• RunawayFixer@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    There’s several systems in use. In short and from memory:

    Ranked choice voting is good for electing 1 representative per voting group, so would be good for electing a president for example or a senator in a small us state.

    A popular method in parliamentary democracies is the D’Hondt method, which is used for electing multiple representatives per voting group (country, district, whatever). The D’Hondt method still gives a minor advantage to larger parties over smaller ones.

    With the D’Hondt method, you can either vote for the list or for a person on the list. The sum of list + direct votes will determine how many representatives will come from that list.

    List votes will be distributed starting at the top of the list, according to need to meet the threshold. It’s basically as you described. Sometimes a celebrity might be dropped somewhere in the middle of the list (or in the very visible last spot) and get elected without benefitting from list votes.

    Being a career politician takes years of work and politicians who got a lot of votes in past elections, will receive better list positions in future elections. So persons at the top of the lists will typically get more direct votes as well.

    The method of vote distribution does not determine how the voting lists are created. The different parties can have different rules on how to create their voting lists, but typically it will be the regional party leadership that creates the lists for their regional elections, based on past performance but also on political chicanery. The regional party leadership will have been typically elected by the regional party membership.

    If I like a party platform but dislike an individual within that party, then I weigh my decision on the chances of that person getting into a position of power if that party was to form the government. If they stand to become a minister, then I won’t vote for anyone from that party.

    I personally never vote for lists, always for persons. Even if that person does not get elected, receiving more direct votes will give them more say within their party.