In case it wasn't clear I wasn't assigning any of those positions to you, just attempting to get to your logic by laying out some reasons why I could imagine someone thinking the election was off. To your last point I'm not seeing how that is less desirable than non-ranked choice voting.Binger wrote: ↑Thu Sep 01, 2022 3:17 pmThank you, again. Let's do this.
1 - I do not think the ballots were tampered or altered. I do not think they were miscounted. I have no evidence of fraud or negligence. I am not suggesting that there was anything nefarious done with the ballots. But....... they were counted multiple times as the last place candidate is dropped off and their choices were added to the other candidates. And when last place candidates are dropped but they appear as the alternate choice for another candidate, are the ballots still weighed equally in this process?
2 - Ranked choice is still a choice. It is not anti-will. But, the outcome may not match the will of the people were the options presented a different way.
3 - I have never thought anyone was duped. I am not clear what you are asking here.
4 - It appears to me that most voters chose a Republican as their first choice. The ranked choosing says that they would like a republican first, but if that person does not win a majority, my next choice would be "X". The algorithm, on the other hand, does something completely different. The algorithm applies the ranked choice after a candidate is dropped from the bottom of the list.
Voter thinks - "I want a Republican Candidate A, and my second choice is candidate B"
Algorithm says - "I want Republican Candidate A, and if that person comes in last place, then I would choose, Candidate B, or if Candidate A is in last place after another candidate's alternate votes are applied, then I choose candidate B, or if Candidate A is in last place after one candidate is eliminated and the second choice of his/her voters are applied and then Candidate A is the second candidate eliminated then I want Candidate B, but I don't really know who I am choosing at this point then. ..
Eventually, it could be the case were it comes down to the last two candidates and some voters first and second choices are eliminated. So, is everyone really franchised at that point? Or no? (I just like using the word franchise because I went to a Jesse Jackson rally in Times Square in December 2000. "Franchise." "Stay out the Bushes.")
tldr: I think the outcome of a D v. Palin election would be different than an open and ranked election with one D and many R's. I don't like Palin. But I think the outcome would be different.
Voters are typically left with a black and white decision between R and D, there aren't a whole lot of other options out there. If left with only the binary you're possibly correct that the R would have won. However in this instance they were allowed to say "If my number one choice isn't selected then I would like x candidate instead". I can't imagine a choice more reflective of the will of the people than that. It allowed the folks that REALLY didn't want Palin to run with a republican first and then pivot away from that if they wanted (remember a full 29% of Begich supports actively picked Peltola). Unless you're suggesting that the second choice was what was messed with?
For me, if you're actually trying to pick the candidate that the MOST folks want, I'm not sure how ranked choice isn't a better option. I'm almost always going to be in favor of a system that requires candidates to build the largest coalition of support, particularly when that support comes from across the aisle.
ETA: TL:DR Given that some 102k of the voters opted not to put Palin down vs 86k that did I'm failing to see how this wasn't the best outcome for the voters.