important votes The Senate Historical Office maintains a list of occasions when senators voted from their desks these included the passage of the Affordable Care Act and Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act the confirmation votes of Supreme Court justices and votes on articles of impeachment 28 29 30 State legislatures Edit Further information State legislature United States nbsp The Wisconsin State Assembly chamber with the electronic vote board on the wall In 1917 the Wisconsin State Assembly became the first state legislative chamber to adopt an electronic voting system Many state legislatures use electronic voting systems for recorded votes The first state legislative chambers to install electronic voting systems were the Wisconsin State Assembly 1917 Texas House of Representatives 1919 and Virginia House of Delegates 1923 31 Electronic voting systems continued to spread and by 1980 nearly half of legislatures used such a system 31 Today almost two thirds of the legislative bodies have installed electronic voting systems 31 About 40 percent of chambers have made updates to their system since 1990 31 Electronic voting systems typically have voting controls at the front desk and running vote total displays 31 The National Conference of State Legislatures has reported on various differences in state electronic voting systems In more than half of chambers the clerk or secretary opens and closes the roll call system In seventeen chambers the presiding officer opens and closes the system in five chambers the reading clerk opens and closes the system and in nine chambers some other legislative staffer opens and closes the system 31 In 36 chambers electronic roll call votes are not subject to change In one third of chambers however changes are allowed if requested at the time of the vote Seventeen chambers allow a roll call vote to be changed upon a member s request at a later time 31 In 42 chambers a running vote total is displayed to the chamber running vote totals appear on the presiding officer s monitor in 62 chambers and on the clerk s monitor in 59 31 More sophisticated electronic voting systems are sometimes linked to other technology to assist the legislatures in their work In 48 chambers the voting system is linked to journal production 31 In 40 chambers the voting system is linked with the calendar 31 In 24 chambers the system has a debate timer 31 In ten chambers the presiding officer has a monitor displaying which legislators wish to speak and the order of the requests 31 A minority of state legislative chambers do not use an electronic voting system Fourteen chambers use a traditional manual roll call system in which the clerk calls the roll orally records each member s vote on paper and then tallies the ayes and nays 31 Twelve chambers use a hybrid system in which the clerk orally calls the roll but each member s vote is then entered into a system 31 United Kingdom Edit Parliament of the United Kingdom Edit Further information Westminster system Division of the assembly United Kingdom Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons of the United Kingdom and House of Lords of the United Kingdom nbsp The House of Lords votes on the Parliament Act 1911In the Parliament of the United Kingdom Westminster at the close of debate the presiding officer of the chamber the Speaker of the House of Commons or the Lord Speaker of the House of Lords puts the motion by asking members to call out their votes typically saying As many as are of that opinion say aye The supporters of the measure shout aye The Speaker then says Of the contrary no and the opponents of the measure shout no The Speaker then makes a determination of which side has won I think the Ayes or Noes have it 32 33 If the result of the vote is unclear or challenged by any member of the house the Speaker will call for a division of the house 32 33 Once a division has been called the order Clear the Lobby is given in the Commons and division bells ring out throughout the Parliamentary Estate to alert members that a vote is to take place 32 33 Members then physically separate themselves into the division lobbies the Aye lobby to the Speaker s right and the No lobby to the Speaker s left 32 33 As members pass through the lobbies clerks record their names and they are counted by tellers 32 33 Members have eight minutes to vote before the doors to the division lobbies are locked 33 In the Commons the tally is complete the tellers approach the presiding officer and announce the tally and then the Speaker or Lord Speaker announces the result 32 33 Some votes are deferred and instead conducted by means of an open ballot done at a convenient time for members This is typically done for minor or technical legislation and is not permitted to be done for Bills 34 The House of Lords follows are similar procedure though the words aye and no are replaced by content and not content and the order given before a division is Clear the Bar 33 Since the COVID 19 pandemic the Lords now vote electronically but members must be physically present in Parliament in order to do so unless special dispensation is obtained 34 Before 2020 proposals to adopt electronic voting in Parliament were considered but rejected 33 For a temporary period between 22 April and 20 May 2020 due to COVID 19 Parliament sat virtually and the both houses conducted electronic voting known as virtual divisions 34 Although this no longer applies in the House of Commons the count in that house is now counted and verified by electronic means of members scanning their passes as they enter a division lobby 34 Devolved assemblies Edit Further information Northern Ireland Assembly Scottish Parliament National Assembly for Wales and Devolution in the United Kingdom Among the devolved assemblies the Northern Ireland Assembly uses the Westminster mode of voting members use Aye and No lobbies unless a unanimous voice vote is taken By contrast the Scottish Parliament Holyrood National Assembly for Wales and States of Jersey use electronic voting systems 35 European Parliament Edit Further information European Parliament and History of the European Parliament In the European Parliament decisions are usually made by show of hands If the show of hands leads to a doubtful result the vote is taken by standing and sitting If this too leads to a doubtful result the vote is taken by roll call A roll call vote is also taken if any political group or any 21 members request The president of the European Parliament may also decide to hold a vote using the Parliament s electronic voting system Electronic voting systems are installed in each of the European Parliament s two locations Strasbourg and Brussels 36 If at least 20 of the Parliament requests it before voting begins the vote will be taken by secret ballot 37 Russian State Duma Edit Further information State DumaIn the Russian State Duma relatively few roll call votes have been published that identify individual deputies votes 38 The votes of individuals are recorded only if the voting is open and the electronic method is used 38 While not all votes are officially roll call votes every time a deputy electronically votes a computer registers the individual deputy s vote 39 See also EditKeypad polling Voting system disambiguation References Edit Robert Henry M et al 2011 Robert s Rules of Order Newly Revised 11th ed Philadelphia PA Da Capo Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 306 82020 5 Robert 2011 p 46 a b Robert 2011 p 47 Robert s Rules Online Art VIII Vote See for example https journals house texas gov HJRNL 88R HTML 88RDAY26FINAL HTM where the Texas Legislature uses the practice in memory of notables Robert 2011 p 53 a b Robert 2011 p 420 Robert 2011 p 422 a b c Robert 2011 p 441 a b Robert 2011 p 423 National Conference of State Legislatures 2000 Mason s Manual of Legislative Procedure p 391 Demeter George 1969 Demeter s Manual of Parliamentary Law and Procedure Blue Book p 213 Sturgis Alice 2001 The Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure 4th ed p 135 TSC Electoral College amp Indecisive Elections history house gov Office of the Historian U S House of Representatives Retrieved April 5 2019 TSC p 211 The Election of Speaker The New York Times January 10 1860 Retrieved April 5 2019 via The Times s print archive Jenkins Jeffery A Nokken Timothy P February 2000 The Institutional Origins of the Republican Party Spatial Voting and the House Speakership Election of 1855 56 PDF Legislative Studies Quarterly 25 1 114 128 130 doi 10 2307 440395 JSTOR 440395 Retrieved April 5 2019 Robert 2011 p 428 Robert 2011 pp 443 444 Robert 2011 p 283 Robert 2011 p 263 Robert 2011 p 426 Robert 2011 pp 428 429 The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization eds Simon Hornblower Antony Spawforth Esther Eidinow Oxford University Press 2014 p 267 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Jacob R Straus Electronic Voting System in the House of Representatives History and Evolution Congressional Research Service Feb 11 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l Walter J Oleszek Voting in the Senate Forms and Requirements Congressional Research Service May 19 2008 a b c Niels Lesniewski Voting by Electronic Device in the Senate Roll Call December 4 2013 S Res 480 Sean Sullivan All 100 Senators voted on the immigration bill from their desks That s a rarer occurrence than you might think Washington Post June 28 2013 Voting from Desk in the Senate Chamber Senate Historical Office Richard Cowan amp Thomas Ferraro Senate passes sweeping immigration legislation Reuters June 27 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Roll Call Voting Machines and Practices National Conference of State Legislatures a b c d e f E E Reynolds Ourselves and the Community Cambridge University Press 3d ed 1950 pp 125 26 a b c d e f g h i Divisions Parliament of the United Kingdom a b c d Divisions Parliament of United Kingdom Archived from the original on 28 October 2022 Retrieved 6 January 2023 How does Holyrood s electronic voting system work BBC News September 23 2016 Michael Palmer The European Parliament What It Is What It Does How It Works Pergamon 1981 pp 91 94 Rules of Procedure of the European Parliament February 2013 Rule 169 Voting by secret ballot 2013 01 31 Retrieved 2018 09 25 a b Chandler Andrea 2004 Shocking Mother Russia Democratization Social Rights and Pension Reform in Russia 1990 2001 University of Toronto Press p 97 ISBN 0 8020 8930 5 Ostrow Joel M 2000 Comparing Post Soviet Legislatures A Theory of Institutional Design and Political Conflict Ohio State University Press pp 24 25 ISBN 0 8142 0841 X LCCN 99 059121 External links EditRobert s Rules of Order on Preferential Voting Fairvote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Voting methods in deliberative assemblies amp oldid 1170239242 Motions relating to methods of voting and the polls, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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