Quoting exnihilo from 16:21, 25th Apr 2005
As to the vote fining, the decimals are an absurdity. The first preferences should have been counted, 25 removed from that first total for the people who were fined and then ALL second and third preferences counted as though nothing had happened. Anything else is grossly unfair, and if I were the candidate fined I would certainly be lodging an appeal.
And, before anyone has a go at me, I think I have a pretty good idea of how STV works as well.
Alright then, I'll use more complicated language. I know your knowledge of STV is strong, so I would say you are deliberately misrepresenting the system by calling decimals an absurdity when they are in fact extremely common in an STV election. The fine was levied against the candidate, yes? Not against the voters who chose the candidate. In that case it makes a lot more sense to count it as if the candidate had got 25 more votes than they needed through a surplus over quota and that they should then be redistributed as normal.
Moreover, by not redistributing immediately, one is destroying the entirety of the votes of 25 persons rather than simply destroying their first preferences. By not counting the 25 votes as part of the first preferenced candidate (say Choong), you can alter when that candidate gets redistributed (if at all). However, by not counting the 25 votes *at all*, you can alter when the other preferenced candidates get redistributed. Yet since the penalty is supposedly only being levied on the first preferenced candidate, it is unfair to carry over the penalty to the others. It is also penalising the voter, since the crucial point of STV is that every vote counts at every point - the fine, without an instant redistribution of it, would trap the vote in a bottleneck until eventually the candidate first preferenced is redistributed.
Simple, no?
[hr]
No more elections. Except tragically watching this General Election.
And hello Mum.