THE CORE

The Mission of F&V

Core principles:

Henry Droop on the "moderate non-partisan section"

Madison on "dangers from abroad" and "the fetters... on liberty"

FRUITS: Support your local, organic growers; and, plant vines and fig trees and pomegranates for the generations to come...

VOTES: For democratization and full representation, for environmental sustainability, social justice, and peace, always sincerely...

Your Orchardist
PRESERVED FRUIT
orchard blocks
  • All
  • FRUITS
  • VOTES
  • wide open spaces
  • 15 May 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, USA

    While the Democratic Party does have proportional representation in its nominating process–and good for it!–even better would be ranked-choice voting in a national primary.

    The next best thing to being able to mark your transferable ballot as Edwards >> Obama would be to donate via the John Edwards page of the Obama campaign website. This is brilliant.

    As for Ladera Frutal, the official work vehicle of the finca has displayed this preference order1 since the day Mr Edwards ended the most social-democratic campaign we are likely to see for some time.

    Edwards-Obama.jpg

    The endorsement speech by Edwards was perfect. Like Obama, Edwards stressed the importance of making the country live up to its claims of greatness, rather than taking that greatness as given.

    As for the impact of the endorsement, one can hardly glance at the Gallup daily tracking trend back to January2 without concluding that Edwards already did the most he could for Obama just by the timing of his withdrawal.
    _______
    The above is not an endorsement. F&V does not endorse candidates, after all.3
    ________

    1. And this reminds me that I need to add that IRV sticker Jack was nice enough to send me some weeks ago. And, of course, this is a truncated ranking, showing only preferences 4 and 5 out of the original 8. []
    2. Planted here previously. []
    3. Although evidence suggests that Ladera Frutal does. []

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: California

    News like this makes me proud to be a Californian, even if the vote was only 4-3.

    Predictably, the Obama campaign takes the safe dodge: it’s up to the states.

    Roy Blunt (R-Mo.) lives up to his name, sounding the cry for his party’s band of bigots:

    this ruling effectively opens the door to allowing the opinion of this state’s court on same-sex marriage to stand as the law of the land for the entire country.

    May it be so. Sometimes the outcome is more important than the process.

    As for the politics, what Scott Lemieux says sounds about right to me:

    People overstate the extent to which people vote on social issues, and people who get outraged by decisions permitting gays and lesbians in other states to get married are overwhelmingly likely to be Republican voters anyway.

    In an earlier post, Scott had noted that six of the seven justices are Republicans.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, USA

    Many House GOP operatives are privately predicting that the party could easily lose up to 20 seats this fall.

    So reports Politico.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    13 May 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, Presidential primaries & caucuses, USA

    John Edwards suspended his bid for the Democratic presidential nomination on 30 January. Today is the West Virginia primary. Today is 13 May.

    Why is John Edwards on today’s West Virginia ballot?

    I mean, how long can it take to print and distribute ballots in a state of just over one million registered voters and area of around 24,000 square miles? I know it is the Mountain State and all that, but still…

    Edwards just might surpass Obama in a few WV counties today.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (1)


    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, Presidential primaries & caucuses, USA

    If you do not know FiveThirtyEight.com, I recommend you go have a look. I would nominate the site for inclusion on any short list of best blogs analyzing the presidential race. Check out today’s put-in-perspective post on West Virginia for just one very valuable example.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (1)


    12 May 2008

    Outgoing London mayor Ken Livingstone in the Guardian:

    One important development at this election was a formal agreement with the Green party calling for second preference mayoral votes for each other. This benefited the Greens - who added 40,000 votes and maintained their share of the vote and existing number of London assembly seats - but also aided the high turnout and Labour. Had I been re-elected I would have given Green nominees a central role in my administration.

    In contrast, Lib Dem failure in London was massive. They chose to stay outside the progressive alliance of Labour and the Greens. As a result they failed even to reach double-figure support in the mayoral election, and their London assembly seats fell from five to three. Hopefully this suicidal orientation will be reversed in the next four years.

    Seen at Making Votes Count.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    11 May 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: Mixed-member

    This is only of historical interest, and I would not have posted it before the London assembly election, anyway, given the advice this columnist offers. But it is interesting inasmuch as it speaks of using the list vote for strategic purposes. I do not know the details of the assembly’s MMP system (tiers, compensation mechanism, etc.–help, anyone?) sufficiently well to determine whether this guy actually “gets” MMP as practiced in London.

    It is almost impossible for the Conservatives to win a seat in the London-wide Assembly Member election (peach-coloured ballot paper). Even though they have come top of the poll in both 2000 and 2004.

    The Tories got half a million votes in this election and not one seat. They came nowhere near to getting a seat. In fact they would have needed many hundreds of thousands more votes to get just one seat. Instead these seats mostly went to Labour, LibDem and Green candidates…

    Why? Because the Tories win a disproportionate number of the Constituency London Assembly Member seats (yellow paper) under first-past-the-post…

    Every Tory vote in this system is wasted, and as a result most of the seats have ended up with those who want to spend spend spend (with the exception of One London).

    Of course, on the Assembly Constituency ballot paper (the yellow one) every Tory vote counts, and seats like Enfield and Haringay are ripe for the taking on a tiny swing from Labour (very likely). So if I were a Tory voter, I would make sure I voted Conservative on yellow ballot paper, but I would vote One London or UKIP on the peach ballot paper - simply because each 100,000 votes (roughly) will deliver a seat for these parties whilst not even half a million votes would win one seat for the Tories.

    Source: mayorwatch.com

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (5)


    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: Coalition governance, Czech Republic

    As noted previously in the Czech Republic block here at F&V, the previous Czech parliamentary election resulted a tied result between the two pre-election alliances.

    Last week, Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek’s three-party center-right 1 government survived a no-confidence vote. The Prague Post news item, excerpted below, hints at (in the part I put in bold) how it is that a bloc of parties with exactly 50% of the seats is able to govern: some defectors from the opposition.2

    It was the opposition’s third attempt to topple the coalition government and despite its fragile majority in the lower house it was fairly clear from the start that the opposition’s chances of success were slim, largely thanks to three independents – former Social Democrat rebels who were expected to support the government. In the end only two of them did, but it was enough. The opposition fell three votes short of achieving its goal and, having done his mathematics, the prime minister looked supremely confident as he listened to criticism from the opposition benches. In fact he even made a point of leafing through the morning papers during the vote itself to show just how unconcerned he was.

    Just another day in parliament…

    Another excerpt from the article is a reminder that parliamentary governments can tolerate dissent on policy votes, but once it comes to survival, the dissidents’ calculation can change quite dramatically:

    Thwarted by three of his own MPs during a Parliament debate on church restitutions on Tuesday, Mr. Topolánek was smarting from his unexpected defeat. Tuesday’s show of coalition unity in the lower house could not have come at a better time for him.

    Just another week in parliamentarism.
    _______

    1. Despite the Greens’ being one of those three. Topolanek heads the Civic Democratic Party, and the Christian Democrats are the other partner. []
    2. Survival is a different matter: It takes a majority to oust the cabinet, and obviously the opposition does not have a majority either. But without the independent support, the cabinet could not pass legislation if the opposition united to, well, oppose. []

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    09 May 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: The Railyard

    So, what are you doing to observe National Train Day?

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (6)


    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, Presidential primaries & caucuses, USA

    Earlier today, someone sent me the following item, and Phil at PolySigh also has noted it. It is one of those things that is just almost impossible to believe.

    Clinton picked people for her team primarily for their loyalty to her, instead of their mastery of the game. That became abundantly clear in a strategy session last year, according to two people who were there. As aides looked over the campaign calendar, chief strategist Mark Penn confidently predicted that an early win in California would put her over the top because she would pick up all the state’s 370 delegates. It sounded smart, but as every high school civics student now knows, Penn was wrong: Democrats, unlike the Republicans, apportion their delegates according to vote totals, rather than allowing any state to award them winner-take-all. Sitting nearby, veteran Democratic insider Harold M. Ickes, who had helped write those rules, was horrified — and let Penn know it. “How can it possibly be,” Ickes asked, “that the much vaunted chief strategist doesn’t understand proportional allocation?”

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (14)


    PoliBlog grafted The Personnel Skills of Hillary R. Clinton
    Jacob Christensen grafted Strategy (2)

    07 May 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, USA

    I have updated my ‘Polls and Votes’ comparison at the original planting,1 showing the difference between final pre-election polling aggregate and the actual vote for each Democratic pre-candidate.

    The punchline: Indiana is like Missouri and North Carolina rather resembles Virginia and Wisconsin.
    ________

    1. The link takes you to a comment; earlier comments did the same updating for other primaries since the original planting. []

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    05 May 2008

    My various questions have been answered by the propagators. Thanks!

    As you likely know by now, London held mayoral and assembly elections over the weekend. “Red Ken” Livingstone was denied a third term as mayor, defeated by Boris Johnson of the Conservative party.

    The mayor is elected by one of the single-winner ranked-choice voting methods, known variously as the “contingent vote” or the “supplementary vote.” Voters may give a second as well as first preference.1 If no candidate has a majority of first preferences, all candidates other than the top two in first preferences are eliminated, and the excluded candidates’ voters’ second preferences are taken into account. Thus this rule is really the one that most deserves the name “instant runoff” that is often used in the USA for any of the various majoritarian ranked-choice systems: it literally mimics a top-two runoff in one round of voting.

    The difference with an actual two-round runoff is that voters do not actually know the top two (in first preferences) when they give their second preferences. In races with two clear leading candidates before the voting begins, this is not a major flaw, though in a race among three or more candidates without clarity about which two are in the lead, it is a very big flaw. Of course, the difference with the other system often known as “instant runoff,” the alternative vote, is that under the latter, candidates are sequentially eliminated and their voters’ next preferences transferred, until one of the remaining candidates crosses the 50%+1 victory threshold.

    A question for reformers, especially Americans: Is this distinction between the alternative vote and the contingent/supplementary vote understood in reform circles? If not, should it be?

    Now back to London. The Guardian shows the two counts that led to Johnson’s winning the majority. He led at the first count, 43.2% to 37%. Brian Paddick of the Liberal Democratic party came in third with 9.8%. Sian Brady of the Greens was next with 3.2% and Richard Barnbrook of the BNP won 2.9%. There were five other candidates. After the elimination of the candidates other than Johnson and Livingstone, Johnson wound up with 53.2%.

    Malcom Clark, quoting from London Elects, notes why some second preferences counted and others did not:

    “on papers where the 1st and 2nd choice votes are for the top two candidates, the 2nd choice votes are not counted.” There are two plausible and complementary explanations for why these 260066 people (10.5% of all who voted) didn’t have their 2nd choice vote count:

    (i) the “we like them bothers” - people who either voted Boris 1 Ken 2, or Ken 1 Boris 2.

    (ii) the “party faithful” - those that ‘double-voted’ and marked their second choice the same as their first choice (so Boris Boris, or Ken Ken) in the misguided hope that that would somehow benefit their candidate more.2

    The London Assembly is elected by list PR MMP.3 The BNP won 5.3% and just cleared the threshold to win a seat.

    Malcolm has a whole series of posts about the elections at Make My Vote Count.
    ___________

    1. Hoping someone can confirm whether third or further preferences are allowed. I gather not, which is, of course, bad for voters whose second choice is someone other than one of the top two first-choice candidates in the electorate–especially if the voter is uncertain as to which two those might be. []
    2. This is a potential flaw I had not though of before in the column format used in London (and, I believe, San Francisco) in which a voter is to make one mark in a column for first preference and another in a column for second preferences. In many other ranked-choice jurisdictions there is a single column of boxes in which the voter writes numbers corresponding to preferences. []
    3. Are lists open, closed, flexible? Can anyone inform? []

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (18)


    30 April 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: FRUITS

    Kudos to California Democratic Assemblyman Dave Jones for introducing a bill that would enhance the fruit-stand business opportunities for farmers.

    Ladera Frutal would not be taking advantage, but this proposal looks like a really good idea.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: Mixed-member, S.E. Europe

    Jack notes that Albania has joined the growing (but still small) set of countries to abandon a mixed-member electoral system.

    In fact, Albania has had quite a diversity of electoral systems in its short democratic existence. After one post-communist election under two-round majority, it had one election under MMP, then changed to MMM, then back to MMP, and now, apparently, will have all-list PR. In the absence of any other information, I will assume that the lists will be closed (as they were for the MM systems). But perhaps they can give open lists a try one day.

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (0)


    29 April 2008

    Planted by MSS
    Planted in: '08, Presidential primaries & caucuses, USA

    A graphic in the NY Times purports to explain “all” of how the Democratic presidential nominating race has gone to date. Well, not really…

    I know it’s hard work, but it would be nice if the reporters who put stuff like this together would use politically relevant units for their analysis.

    Counties, with their vast variation in population, tell you nothing.

    Delegates are apportioned (mostly) in congressional districts by (mostly) proportional representation.

    So, while it is interesting, it’s also rather beside the point how many counties in which someone has “won” the most votes.

    (Via Marc Ambinder and Steven Taylor.)

    Propagation: Seeds & scions (2)


    Next Page ?
    FRUIT FEEDS
    PROPAGATION
    Recent comments.

  • It’s just too complex (14)
    • Bob Richard: Alan, #9: if the US political elite actually understood the working of election systems they would immediately institute a different...
    • Alan: I urge all fructovoters to join me in holding our breaths until our host does his even magnitude allocation analysis.
    • Tom Round: I don’t know what formula the Dems use to apportion delegates across districts - my guess is either [1] Hare quota and highest...
    • MSS: Alan: “if the US political elite actually understood the working of election systems they would immediately institute a different...
    • MSS: We discussed the even magnitudes back at the start of February. I generally agree they are not a good idea. But then neither are 3-seat...
    • Alan: While I take Jack’s point. the principle of transparency demands that the working of an electoral system not be so opaque that errors...
    • Jack: I’m inclined to think there’s a connection between Obama understanding PR and supporting a return to cumulative voting in IL...
    • Alan: Actually, the fatal error was not contesting the ‘Potomac primary’. Under PR, even, perhaps especially. PRBM, you cannot give...
    • MSS: Yes, it seems pretty evident that the Obama campaign understood the PR system and the Clinton campaign thought it could win on early...
    • Alan: The problem with the rather blasé allegation that CLinton’s abysmal electoral advice reflects some non-trivial characteristic is that...
    • Tom Round: Cross-posted at Polisigh: Next: Penn advising Hillary, “Look, just accept the Vice-Presidenti al nomination for now, because if we...
  • John Edwards 2008! (1)
    • MSS: So, Edwards has his best showing since 29 January. And then the next day endorses another candidate. Go figure!
  • 538 (1)
    • rac: This site does what media organizations should do more often with readily accessible data, instead of just speculating on individual factors....
  • Saskatchewan election called (8)
    • Tom Round: No separate thread for Alberta? Is MSS foreshadowing the Canada of 2028, not of 2008? Anyway, this from Colby Cosh: ‘… The...
  • CROSS-POLLINATION

    FRUITS

    morn_blms_corralito.jpg

    The Fruit Blog (Fruit & fruit breeding)
    Daley's Fruit Tree Blog
    The Orchard Keeper
    Organic Researcher
    Small farms ("real people & real food")
    Life begins at 30 (Farmers markets, etc.)
    Rare Fruit News Online
    Cloudforest Cafe


    VOTES

    bulgaria_protest copy

    Comparative democracy

    Psephos (Adam Carr's data archive)
    Electoral Panorama
    M. Herrera's Electoral Calendar
    The Democratic Piece
    Countries at the Crossroads (Freedom House blog)
    Electoral Geography (Data archive)
    Michael Gallagher's data archive
    Election Finance (Blog, data archive)
    European Election Law News
    IFES
    Election Law
    VoteLaw
    Vote View
    Third Party Watch
    Ballot Access News

    Electoral and Political Reform

    The FairVote Blog (US)
    Make my vote count (UK)
    democraticSPACE (Canada)
    Citizens Assembly Blog


    POLITOLOGY

    Blogs of political analysis

    Political Science Weblog (abstracts)
    PoliBlog
    Arms and Influence
    Josep Colomer
    Crooked Timber
    The Head Heeb (dormant)
    Political Arithmetik
    Polysigh
    Chapel Hill Treehouse
    Political Behavior (dormant)
    Simon Jackman
    Jacob T. Levy

    OTHER SOCIAL SCIENCE BLOGS

    Statistical Modeling
    Social Science Statistics
    Cold Spring Shops
    Marginal Revolution
    Brad DeLong

    GREEN LIVING (and voting)

    Greens for Greens
    Green Options
    Sustainability Blog
    TreeHugger
    Green Commons
    California Greening
    Philobiblon (UK)
    Prayingmantis (NZ)
    Meretz USA (Israel)

    JEWISH LIVING

    The Jew and the Carrot
    Mah Rabu
    Baraita
    Jewschool
    Tikkun Ger
    Pharisees Rock!

    THE HOPYARD

    Beer Advocate
    Rate Beer
    Seen Through a Glass
    A Good Beer Blog
    Seven Pack Beer Blog
    Beer and Food
    Beer Culture

    THE BALLYARD

    6-4-2
    Halos Heaven
    Global Baseball
    Management by Baseball
    Sabernomics
    Baseball Musings
    Gaslamp Ball
    Beyond the Boxscore
    John Sickles

    THE RAILYARD

    Cold Spring Shops
    Rip Track
    Stephen Rees's blog

    SUN & MOON

    CURRENT MOON

    NEWS

    ABC

    BBC

    CBC

    Democracy Now!

    Deutsche Welle

    El Tiempo

    Guardian

    Haaretz

    Hindustan Times

    The Independent

    NZ Stuff

    RFE/RL

    ORGANIZATIONS

    About/disclaimer

    California Rare Fruit Growers

    Center for Voting and Democracy

    Californians for Electoral Reform

    Society for American Baseball Research

    Link TV

    SCION EXCHANGE

    HARVESTS

    If by my laws you walk, and my commands you keep, and observe them,
    then I will give-forth your rains in their set-time,
    so that the earth gives-forth its yield
    and the trees of the field give-forth their fruit.
    --Vayikra 26: 3-4

    ORCHARD SERVICES

    F&V time: This blog's date function is so set as to start a new day at approximately local sunset. (Why, if we have "day" and "night," should a new "day" start in the middle of the night?)

    F&V Coordinates: A compass may be helpful for navigating the orchard--a Political Compass, that is.

    Your Orchardist's coordinates:

    • –3.88 Economic left
    • –6.26 Social libertarian
    ...approximately the location of The Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand and close to the ideological positions of Gandhi, Nelson Mandela, and Ralph Nader.

    Fruits & Votes encourages the flourishing of all democratic political viewpoints, respectfully presented.

    best portable air conditioner tested bad side effects of viagra

    Powered by WordPress