Spare vote
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The spare vote[1] refers to a secondary party vote which comes into play in the event that the main party vote is ineffective because that main party vote is for a party that has failed to pass some kind of threshold. It may be simply understood by the phrase “If my first choice party fails to pass any threshold my vote goes instead to my spare vote, that is my second choice of party vote”. The Spare vote overcomes, in a simple way, various problems created by the application of thresholds in party voting.
Under party-list proportional representation with a threshold, the fraction of wasted votes due to the electoral threshold can reach up to 30% and represents a democratic deficit as measured by disproportionality. Despite this, a spare vote is not a feature in any list PR system in use as of this date. The German Federal Constitutional Court ruled that the electoral system is not required to have such a supplementary contingent vote feature.[2]
The term "spare vote" not only refers to the additional specification of a second preference but can also mean the electoral system working with a second preference as a whole. Not every second preference is a spare vote. Ranked voting systems differ in terms of their field of application, choice of party lists vs. choice of individuals. In particular, the following ranking procedures should be strictly distinguished from the spare vote:
- Single transferable vote (and its single winner version instant-runoff voting also called the alternative vote), contingent vote, and supplementary vote: In contrast to the spare vote, which ranks political parties, these systems rank individual candidates.
- Group voting ticket, a straight-ticket method of single transferable vote for selecting all candidates of a party in a multi-winner district, but in which preferences are automatically distributed to individual candidates rather than the whole party's list. This has been used most under laws which require voters to rank all candidates for all available seats.
The electoral threshold typical in party-list proportional representation and mixed-member proportional representation causes tactical voting and spoiler effects. Voters instead of casting their vote for a preferred party that presumably will fail to pass the electoral threshold tend to choose a less preferred party with a reliable chance of passing the electoral threshold. The security of the spare vote is intended to encourage voters to vote more honestly for their actually preferred party. On the ballot paper, the voter is given the opportunity to designate beside the first preference the spare vote, which becomes an effective vote only under the condition that the first preference fails to comply with the electoral threshold. To prevent that the spare vote falls below the electoral threshold as well, the voter should assign the spare vote to a party that is very likely to pass the electoral threshold. The spare vote continues to prevent the fragmentation of parliaments achieved by the electoral threshold.[3]
