Reminder: This post is from the Community Actual Discussion. We try to use voting for elevating constructive, or lowering unproductive, posts and comments here. When disagreeing, replies detailing your views are highly encouraged as no-discussion downvotes don’t help anyone learn anything valuable. For other rules, please see this pinned thread. Thanks!
I’ve had some discussions in real life about what the best options would be for replacing the Canadian “First Past The Post” (and also the more-broken American system of course) system of voting and there are a ton of ideas.
Shout out to !fairvote@lemmy.world for inspiring this post.
Some examples are:
I also have come to find that different systems work better for different sizes of vote. For example, local elections vs. federal elections.
Some Starters (and don’t feel you have to speak on all or any of them if you don’t care to):
- What systems do you feel would work better for local, provincial, and federal elections?
- Do you even think about how it could be made better?
- Could you be convinced to vote for a single-issue party that would implement better systems and then abscond? This has been a serious topic of discussion within my local group of mayoral and city council members. Since it would benefit those on all sides, do you think people could be convinced?
- Is there a perfect system, or is every system you’ve seen lacking in some way?


This is an awesome discussion, but let’s define a term before we really dig in.
When you say, “works better”, I’m reading that to mean something like, “most accurately represents the coherent, extrapolated volition of its population”.
Does that match your meaning?
Well, somewhat. I left it open to interpretation on purpose so the reader could define that in their response.
If I were to personally state my interpretation, I’d mean something like a system least open to abuses (gerrymandering, cronyism, bribery, etc.), being open and honest, while also being representative of the people using it.