Approval Voting Explained
In Approval voting, each voter simply votes for, or "approves," as
many of the candidates as desired (without ranking them). As in
plurality voting, the votes are counted, and the candidate with the most
votes wins. No new voting equipment is needed (except perhaps in rare
cases), and the ballots don't even need to be changed. Moreover, the
change to the current voting rules is trivial: "vote for one" simply
becomes "vote for one or more."
Although trivial to implement, Approval voting goes a long way toward
overcoming the "lesser of two evils" problem inherent in our current
plurality system, which artificially entrenches our political system
into a two-party duopoly without effective competition from other
parties. And although Approval voting is much simpler than Instant
Runoff Voting (IRV), it is actually more effective according to
important technical criteria, with no
significant disadvantages compared to IRV.
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