| Understanding BC-STV
Note this page is based on the class lecture
overheads
Click here or a flash video on BC-STV visit the BC Citizens'
Assembly
Current 79, single-member ridings will be reduced.
Still 79 members overall, but elected from multi-member ridings. Only a
few 2-seat ridings in the North and Interior; most electoral districts
will have 5 or 7 members.
From Voters’ perspective, you simply rank your candidates 1, 2, 3 etc in
order of your preference. Rank as many or as few as you want.
Complications arise in how to translate votes cast into who wins seats.
Candidates are declared elected when they meet the “quota” for the
riding:
(Total valid votes) + 1 = Quota
(# seats + 1)
For example, in an electoral district with 5 seats and
100,000 valid votes:
(100,000) + 1 = 16,668
(5 + 1)
After the election, all voters’ first preferences are
added up. If any candidates has enough to meet the quota, they are
declared elected.
If no-one meets quota, then the candidate with the least 1st preference
votes is eliminated and the 2nd choices on the ballot papers are added
up and distributed to the remaining candidates.
If a candidate meets the winning quota, then any votes they received
above the quota are considered to be “surplus.” The surplus is then
distributed to the other candidates.
To be fair, all the winning candidate’s votes are examined and the next
preference on the ballot papers are added up.
These 2nd choice votes are then transferred to the other candidates
according to the “transfer value”
total votes - quota = transfer value
total votes
Example: a candidate received 32,000 1st preference votes when the quota
was 16,000.
32,000 - 16,000 = 0.5
32,000
To transfer the 2nd choice votes of the winning candidate each vote is
transferred at 0.5, So each vote is transferred as half a vote in this
example:
Candidate Second Choices Transferred Votes
A
14,000
7,000
B
8,000
4,000
C
5,000
2,500
D
5,000
2,500
The total transferred votes then equals the
surplus
The transferred votes are added to the remaining candidates’ totals.
If any candidates now meet the winning quota they are declared elected
and their votes are now transferred in a similar way to the other
remaining candidates.
The process continues until all the winning candidates are identified.
Strengths of BC-STV:
- provides more proportional relationship, than SMP, between votes cast
for a party and their share of seats in the legislature
- allows voters to vote for candidates from different parties; this is
supposed to reduce the influence of parties over their candidates
- ensures most votes (not all, as claimed) are used to determine winning
candidates; this means fewer “wasted” votes
Weaknesses of BC-STV:
- complicated vote counting procedure
- actual results depend upon number of candidates run by the parties; in
Australia and Ireland the parties never run the maximum number of
candidates in each riding
- large multi-member ridings decrease chances of elected representative
coming from a particular community
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