Good Stuff Happens in 1:1 Meetings: Why you need them and how to do them well
How the Alternative Vote System Works
1. Newcombe is a tiny constituency with just 15 people. The election for Newcombe’s MP has 3 candidates. It will be held using the Alternative Vote system. How the Alternative Vote System Works
2. Usually, people in Newcombe vote for one candidate with an X. But in the Alternative Vote system, voters rank candidates. (“1” for their favourite down to “3” for their least favourite). << 1 st preference << 2 nd preference << 3 rd preference The Ballot Paper
3. 4 votes 6 votes 5 votes (27%) (40%) (33%) When voting is over, the 1 st preferences are all added together. Mary leads with 6 votes and would win under the previous system. But you need more than 50% to win in the Alternative Vote system. Round One
4. X 6 votes 5 votes (40%) (33%) So it goes to Round Two. This means that the candidate in last place (John) is eliminated. His 4 votes will now be shared between Mary and Sean using 2 nd preferences . 4 votes?? Round Two
5. It works like this. 4 people voted for John. Of these, 1 chose Mary as their second favourite and 3 chose Sean. These 2 nd preferences then get added to the original totals. 2 nd preference 2 nd preference 2 nd preferences
6. 7 votes 8 votes (47%) (53%) 6 + 1 = When the 2 nd preferences are added, Sean now has 8 votes. As this is more than 50%, Sean is elected MP for Newcombe. So Sean wins even though he was second after Round One. 5 + 3 = The Final Result
7. And that’s how the Alternative Vote system works. In real elections there are usually more candidates and more rounds. See my real world example at http://slidesha.re/dMTH5k . And let me know what you think on @ myddelton .