One problem with this system is that it can violate the “non-dictatorship” criteria for fairness, since a single voter (or small group of allied voters) could strategically withhold votes during potential landslide elections and spend them during close elections. With the right maneuvering among a well-organized block of voters, I could imagine a situation where the system becomes a perpetual minority rule.
Votes can not be counted more than once, and every vote counts (according to the voter.) As all voters have an equal opportunity to withhold or spend votes—how can this be unfair?
In current systems, a minority voter may never be offered a candidate worth a vote—all such votes don’t count (according to the voter.) This is clearly unfair, and has only an appearance of proportional representation.
With the right maneuvering among a well-organized block of voters, I could imagine a situation where the system becomes a perpetual minority rule.
And this does not happen now?
This is likely the reason for low turn outs in many elections—the voters simply do not care.
That’s just the problem. It does happen now, in a system where everyone is throttled at only one vote to spend per election. In a system where you can withhold that vote till another election, increasing the power of your vote over time, it only exacerbates this behavior.
Is the better fairness on a micro level worth the trade-off of lesser fairness on a macro level?
One problem with this system is that it can violate the “non-dictatorship” criteria for fairness, since a single voter (or small group of allied voters) could strategically withhold votes during potential landslide elections and spend them during close elections. With the right maneuvering among a well-organized block of voters, I could imagine a situation where the system becomes a perpetual minority rule.
Votes can not be counted more than once, and every vote counts (according to the voter.) As all voters have an equal opportunity to withhold or spend votes—how can this be unfair?
In current systems, a minority voter may never be offered a candidate worth a vote—all such votes don’t count (according to the voter.) This is clearly unfair, and has only an appearance of proportional representation.
And this does not happen now?
This is likely the reason for low turn outs in many elections—the voters simply do not care.
That’s just the problem. It does happen now, in a system where everyone is throttled at only one vote to spend per election. In a system where you can withhold that vote till another election, increasing the power of your vote over time, it only exacerbates this behavior.
Is the better fairness on a micro level worth the trade-off of lesser fairness on a macro level?