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Thank you!
Thats a lot better explained than how my mum tried to tell me![]()
I'm shocked you didn't get the annual primary school lesson on how it worked?
They drummed it into us so hard that blokes who dropped out in Year 10 to smoke more weed can still count preferential votes!
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when i went to school we had like a 3 day tutorial on the whole thing! hell that was primary School and we did Preferential voting to find are SRC was quite good actually.
Lower house voting in a nutshell (Preferential voting)
To win, you need 50% + 1 of the vote.
Say there's 4 candidates in an electorate
Labor
Liberal
Greens
Family First
Once the booths are closed, there is a simple count of the first preference votes. Say there's 20000 votes and the result is:
Labor 10001
Liberal 8000
Greens 500
Family First 1499
Then Labor with 50% +1 of the vote wins the seat.
However, if the result at the end of the fist count is
Labor 8000
Liberal 9000
Greens 500
Family First 2500
No party has 50% + 1 of the vote. So the last placed candiate (the Greens in this example) are eliminated and their 2nd preference votes are distributed across the remaining parties. Say at the end of round 2
Labor 8300
Liberal 9200
Family First 2500
We still have no party with 50% + 1. Now the Family First 2nd preference votes are redistributed. At the end, if the result is:
Labor 10100
Liberal 9900
Then Labor would win the seat
Good summary. The only thing wrong is that the family first preferences will never favour Labor.
I find it staggering countries like the US and the UK use first past the post voting.
Another voting misnomer is that minor parties can direct their preferences where they want. This is wrong, preferences go where you vote for them. The only direction the parties give is on their how to vote cards they hand out at the booth.
Not to mention the US and UK voting is optional so you could end up with something like 30% of the population voting in their President/PM, of which only 30-40% of the vote going to them (meaning they've really only got the vote for 10-15% of the country). With the US, you've also got to throw in the Electoral Collage (which was how Bush got in in 2000).
Would require a swing of 18.4% for Turbo Tom to lose his seat.
One thing to consider is the possibility Labor will regain Mitchell (held by Kris Hanna by just 0.7%), meaning that's an extra seat the Libs have to gain somewhere else. Also, some of the seats the Liberals have their eye on require some decent swings (for example they reckon they can get Newland, which would require a 6.9% swing - possible but highly unlikely).
Using 6% as the mark between marginal and safe, even if all marginal Labor seats went to Liberal (Hartley, Light, Mawson, and Norwood), they would require significant swings in at least 5 other seats (6 if Labor regain Mitchell) to win government in their own right.
Some will go to Liberal, but not enough for them to win IMO.
For those that want to see the 2006 results, they're at http://www.ecsa.sa.gov.au/archive/2006/pdf/Results_and_Outcomes_Booklet3.pdf (lower house results on page 15)
Lower house voting in a nutshell (Preferential voting)
To win, you need 50% + 1 of the vote.
Say there's 4 candidates in an electorate
Labor
Liberal
Greens
Family First
Once the booths are closed, there is a simple count of the first preference votes. Say there's 20000 votes and the result is:
Labor 10001
Liberal 8000
Greens 500
Family First 1499
Then Labor with 50% +1 of the vote wins the seat.
However, if the result at the end of the fist count is
Labor 8000
Liberal 9000
Greens 500
Family First 2500
No party has 50% + 1 of the vote. So the last placed candiate (the Greens in this example) are eliminated and their 2nd preference votes are distributed across the remaining parties. Say at the end of round 2
Labor 8300
Liberal 9200
Family First 2500
We still have no party with 50% + 1. Now the Family First 2nd preference votes are redistributed. At the end, if the result is:
Labor 10100
Liberal 9900
Then Labor would win the seat
Good summary. The only thing wrong is that the family first preferences will never favour Labor.
I find it staggering countries like the US and the UK use first past the post voting.
Another voting misnomer is that minor parties can direct their preferences where they want. This is wrong, preferences go where you vote for them. The only direction the parties give is on their how to vote cards they hand out at the booth.
It wouldn't seem you quite have a grasp on the American system.
I can assure you all Presiden't get in on the Electoral College.
Also, arguably W got in through the Supreme Court![]()
As for my personal outlook: i'm a bit like Riggy.... extreme left (but i dont believe in democracy either but that's another topic)......
how do you know this and how has this not been reported ??
That just seems crazy that this wouldn't be reported given an election is coming up.
I still don't know who I'm going to vote for but at the end of the day I recon the ALP will get up. It will come down to the devil
you know rather than the devil you don't.
Both are a bunch of flogs.
I accept that logic in nearly all fields but politics.
I prefer the devil I don't know as the more frequent the changes of government the less they can **** things up and the less arrogant and conceited they get
I accept that logic in nearly all fields but politics.
I prefer the devil I don't know as the more frequent the changes of government the less they can **** things up and the less arrogant and conceited they get
you know the sad part is I reckon your right.