I can definitely get behind this idea. If this were implimented, I would feel a bit better about voting in our upcoming elections, as I want to vote neither republican or democrat. I would however like to remove republican votes without actually adding to the democrats. If these votes counted towards majority, it may cause both candidates to fail at winning the election, as "No Confidence" has the potential to win, forcing a new campaign and election. That would be fan-fucking-tastic.Rye wrote:I forgot one of my coolest and most popular ideas: The negative vote.
For elections when you don't feel compelled to vote for any one party but you do hate one party more than the others (BNP, Tories, Labour, whoever), you can instead use your vote to take off one of their supporters. People basically do this already by voting for their main rivals, but I would prefer to have a purely negative effect without voting tactically.
(Functionally speaking: As it stands now, if we assume that there is a number line, and that each vote has a statistically equal chance of being allotted to one politician or the other, each politician starts at 0 on that number line. When a vote is cast, it is given to one side, and effectively takes it away from the other. This causes a net movement of 2, where one politician gains a vote, and the other effectively loses it, candidate 1 moves up an integer, candidate 2 moves down an integer. This is why when an election is won 52 to 48, the point difference is 4. This alternative would also cause a net movement of 2 percentage points, but would take votes from a candidate, and the other just loses the potential vote. This could mean, if neither party or candidate is well liked, that neither could be elected with appropriate reforms in our electoral system. A president for example cannot be elected on a plurality, and if Electoral Votes were apportioned as "no confidence", it could mean a new election must be held, or a runoff election between the candidates--including third party--least affected by the no confidence votes)