tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19883544.post6432711969542335978..comments2023-09-24T05:52:39.273-05:00Comments on Green Party of Monroe County: Green Party Members in New York Voting In A Presidential Primary By Mail BallotDeborah Magonehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/14905852053125317820noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19883544.post-25545630528155515422008-05-30T05:04:00.000-05:002008-05-30T05:04:00.000-05:00We are looking for Green volunteers to help count ...We are looking for Green volunteers to help count the ballots. meet us at 10am on Saturday May 31 on the 5th floor of the Rochester Auditorium Center on the corner of E. Main street and prince street in Rochester, NY.<BR/><BR/>How the votes will be counted for upstate New York:<BR/>Voting System Values: This system allocates delegates proportionally within a region, but it allows voters who support losing candidates to transfer their support to candidates still in the running for additional delegates. This is a "closed" system - meaning that voters choose a presidential candidate's slate, but not individual delegates.<BR/><BR/>Will we begin by sorting envelopes into separate piles for each region of New York. This will be done by return address, postmark, and doubled checked by the voter confirmation sheet. (any returned ballots whose region cannot be identified will be spoiled) <BR/><BR/>Then we will open the envelopes and immediately remove any of the voter confirmation sheets, volunteer pledges and donations from the ballots. (Ideally we would have been able to afford a blank envelope inside the return envelope.)<BR/><BR/>We will then precede to hand count the ballots in each region with the following method as recommended by Fair Vote, www.fairvote.org. <BR/><BR/>Step One: Determine the threshold that a candidate needs to reach to guarantee winning a delegate in each region. This number will be: <BR/>[TOTAL NUMBER OF VALID VOTES / (NUMBER OF SEATS TO BE FILLED + 1)] +<BR/>1. Disregard any fractional remainders here, so that the threshold is a whole number.<BR/><BR/>At least one delegate will be awarded to each candidate who reaches the following threshold per region:<BR/><BR/>Example: <BR/>Region 3: 5 Delegates to be elected. Threshold = 1/6th of the region's total votes + 1 (rounded to next whole number)<BR/><BR/>Region 6: 7 Delegates to be elected. Threshold = 1/8th of the region's total votes + 1 (rounded to next whole number)<BR/> <BR/>Step Two: Count each voter's first choice, including any write-in candidates. Note that for this election, "None of the Above" will be treated as a candidate in each region. Award delegates to a candidate, each time they have reached the threshold in their region. For example, if the threshold in a region is 21 votes and a candidate has 50 votes, they will be awarded two delegates from that region, and they will have a" remainder" of 8 votes. Award as many delegates as possible using the first choices.<BR/><BR/>Step Three: Determine how many delegates are left to be awarded per region, and then determine the "remainder" of votes left for each candidate. If a candidate has been awarded no delegates in a region, their entire vote total for that region is their "remainder."<BR/><BR/>Step Four: In each region, determine the last place candidate in the race for "remainder" votes, *who has not yet received any delegates*, and eliminate them in that region. Now count this candidate's ballots for each voters' next ranked candidate in that region. Then recalculate the "remainder" vote for each remaining candidate in the region. Award any additional delegates to candidates who have now reached the threshold through "remainder" votes. Repeat this process until another delegate has been awarded.<BR/><BR/>Step Five: Repeat "Step Four" until all remaining delegates have been awarded or until the number of candidates remaining is one greater than the number of delegates left to be elected. At this point, the candidates with the greatest number of "remainder" votes will receive the respective remaining delegates.<BR/><BR/>During any step in the process, should a tie exist in determining which candidate to eliminate, eliminate the candidate with fewer first choices. If the candidates are tied in first choices, eliminate both of the tied candidates at the same time, unless doing so would create too few candidates left to allocate delegates to. In the latter instance, determine which tied candidate to eliminate by coin-flip.Jason Nabewaniechttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00813762834231138195noreply@blogger.com