fbpx
Wikipedia

STAR voting

STAR voting is an electoral system for single-seat elections.[1][2] The name (an allusion to star ratings) stands for "Score then Automatic Runoff", referring to the fact that this system is a combination of score voting, to pick two finalists with the highest total scores, followed by an "automatic runoff" in which the finalist who is preferred on more ballots wins. It is a type of cardinal voting electoral system.

The STAR Voting ballot, including recommended instructions and formatting details.
Graphic explaining how STAR Voting works

Method edit

In STAR, voters are given a score ballot (or ratings ballot) on which each voter scores candidates with a number from 0 up to 5, with 0 representing "worst" and 5 representing "best."

The scores for each candidate are then summed, and the two highest-scored candidates are selected as finalists.

In the automatic runoff round, the finalist who was given a higher score on a greater number of ballots is selected as the winner.

Usage edit

The concept was first proposed in October 2014 by Mark Frohnmayer, and was initially called score runoff voting (SRV).[3] The runoff step was introduced in order to reduce strategic incentives in ordinary score voting, such as bullet voting and tactical maximization.[4] STAR is intended to be a hybrid between (rated) score voting and (ranked) instant runoff voting.[5][6]

The first movement to implement STAR voting was centered in Oregon,[7][8] with chapters in Eugene, Portland, Salem, Astoria, and Ashland.[9] In July 2018, supporters submitted over 16,000 signatures for a ballot initiative in Lane County, Oregon, putting Measure 20-290 on the November 2018 ballot.[1][10][11][12] This ballot measure did not pass, with 47.6% of voters voting yes, and 52.4% of voters voting no.[13][14]

In 2019, the Multnomah County Democratic Party adopted STAR for all internal elections.[15][16]

A 2020 ballot initiative for the city of Eugene (in which a 54% majority had supported the 2018 county initiative) was attempted, as well as a second attempt at Lane County,[17] and an initiative in Troutdale, Oregon.[18] On July 27, 2020, after the Eugene City Council deadlocked at 4-4 on a vote to refer a measure allowing STAR voting to be used in city elections to the November 2020 ballot, Eugene Mayor Lucy Vinis cast the deciding vote against the referral, meaning that no Eugene ballot measure would be held in 2020.[19]

The Independent Party of Oregon used STAR voting in their 2020 primary election.[20][21][22][23] The Democratic Party of Oregon used STAR Voting for their elections for delegates to the 2020 Democratic convention.[23] In 2022, the Libertarian Party of Oregon authorized STAR voting for its internal elections starting in 2023.[24]

Example edit

 

Suppose that Tennessee is holding an election on the location of its capital. The population is concentrated around four major cities. All voters want the capital to be as close to them as possible. The options are:

  • Memphis, the largest city, but far from the others (42% of voters)
  • Nashville, near the center of the state (26% of voters)
  • Chattanooga, somewhat east (15% of voters)
  • Knoxville, far to the northeast (17% of voters)

The preferences of each region's voters are:

42% of voters
Far-West
26% of voters
Center
15% of voters
Center-East
17% of voters
Far-East
  1. Memphis
  2. Nashville
  3. Chattanooga
  4. Knoxville
  1. Nashville
  2. Chattanooga
  3. Knoxville
  4. Memphis
  1. Chattanooga
  2. Knoxville
  3. Nashville
  4. Memphis
  1. Knoxville
  2. Chattanooga
  3. Nashville
  4. Memphis

Suppose that 100 voters each decided to score from 0 to 5 stars each city such that their most liked choice got 5 stars, and least liked choice got 0 stars, with the intermediate choices getting an amount proportional to their relative distance.

Voter from/
City Choice
Memphis Nashville Chattanooga Knoxville Total
Memphis 210 (42 × 5) 0 (26 × 0) 0 (15 × 0) 0 (17 × 0) 210
Nashville 84 (42 × 2) 130 (26 × 5) 45 (15 × 3) 34 (17 × 2) 293
Chattanooga 42 (42 × 1) 52 (26 × 2) 75 (15 × 5) 68 (17 × 4) 237
Knoxville 0 (42 × 0) 26 (26 × 1) 45 (15 × 3) 85 (17 × 5) 156

The top-two frontrunners are Nashville and Chattanooga. Of the two, Nashville is preferred by 68% (42+26) to 32% (15+17) of voters, so Nashville, the capital in real life, likewise wins in the example.

For comparison, note that traditional first-past-the-post would elect Memphis, even though most citizens consider it the worst choice, because 42% is larger than any other single city. Instant-runoff voting would elect the 2nd-worst choice (Knoxville), because the central candidates would be eliminated early. Under score voting, Nashville would have won, since it had the highest score in the first round. In approval voting, with each voter selecting their top two cities, Nashville would also win because of the significant boost from Memphis residents. A two-round system would have a runoff between Memphis and Nashville, where Nashville would win.

In this particular case, there is no way for any single city of voters to get a better outcome through tactical voting. However, Chattanooga and Knoxville voters combined could vote strategically to make Chattanooga win; while Memphis and Nashville voters could defend against that strategy and ensure Nashville still won by strategically giving Nashville a higher rating and/or Chattanooga and Knoxville lower ratings.

Ties edit

Tie votes in STAR Voting are rare, but as with any voting method they can occur, especially in elections without many voters. In most cases, ties in STAR voting can be broken by referring back to the ballots themselves for either the Scoring or Runoff round. Ties in the Scoring round are broken in favor of the candidate who was preferred by more voters. Ties in the Runoff round are broken in favor of the candidate who was scored higher. Ties which cannot be broken as above are considered a true tie.[25]

Properties edit

Unlike ranked voting systems, STAR voting allows voters to express preferences of varying strengths, though unlike Score voting, it does not take voters' strength of preference into account in 2-candidate elections.[26]

STAR voting satisfies the monotonicity criterion, i.e. raising your vote's score for a candidate can never hurt their chances of winning, and lowering it can never help their chances.[27][28] It also satisfies the resolvability criterion (in both Tideman and Woodall's versions).[citation needed]

There are a number of other voting system criteria it does not fully satisfy. These include the majority criterion, as it can happen that a candidate does not make it to the runoff, even though he is the first preference of a majority.[29] It does not satisfy the mutual majority criterion, although the more candidates there are in the mutual majority set, the greater the chances that at least one of them is among the two finalists in the runoff, in which case one of them will win. It does not always satisfy reversal symmetry (though it only violates it for exactly three candidates).

It also violates participation, consistency; and independence of clones (where any clones of the highest rated candidate may receive almost the same rating and enter the runoff, ahead of the second most popular non-clone).

It does not satisfy the later-no-harm criterion, meaning that giving a positive rating to a less-preferred candidate can cause a more-preferred candidate to lose.[30]

Discussion of STAR's criteria compliances edit

FairVote, an organization that promotes the use of instant-runoff voting, argues that STAR's failure of the majority criterion and the later-no-harm criterion is problematic.[31] STAR advocates have responded,[32] noting that STAR satisfies a relaxed version of the majority criterion,[33] and never elects a Condorcet loser, and that the system better balances the competing, incompatible favorite betrayal and later-no-harm criteria, resulting in superior voter satisfaction, as demonstrated by simulations in which STAR performs better than many other methods, including Instant Runoff voting.[30]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Revolutionary New Voting Method Bolstered By over 16,000 Voters in Oregon County". The Independent Voter Network. 2018-07-09. Retrieved 2018-09-18.
  2. ^ "Equal Vote Coalition". Retrieved 2017-04-05.
  3. ^ "Score Runoff Voting: The New Voting Method that Could Save Our Democratic Process". Independent Voter Network. 2016-12-08. Retrieved 2017-04-05.
  4. ^ "Strategic SRV?". Equal Vote Coalition. Retrieved 2017-04-05.
  5. ^ "Equal Systems Science". Equal Vote Coalition. Retrieved 2018-07-14. a two-phase, one-election hybrid of the Rating and Ranked Choice categories
  6. ^ "Comparing Voting Systems: A Report Card". Equal Vote Coalition. Retrieved 2018-07-14. STAR Voting is the new and improved hybrid of RCV and Score Voting
  7. ^ Russo, Ed. "New way to elect Lane County leaders could appear on ballot". The Register-Guard.
  8. ^ "Residents could put STAR Voting on November ballot".
  9. ^ "Chapters". STAR Voting. Retrieved 2020-01-09.
  10. ^ "STAR Voting on Nov ballot!". STAR Voting For Lane County. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
  11. ^ "November 6, 2018 General Election - Lane County". www.lanecounty.org. Retrieved 2018-09-19.
  12. ^ "Content Manager WebDrawer - 2018 General Election Voters Pamphlet Book 4 Lane County". records.sos.state.or.us.
  13. ^ Foden-Vencil, Kristian (November 7, 2018). "Lane County, Oregon, Effort To Change Voting System Fails". Oregon Public Broadcasting. Retrieved 2018-11-10.
  14. ^ "General Election Lane County, November 6, 2018 All Precincts, All Districts, All ScanStations, All Contests, All Boxes Unofficial Results" (PDF). November 7, 2018. 20-290 Lane County Adopts STAR Voting: Yes 74408, No 82157, Total 156565
  15. ^ Barker, Joel (2019-10-01). "Multnomah County Democrats Adopt STAR voting for internal party elections". Multnomah County Democrats. Retrieved 2020-01-09.
  16. ^ Davis, James (16 March 2021). "STAR Voting Helps Create Smooth Party Elections". Multnomah County Democrats.
  17. ^ Hill, Christian. . The Register-Guard. Archived from the original on 2020-09-25. Retrieved 2020-01-09.
  18. ^ "Campaigns". STAR Voting.
  19. ^ "Death STAR". July 29, 2020. Retrieved August 1, 2020.
  20. ^ "Independent Party of OR to use STAR Voting for Primary Election!". STAR Voting Email Campaign Archive. April 7, 2020. Retrieved 2020-04-08.
  21. ^ "STAR VOTING ANNOUNCEMENT". Independent Party of Oregon. Salem. 2020-04-07. Retrieved 2020-04-11.
  22. ^ "Independent Party of Oregon to utilize STAR system for primary". Herald and News. Apr 8, 2020. Retrieved 2020-04-10.
  23. ^ a b "Case Studies". STAR Voting.
  24. ^ "Libertarian Party of Oregon: 2022 Primary Elections Results". 11 March 2022.
  25. ^ "Q: How are ties in STAR Voting broken?". STAR Voting.
  26. ^ In a 2-candidate STAR voting election, both candidates automatically go to the runoff, where the voter will either give no support or full support to each of the candidates.
  27. ^ "An analysis of FairVote's Look at STAR Voting". Equal Vote Coalition. Retrieved 2018-07-21. STAR is monotonic, IRV is not.
  28. ^ D R Woodall, "Monotonicity and Single-Seat Election Rules", Voting matters, Issue 6, 1996. This article calls the monotonicity criterion in question "mono-raise", and also gives other monotonicity criteria that STAR voting fails. For instance, STAR voting violates "mono-raise-delete", defined as "A candidate X should not be harmed if X is raised on some ballots and all candidates now below X on those ballots are deleted from them". In the case of STAR, "deleted" would mean "given the lowest score"; deleting a candidate Y could change the runoff from X vs Y, which X wins, to X vs Z, which Z wins.
  29. ^ League of Women Voters of Washington Education Fund. A Review of Various Election Methods (PDF) (Updated February 2020 ed.).
  30. ^ a b . STAR Voting. Archived from the original on 2018-07-21. Retrieved 2018-07-21. STAR Voting actually fails both Later No Harm and The Favorite Betrayal Criterion - but hear us out! This is actually also desirable. ... We believe it is better for a system to fail two opposing criteria and in doing so mitigate the ways in which it fails both
  31. ^ Richie, Rob (July 2018). "Explaining FairVote's position on STAR Voting". FairVote.
  32. ^ Frohnmayer481.60scon, Mark. "Our take on FairVote's position regarding STAR Voting". Equal Vote Coalition.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  33. ^ "The Relaxed Majority Criterion". Equal Vote Coalition.

External links edit

  • STAR voting
  • The Equal Vote Coalition, an advocacy organization for STAR voting and other reforms.
  • ★.✓ An online platform for carrying out STAR voting elections.

star, voting, this, article, rely, excessively, sources, closely, associated, with, subject, potentially, preventing, article, from, being, verifiable, neutral, please, help, improve, replacing, them, with, more, appropriate, citations, reliable, independent, . This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources April 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message STAR voting is an electoral system for single seat elections 1 2 The name an allusion to star ratings stands for Score then Automatic Runoff referring to the fact that this system is a combination of score voting to pick two finalists with the highest total scores followed by an automatic runoff in which the finalist who is preferred on more ballots wins It is a type of cardinal voting electoral system The STAR Voting ballot including recommended instructions and formatting details Graphic explaining how STAR Voting works Contents 1 Method 2 Usage 3 Example 4 Ties 5 Properties 5 1 Discussion of STAR s criteria compliances 6 See also 7 Notes 8 External linksMethod editIn STAR voters are given a score ballot or ratings ballot on which each voter scores candidates with a number from 0 up to 5 with 0 representing worst and 5 representing best The scores for each candidate are then summed and the two highest scored candidates are selected as finalists In the automatic runoff round the finalist who was given a higher score on a greater number of ballots is selected as the winner Usage editThe concept was first proposed in October 2014 by Mark Frohnmayer and was initially called score runoff voting SRV 3 The runoff step was introduced in order to reduce strategic incentives in ordinary score voting such as bullet voting and tactical maximization 4 STAR is intended to be a hybrid between rated score voting and ranked instant runoff voting 5 6 The first movement to implement STAR voting was centered in Oregon 7 8 with chapters in Eugene Portland Salem Astoria and Ashland 9 In July 2018 supporters submitted over 16 000 signatures for a ballot initiative in Lane County Oregon putting Measure 20 290 on the November 2018 ballot 1 10 11 12 This ballot measure did not pass with 47 6 of voters voting yes and 52 4 of voters voting no 13 14 In 2019 the Multnomah County Democratic Party adopted STAR for all internal elections 15 16 A 2020 ballot initiative for the city of Eugene in which a 54 majority had supported the 2018 county initiative was attempted as well as a second attempt at Lane County 17 and an initiative in Troutdale Oregon 18 On July 27 2020 after the Eugene City Council deadlocked at 4 4 on a vote to refer a measure allowing STAR voting to be used in city elections to the November 2020 ballot Eugene Mayor Lucy Vinis cast the deciding vote against the referral meaning that no Eugene ballot measure would be held in 2020 19 The Independent Party of Oregon used STAR voting in their 2020 primary election 20 21 22 23 The Democratic Party of Oregon used STAR Voting for their elections for delegates to the 2020 Democratic convention 23 In 2022 the Libertarian Party of Oregon authorized STAR voting for its internal elections starting in 2023 24 Example editvte nbsp Suppose that Tennessee is holding an election on the location of its capital The population is concentrated around four major cities All voters want the capital to be as close to them as possible The options are Memphis the largest city but far from the others 42 of voters Nashville near the center of the state 26 of voters Chattanooga somewhat east 15 of voters Knoxville far to the northeast 17 of voters The preferences of each region s voters are 42 of votersFar West 26 of votersCenter 15 of votersCenter East 17 of votersFar EastMemphisNashvilleChattanoogaKnoxville NashvilleChattanoogaKnoxvilleMemphis ChattanoogaKnoxvilleNashvilleMemphis KnoxvilleChattanoogaNashvilleMemphisSuppose that 100 voters each decided to score from 0 to 5 stars each city such that their most liked choice got 5 stars and least liked choice got 0 stars with the intermediate choices getting an amount proportional to their relative distance Voter from City Choice Memphis Nashville Chattanooga Knoxville TotalMemphis 210 42 5 0 26 0 0 15 0 0 17 0 210Nashville 84 42 2 130 26 5 45 15 3 34 17 2 293Chattanooga 42 42 1 52 26 2 75 15 5 68 17 4 237Knoxville 0 42 0 26 26 1 45 15 3 85 17 5 156The top two frontrunners are Nashville and Chattanooga Of the two Nashville is preferred by 68 42 26 to 32 15 17 of voters so Nashville the capital in real life likewise wins in the example For comparison note that traditional first past the post would elect Memphis even though most citizens consider it the worst choice because 42 is larger than any other single city Instant runoff voting would elect the 2nd worst choice Knoxville because the central candidates would be eliminated early Under score voting Nashville would have won since it had the highest score in the first round In approval voting with each voter selecting their top two cities Nashville would also win because of the significant boost from Memphis residents A two round system would have a runoff between Memphis and Nashville where Nashville would win In this particular case there is no way for any single city of voters to get a better outcome through tactical voting However Chattanooga and Knoxville voters combined could vote strategically to make Chattanooga win while Memphis and Nashville voters could defend against that strategy and ensure Nashville still won by strategically giving Nashville a higher rating and or Chattanooga and Knoxville lower ratings Ties editTie votes in STAR Voting are rare but as with any voting method they can occur especially in elections without many voters In most cases ties in STAR voting can be broken by referring back to the ballots themselves for either the Scoring or Runoff round Ties in the Scoring round are broken in favor of the candidate who was preferred by more voters Ties in the Runoff round are broken in favor of the candidate who was scored higher Ties which cannot be broken as above are considered a true tie 25 Properties editUnlike ranked voting systems STAR voting allows voters to express preferences of varying strengths though unlike Score voting it does not take voters strength of preference into account in 2 candidate elections 26 STAR voting satisfies the monotonicity criterion i e raising your vote s score for a candidate can never hurt their chances of winning and lowering it can never help their chances 27 28 It also satisfies the resolvability criterion in both Tideman and Woodall s versions citation needed There are a number of other voting system criteria it does not fully satisfy These include the majority criterion as it can happen that a candidate does not make it to the runoff even though he is the first preference of a majority 29 It does not satisfy the mutual majority criterion although the more candidates there are in the mutual majority set the greater the chances that at least one of them is among the two finalists in the runoff in which case one of them will win It does not always satisfy reversal symmetry though it only violates it for exactly three candidates It also violates participation consistency and independence of clones where any clones of the highest rated candidate may receive almost the same rating and enter the runoff ahead of the second most popular non clone It does not satisfy the later no harm criterion meaning that giving a positive rating to a less preferred candidate can cause a more preferred candidate to lose 30 Discussion of STAR s criteria compliances edit FairVote an organization that promotes the use of instant runoff voting argues that STAR s failure of the majority criterion and the later no harm criterion is problematic 31 STAR advocates have responded 32 noting that STAR satisfies a relaxed version of the majority criterion 33 and never elects a Condorcet loser and that the system better balances the competing incompatible favorite betrayal and later no harm criteria resulting in superior voter satisfaction as demonstrated by simulations in which STAR performs better than many other methods including Instant Runoff voting 30 See also editList of democracy and elections related topics Consensus decision making Decision making Democracy Relative Utilitarianism Usual judgment similar voting method based on medians instead of averages and verbal appreciations instead of notes Majority judgment Unified Primary alternate voting method for nonpartisan blanket primary that uses approval voting based method in runoff electionNotes edit a b Revolutionary New Voting Method Bolstered By over 16 000 Voters in Oregon County The Independent Voter Network 2018 07 09 Retrieved 2018 09 18 Equal Vote Coalition Retrieved 2017 04 05 Score Runoff Voting The New Voting Method that Could Save Our Democratic Process Independent Voter Network 2016 12 08 Retrieved 2017 04 05 Strategic SRV Equal Vote Coalition Retrieved 2017 04 05 Equal Systems Science Equal Vote Coalition Retrieved 2018 07 14 a two phase one election hybrid of the Rating and Ranked Choice categories Comparing Voting Systems A Report Card Equal Vote Coalition Retrieved 2018 07 14 STAR Voting is the new and improved hybrid of RCV and Score Voting Russo Ed New way to elect Lane County leaders could appear on ballot The Register Guard Residents could put STAR Voting on November ballot Chapters STAR Voting Retrieved 2020 01 09 STAR Voting on Nov ballot STAR Voting For Lane County Retrieved 2018 09 19 November 6 2018 General Election Lane County www lanecounty org Retrieved 2018 09 19 Content Manager WebDrawer 2018 General Election Voters Pamphlet Book 4 Lane County records sos state or us Foden Vencil Kristian November 7 2018 Lane County Oregon Effort To Change Voting System Fails Oregon Public Broadcasting Retrieved 2018 11 10 General Election Lane County November 6 2018 All Precincts All Districts All ScanStations All Contests All Boxes Unofficial Results PDF November 7 2018 20 290 Lane County Adopts STAR Voting Yes 74408 No 82157 Total 156565 Barker Joel 2019 10 01 Multnomah County Democrats Adopt STAR voting for internal party elections Multnomah County Democrats Retrieved 2020 01 09 Davis James 16 March 2021 STAR Voting Helps Create Smooth Party Elections Multnomah County Democrats Hill Christian STAR voting returns with dual initiative push The Register Guard Archived from the original on 2020 09 25 Retrieved 2020 01 09 Campaigns STAR Voting Death STAR July 29 2020 Retrieved August 1 2020 Independent Party of OR to use STAR Voting for Primary Election STAR Voting Email Campaign Archive April 7 2020 Retrieved 2020 04 08 STAR VOTING ANNOUNCEMENT Independent Party of Oregon Salem 2020 04 07 Retrieved 2020 04 11 Independent Party of Oregon to utilize STAR system for primary Herald and News Apr 8 2020 Retrieved 2020 04 10 a b Case Studies STAR Voting Libertarian Party of Oregon 2022 Primary Elections Results 11 March 2022 Q How are ties in STAR Voting broken STAR Voting In a 2 candidate STAR voting election both candidates automatically go to the runoff where the voter will either give no support or full support to each of the candidates An analysis of FairVote s Look at STAR Voting Equal Vote Coalition Retrieved 2018 07 21 STAR is monotonic IRV is not D R Woodall Monotonicity and Single Seat Election Rules Voting matters Issue 6 1996 This article calls the monotonicity criterion in question mono raise and also gives other monotonicity criteria that STAR voting fails For instance STAR voting violates mono raise delete defined as A candidate X should not be harmed if X is raised on some ballots and all candidates now below X on those ballots are deleted from them In the case of STAR deleted would mean given the lowest score deleting a candidate Y could change the runoff from X vs Y which X wins to X vs Z which Z wins League of Women Voters of Washington Education Fund A Review of Various Election Methods PDF Updated February 2020 ed a b Farewell to Pass Fail STAR Voting Archived from the original on 2018 07 21 Retrieved 2018 07 21 STAR Voting actually fails both Later No Harm and The Favorite Betrayal Criterion but hear us out This is actually also desirable We believe it is better for a system to fail two opposing criteria and in doing so mitigate the ways in which it fails both Richie Rob July 2018 Explaining FairVote s position on STAR Voting FairVote Frohnmayer481 60scon Mark Our take on FairVote s position regarding STAR Voting Equal Vote Coalition a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link The Relaxed Majority Criterion Equal Vote Coalition External links editSTAR voting The Equal Vote Coalition an advocacy organization for STAR voting and other reforms An online platform for carrying out STAR voting elections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title STAR voting amp oldid 1217190880 Usage, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.