Tag Archives: Ireland

The Importance of Having Candidates

As I am drafting this post, the Irish are counting the votes in yesterday’s election.  The exit polls published last night showed a neck-and-neck race between the top three parties.  Despite the closeness of the vote, one party is not in contention to be the leading party in parliament when the count finishes sometime on Monday or Tuesday.   And the reason for that has to do with how many candidates that party had running.

As discussed several days ago, Ireland uses a “single transferable vote” system to elect its members of parliament from multi-member constituencies.  (Constituencies — depending on population — elect either three, four, or five members).  If you look at the candidate list for each constituency, the two traditional “major” parties run two or three candidates per constituency.  When you run multiple candidates, any excess vote from your main candidate goes to your other candidates.  If you have a strong performance in a constituency, you can elect two or three members from that constituency.  Fianna Fail is running only one candidate in six constituencies, two candidates in twenty-three constituencies, three candidates in eight constituencies, and four candidates in two constituencies (both five-member constituencies).  Fianna Gael is running only one candidate in four constituencies,  two candidates in twenty-seven constituencies,  and three candidates in eight constituencies.  By contrast, for Sinn Fein, there is one constituency in which they have no candidates, thirty-four constituencies in which they only have one candidate, and four constituencies (three of which are five-member constituencies and one of which is a four-member constituency) in which they have two candidates.

If the exit polls are true, Sinn Fein would have had a good shot at picking up a second or third member in multiple constituencies in which they only ran one member.  Because they only ran one member in these constituencies, we will never for sure know how many seats they could have won.  (Projections — based on partial counts — are giving Sinn Fein between 30-40 members. which will put it behind Fianna Fail and Fianna Gael.  But assuming that most transfers would have gone to a second Sinn Fein candidate, Sinn Fein would have been contending for another 5-10 seats.) Continue Reading...

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Single Transferable Vote and the Presidential Primary

While everybody is digesting the results from Iowa and guessing how it might impact next Tuesday’s vote in New Hampshire, it is a good time to take a brief look over at elections in Europe — specifically the Republic of Ireland which will vote this Saturday.  What makes Ireland different is that it is one of a handful of countries that use the Single Transferable Vote.

The Single Transferable Vote system is a hybrid of proportional representation and preferential/ranked-choice voting.  Currently, the Democratic Party uses proportional representation to allocate delegates to presidential candidates.  As an initial caveat, both proportional representation and single transferrable vote require multi-member districts.  For the Democratic Party, delegates are allocated in multi-member districts — on both a state-wide and congressional district basis. (Typically, the congressional districts have between four and ten delegates.  State-wide delegates range from a low of two party leader delegates in Wyoming to ninety at-large delegates in California.)  For Ireland, the members of its parliament are elected in thirty-nine constituencies with the constituencies electing between three and five members to parliament.

There are three basic questions that a proportional representation system has to answer. First, how to decide fractional members?  In any system, after all the votes are counted, there is a set number of votes that exactly equals a certain number of delegates/members of parliament.  But, the odds that all of the candidates/parties will end up getting exactly the right number of votes is very, very slim.  Instead, it is likely that some candidates/parties will be  100 or 1,000 votes show of the number needed to win the next delegate/seat, and that other parties will have 100 or 1,000 votes more than the number need to win the previous delegate/seat.  This process is easy when you have two parties/candidates, you simply round up any fraction over .5 and round down any fraction under .5.  But when you have multiple parties, rounding may give you too many or too few seats.   Thus, a system using proportional representation needs to have a system for deciding which parties/candidates get the leftover delegates/seats once you are down to fractional seats. Continue Reading...

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