WA Senate
National Party Ticket vote increases in value disproportional to
original transfer value when allocated to Linda REYNOLDS and filtered
through PUP
Count 27: Linda REYNOLDS (Liberal) elected #4
…
2,582 (0.20%) votes (64,034 ballot papers at 0.0403 transfer value)
originally from The Nationals distributed to Palmer United Party (Zhenya
WANG) via preference 15.
…
Count 29: Zhenya WANG (Palmer United Party) elected #5
2,911 (0.23%) votes (64,034 ballot papers at 0.0455 transfer value)
originally from The Nationals distributed to Australian Labor Party
(Louise PRATT) via preference 38.
The LNP vote also increased in value when Liberal (Linda REYNOLDS)
was elected and her surplus transfer value calculated She absorbed part
of the National party and SEP vote which were devalued in the
calculation of the Liberal Party Surplus Transfer value. The Liberal
Group Ticket increases in value disproportional to its contribution to
REYNOLDS surplus
there are a numbeR of serious flaws in the way the AEC counts the Senate vote.
1 The calculation of the surplus transfer value
2. The segmentation distribution
Both methods were designed to facilitate a manual count
You could add a third if you wanted to remove the Droop quota (x/(y+1)) and adopt a pure proportional count (y/y)
If you count the current vote using the registered above-the-line group voting tickets you get the following results
As per current senate rules
LNP 3, ALP 2 PUP 1
Using a weighted Surplus Transfer value count
LNP 3, ALP 1 PUP 1, GRN 1
If you then remove the segmentation distribution and adopt a single
transfer reiterative count which reflects more accurately the voters
intentions kin the distribution of preferences. One single transaction
per candidate only distributed weighted surpluses
The result is
LNP 3, ALP 2 PUP 1
What the above analysis shows is that you can not fix the system by
just applying a weighted Gregory transfer value. You must also remove
the segmentation distribution.
Segmentation allows the vote to skip and jump preferences even though
an early preference indicates distribution to a candidate who has not
been excluded.
Both non Weighted Surplus and segmentation are flaws in the method of
counting that were introduced to facilitate a manual count.
With the use of computer aided counting we can and should adopt a
reiterative weighted surplus counting system such as Meek or Wright that
excludes segmentation.
A reiterative count would ensure that the vote is redistributed as if
the excluded candidate had not stood. It would form part of the Groups
surplus value and be transferred as part of that groups overall surplus
at a recalculated transfer value
The point of segmentation plays a significant role in the distortion and allocation of the count
We Should only be distributing surpluses on each
iteration/distribution. If a candidate is excluded from the count, the
count should be reset and restated ignoring preferences for excluded
candidates. This way a vote at full value is always transferred to the
first available continuing candidate. Surplus transfers should be
weighted to the value of the vote and transferred as a single
transaction.
A liner distribution model
When the AEC get around to publishing the BTL preference data files, which copies have been denied to scrutineers as it takes the Big bang away from the AEC pressing of the button show and allows room for any last minute twigging of the votes as no one knows what is contained in the data file, leaving it open to possible corruption. Scrutineers prevented from being able to verify the contents of the data-file during the count.
The refusal of the AEC to subject the count to a full open and transparent scrutiny undermines confidence in the overall process.
The preference data-files are eventually published, months after the election has been declared and the crowd and public attention has dissipated. This adds a whole new meaning to “secret ballot” when scrutineers are denied access to copies of crucial computer data-files that are used to determine the results of the election just so the AEC can have maintain an element of surprise and leave open a window for preference data to be tweeked
Had these data-files been published progressively during the count then you would have been able to include them in your Calculator's analysis
It would also be possible to highlight the impact in the flaws in the way in which the Senate vote is counted
Analysis of the WA Sent votes based on registered group voting tickets using three different system to count the vote
Model A
Model B
Model C
“The wright System”
Model C (Wright System) being the preferred method as it reflects the voters intentions where first preferences from excluded candidates are distributed as if the excluded candidates had not stood
The other alternative model is Meek which in 99.98% of the time produces the same result as the Wright System