Subject: [EL] IE's in Oakland and IRV elections |
From: Rob Richie |
Date: 11/12/2010, 12:05 PM |
To: Douglas Johnson |
CC: Justin Levitt <Justin.Levitt@lls.edu>, "election-law@mailman.lls.edu" <election-law@mailman.lls.edu> |
Seen any of it in the IRV elections? Given how hard it is to differentiate IE from candidate campaigns (especially at the local level), I think the candidates themselves have to actively discourage potential "expose" IEs.
And relying on IEs to provide vital information to voters seems an acknowledgement that the system is flawed, isn't it? It may still be "the worst system, except all the others," but that's a pretty significant flaw.
- Doug
From: election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu [mailto:election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu] On Behalf Of Justin Levitt
Sent: Friday, November 12, 2010 10:11 AM
To: election-law@mailman.lls.edu
Subject: Re: [EL] problem with winning strategy in IRV elections
I was under the impression that political spending by entities independent of candidates had been growing rather substantially in this era. :)
Justin
On 11/12/2010 9:17 AM, Douglas Johnson wrote:At the risk of re-opening an earlier discussion that some probably wish stay closed, I would point out that the strategy to "Concentrate on Being the 2nd or 3rd Choice" means "Don't say anything negative or revealing about your opponents" -- and that lack of information for the voters is how a jurisdiction (even one as large as San Francisco) ends up with electing someone who claims to reside in a vacant building and who, upon taking office, immediately starts committing extortion.
Voters may say they dislike "negative campaigns," but in this era if the other candidates (and their campaign teams) are not checking up on their opponents, who will?
- Doug
Douglas Johnson
Fellow
Rose Institute of State and Local Government
Claremont McKenna College
o 909-621-8159
m 310-200-2058
From: election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu [mailto:election-law-bounces@mailman.lls.edu] On Behalf Of Rick Hasen
Sent: Friday, November 12, 2010 5:47 AM
To: Election Law
Subject: [EL] Electionlawblog news and commentary 11/12/10
"The Winning Strategy in Oakland: Concentrate on Being 2nd or 3rd Choice"
See this report from "The Bay Citizen" (as reprinted in the NY Times Bay area edition). More on the Oakland race from Fairvote (and here).
Posted by Rick Hasen at 05:37 AM
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Justin Levitt
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