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Without doubt, simply voting “for” a party, as is customary throughout the world, is a very crude procedure for ascertaining the intentions of a population. Differentiated opinions, such as “I would be for a party if...” or “I don’t know which party I am for, but I certainly know which one I am against...” have no place in the usual voting systems. In the weeks preceding the Swedish parliamentary elections in 2002, eligible Swedish voters were asked to come to a voting laboratory that the group had set up in central Stockholm. They were to participate in an “experimental election”, thus demonstrating how a different voting system would produce different results. In this experiment it was possible to vote in the usual manner for the desired These three decisions allowed four outcomes to be analyzed:
the result of a vote in which it is allowed to vote positively or negatively, whereby the voters themselves can decide if they would rather vote for or against a party. |
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wochenklausur@wochenklausur.at Gumpendorferstr. 20, 1060 Vienna Austria, Tel/Fax: +43-1-5856568 |
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