Re: Abbott in Government
That's a fair point, I wasn't considering incomplete voting in that bit of my post - I'd support that.
Personally I'd love to be able to leave incomplete the middle numbers, so I could vote for who I wanted, vote against a few groups I do not want to see get in, and then not care about the ones I don't know about. I'm not sure if any ordered-preference voting system does that (range/approval voting would do it, but that's very different).
Introducing ballot rotation so not everyone's ballot was in the same order would get rid on the "first on the ballot" donkey voting too
I have to challenge your assumption that voters are required to have full, in-depth knowledge of all parties policies. Voters are responsible for expressing their choice when voting. There is absolutely no limit on how they have to determine that choice. Anyone has the right to say "I like fishing, therefore I'm voting for the fishing party". They would have made a choice that makes them happy. Who are you or I or the LNP/ALP or journalist to force such a person to research all the parties policies.
Sure make all parties publish their full senate ticket. But people are allowed to decide their vote in private using their own methodology.
That's a fair point, I wasn't considering incomplete voting in that bit of my post - I'd support that.
Personally I'd love to be able to leave incomplete the middle numbers, so I could vote for who I wanted, vote against a few groups I do not want to see get in, and then not care about the ones I don't know about. I'm not sure if any ordered-preference voting system does that (range/approval voting would do it, but that's very different).
Introducing ballot rotation so not everyone's ballot was in the same order would get rid on the "first on the ballot" donkey voting too