Talk:Proportional representation: Difference between revisions
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YOU have violated the [[WP:3RR]] rule. I have contacted [[User:Øln]], and [[User:Reallavergne]] to provide assistance on this article. Judging by the archives, you have previously engaged in edit wars with these two editors. [[User:Reallavergne]] has mentioned on [[User:Øln]]'s talk page: "I'm afraid I am going to have to launch a formal complaint against BalCoder, as all he can do is revert and criticize. He has now reverted everything I have contributed en masse three times now, and has not contributed one edit himself in response to our discussions. At least if he was selective in his reversions or offered some text of his own to try to address the concerns I have expressed, I could understand. It seems he is incapable of considering any changes at all to what he wrote back in August - not even stylistic errors - and so no progress is being made on the page. However, I know you have been reading at least some of our discussion, so perhaps before I launch a call for dispute resolution, you have a comment offer on the talk page?Reallavergne (talk) 14:27, 27 September 2014 (UTC)". In fact, you have previously been part of a dispute resolution [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive854]] "24. Mass reversion and disrespectful language - Proportional Representation" on this same topic for the same unacceptable conduct! It seems you have routinely engaged in edit wars in the past on this article where you mass reverted content. You should have selectively removed only the areas of disagreement. These other editors also noted that you did not provide sources to back up your opinions. You were also extremely rude to these other editors as well. For example, on September 24th, 2014, [[User:Reallavergne]] noted "I don't find that you are being respectful here. Let us please try to avoid accusations such as the above and assume that we are working in good faith." To sum up, you have been repeatedly told by other editors (on this very same article) that mass reversions are unacceptable, that you need to provide SOURCES, and that you must act in a civil manner. |
YOU have violated the [[WP:3RR]] rule. I have contacted [[User:Øln]], and [[User:Reallavergne]] to provide assistance on this article. Judging by the archives, you have previously engaged in edit wars with these two editors. [[User:Reallavergne]] has mentioned on [[User:Øln]]'s talk page: "I'm afraid I am going to have to launch a formal complaint against BalCoder, as all he can do is revert and criticize. He has now reverted everything I have contributed en masse three times now, and has not contributed one edit himself in response to our discussions. At least if he was selective in his reversions or offered some text of his own to try to address the concerns I have expressed, I could understand. It seems he is incapable of considering any changes at all to what he wrote back in August - not even stylistic errors - and so no progress is being made on the page. However, I know you have been reading at least some of our discussion, so perhaps before I launch a call for dispute resolution, you have a comment offer on the talk page?Reallavergne (talk) 14:27, 27 September 2014 (UTC)". In fact, you have previously been part of a dispute resolution [[Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive854]] "24. Mass reversion and disrespectful language - Proportional Representation" on this same topic for the same unacceptable conduct! It seems you have routinely engaged in edit wars in the past on this article where you mass reverted content. You should have selectively removed only the areas of disagreement. These other editors also noted that you did not provide sources to back up your opinions. You were also extremely rude to these other editors as well. For example, on September 24th, 2014, [[User:Reallavergne]] noted "I don't find that you are being respectful here. Let us please try to avoid accusations such as the above and assume that we are working in good faith." To sum up, you have been repeatedly told by other editors (on this very same article) that mass reversions are unacceptable, that you need to provide SOURCES, and that you must act in a civil manner. |
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Moreover, there is nothing incoherent about pointing out the OBVIOUS difference between the numbers 47 and 3! How could you possible expect people to believe that only 3 nations use FPTP? I am reverting this blatant vandalism.[[User:Ontario Teacher BFA BEd|Ontario Teacher BFA BEd]] ([[User talk:Ontario Teacher BFA BEd|talk]]) 22:51, 3 November 2015 (UTC) |
Moreover, there is nothing incoherent about pointing out the OBVIOUS difference between the numbers 47 and 3! How could you possible expect people to believe that only 3 nations use FPTP? I am reverting this blatant vandalism.[[User:Ontario Teacher BFA BEd|Ontario Teacher BFA BEd]] ([[User talk:Ontario Teacher BFA BEd|talk]]) 22:51, 3 November 2015 (UTC) |
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:Hi [[User:BalCoder]], [[User:Ontario Teacher BFA BEd|Ontario Teacher BFA BEd]], I am afraid that proper treatment of your dispute would require more time than I can afford to put into it. There are certainly some strange things going on. Why, Balcoder would you ever want to say that only three countries use FPTP? You know that is nonsense as much as I do. But Ontario, I am just as befuddled by your treatment of MMP. MMP can be quite highly proportional - certainly as proportional as STV, but it is also relatively rare (Germany, New Zealand and Scotland - that is about it). That you recognize neither of these points perplexes me. Maybe you are confusing semi-proportional MMM systems and MMP. Both are mixed systems, but one is more proportional than the other. |
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:Ontario, I recognize your complaints against Balcoder, as I had the same complaints and eventually gave up working on this Wikipedia page because I found Balcoder to be abusive and too hard to work with (Sorry Balcoder, it's the truth). So, Balcoder, I admit that I started to review your dispute with some bias against you. However, I recognize that you play a useful policing role, and as I reviewed some of the changes that Ontario had made, they did not seem to me to be improvements over what was there before and tended to muddy the waters, so I tend to sympathize that your approach may have been best in this case and it's probably a good thing that you are prepared to do it. |
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:I see that this dispute goes back to August 17, and I have already spent about three hours just trying to disentagle things a bit for myself. So, without investing hours or even days of time that I don't have right now, I am afraid I don't have a solution to your current impasse. Looking at a few of the reversions, I am inclined to believe that the mass revert in this case may have been largely justified. It's messy, that's for sure. All I can say is that this can happen in Wikipedia. I can't afford the time to try to do any more to help fix this one and feel sorry that both of you have invested so much time and effort into this, apparently to little avail. [[User:Reallavergne|Reallavergne]] ([[User talk:Reallavergne|talk]]) 02:16, 4 November 2015 (UTC) |
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{{reflist-talk|title=References for '''Edits and Reversions by {{u|BalCoder}} and {{u|Ontario Teacher BFA BEd}}'''}} <!-- Section title, not personal title --> |
{{reflist-talk|title=References for '''Edits and Reversions by {{u|BalCoder}} and {{u|Ontario Teacher BFA BEd}}'''}} <!-- Section title, not personal title --> |
Revision as of 02:16, 4 November 2015
Politics B‑class High‑importance | ||||||||||
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This page has archives. Sections older than 30 days may be automatically archived by Lowercase sigmabot III when more than 3 sections are present. |
Deviation from proportionality was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 10 October 2014 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Proportional representation. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here. |
Lithuania
Doesn't Lithuania have some sort of proportional representation system?
Edits and Reversions by BalCoder and Ontario Teacher BFA BEd
First part of discussion between BalCoder and Ontario Teacher BFA BEd. Please do not modify this discussion.
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Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: You have re-inserted statements I reverted so I am again reverting them. Here are the reasons.
1, Link between constituent and representative: In your new first sentence, "ridings do not exist" is wrong (you contradict yourself in the next sentence - "half of the electoral ridings" - for this reason alone your revision should be reverted). Ridings exist in all PR systems, they are simply bigger than in an FPTP system. So your claim that "there is no link between voters and their parliamentary representatives" is wrong, only where the district encompasses "larger districts, especially those with a nationwide district" is the point justified but you have deleted that. Why? With STV there are no rules saying Nunavut cannot continue to be a single member district if that's what people want. When STV was used in Alberta and Manitoba all rural districts were single member; in the recent STV plan for the UK mentioned elsewhere in the article the Outer Hebrides would continue to be a single member district. Perhaps I misunderstand the word "ridings" which appears here for the first time in the article. I assume it means electoral "districts" but, not knowing Canada, I am not sure. In WP it is a good idea when a term is used for the first time to provide a link to the appropriate WP article. In "The disadvantage of the proportional representation system..." the first "The" is wrong because, as the rest of the article makes clear, there are other PR disadvantages: you must use the indefinite article. The next "the", in "of the proportional representation system", is also wrong: There is not one PR system but three (see the top of the article). Better would be "of proportional representation..." referring to just the concept. In MMP, you write, "half of the electoral ridings are elected through PR". That too is wrong, in NZ they have 50 list members and 70 districts and are thinking of fixing a 40:60 ratio; Lesotho has a still lower ratio. But you have deleted the words that hinted at this, "up to half". MMP is normally "mixed member proportional representation You have deleted the essay template ({{essay|section|date=May 2015}} at the beginning of the section). Why? The rest of the section doesnt't have an essay-like style? The text you replaced may not have been much good but you have clearly not improved it. What point are you trying to make which wasn't already addressed? Can't you integrate it into the existing text? 2, Party list PR: you have added the statement "Unfortunately, this can result in candidates that appeal more to their respective political bases than to the general public as a whole." That may be so but you haven't provided a source. Please see WP:VERIFY: "Even if you're sure something is true, it must be verifiable before you can add it." An example too would be good. --BalCoder (talk) 08:56, 20 August 2015 (UTC)
BalCoder
I agree that WP requires articles to reflect sources. Therefore, I have provided sources below that should clear up your confusion as to what mixed systems are: "Mixed electoral systems attempt to combine the positive attributes of both plurality/majority (or other) and PR electoral systems. In a mixed system, there are two electoral systems using different formulae running alongside each other. The votes are cast by the same voters and contribute to the election of representatives under both systems. One of those systems is a plurality/majority system (or occasionally an ‘other’ system), usually a single-member district system, and the other a List PR system. There are two forms of mixed system. When the results of the two types of election are linked, with seat allocations at the PR level being dependent on what happens in the plurality/majority (or other) district seats and compensating for any disproportionality that arises there, the system is called a Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) system." [1] "C. Mixed Systems Some jurisdictions have chosen to use a mixture of majority and proportional representation systems in order to achieve the benefits of both. Since the late 1940s in Germany, for example, one half of the seats in the Bundestag (the lower house of parliament) have been filled by plurality, using single-member constituencies, while the other half are filled using party lists, according to the d'Hondt system. Voters mark two choices on their ballot papers: one from among a list of parties, the other from among a slate of candidates for district representation."[2] To conclude, as verified by the above sources, there are actually three voting systems: plurality/majoritarian, mixed, and PR. 'Mixed systems' is a distinct voting system category which shares characteristics of both PR and plurality systems. The fact that mixed voting systems such as MMP share characteristics with PR systems does not negate the existence of this distinct and critical third category. Additionally, a plethora of sources within the article clearly state that the two PR types are STV and party list. It is important not to confuse readers by inserting contradictions into the article. I encourage you to follow WP:VERIFY policy, and thoroughly research mixed systems prior to capriciously denying their existence. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk • contribs) 11:20, 1 September 2015 (UTC)
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- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: "'Mixed systems' is a distinct voting system category": well, which is it, a voting system, as you write in the lead, or a voting system category? A good faith editor, comparing O'Neal with the other sources, would realize that a researcher in the Canadian parliament's research service in 1993 does not trump the world's academics, and would not use the source, especially as O'Neal does not mention "mixed member" or "MMP" at all. A good faith editor would avoid the inconsistency of questioning the reliability as sources of advocacy groups such as Fairvote USA, and then using the Electoral Reform Society's classification of voting systems to set aside Forder at Oxford UK, Amy at Mt.Holyoke College, Mass., and the Law Commission of Canada. A good faith editor would realize that voting system classifications are irrelevant in the lead because the concern there is to summarize ways to produce a proportional result - two of the methods mentioned are not even voting systems. In the body a classification, two tier systems, is used as a section title to add structure. The term is particularly appropriate because two tier apportionment exists specifically to improve proportional representation, the subject of the article. So a good faith editor would realize that re-naming the "Two tier systems" section to "Mixed systems" is inappropriate, since some mixed systems (all but one) are not proportional, and some of the following sub-sections (all but one) have nothing to do with mixed systems. Placing "Mixed systems" at the same level as "PR electoral systems" as if it were something other than PR, is wrong and will mislead readers. In the same way, a good faith editor of Template:Electoral systems would not re-name "Semi-proportional representation" to "Mixed systems" because most of the following sub-sections, e.g.cumulative voting, have nothing to do with mixed systems; in fact, a good faith editor would be in no doubt that such a crude change would be tantamount to vandalism. A good faith editor with not even the most tenuous understanding of party list systems would refrain from changing the article's party list PR section, regardless of how bad it is, and if nonetheless tempted would provide sources for any outlandish claims - arguing from the specific (Netherlands/Israel) to the general (open & closed lists have no districts) is a logical fallacy and no good. Understanding that the article concerns PR, a good faith editor would realize that an extensive discourse on closed party lists in single nationwide districts would be more appropriate in the Party list article (the Template:Main link to which you deleted). A good faith editor, especially a beginner, would respect WP rules and guidelines when they are pointed out, and take care not to delete a section ("Wider benefits to society") and other sourced text inadvertently, or without explanation. A good faith editor, knowing that Canada is not the only FPTP user, would hesitate to claim for FPTP the universal benefit of facilitating the removal of party leaders from parliament when the Canadian example is probably due more to the weak identification of Canadians with political parties. Your edits (to say nothing of your Talk posts) have not demonstrated good faith so, since no admin has deigned to respond to my WP:ANI request to block you, I have no alternative but to revert. (As a final tip I refer you to Help:Show preview about avoiding clogging up the change log). --BalCoder (talk) 08:48, 14 September 2015 (UTC)
- Perhaps Admins haven't responded since they may end up blocking you both due to WP:BOOMERANG? You're argument of "Admins haven't done
what I wantedanything, so I'll take matters into my own hands" (paraphrased) is very weak grounds for an WP:EDITWAR and reverting, though I do agree with your mention of using the "Preview" button to avoid "clogging up the change log" as you put it. - Too be completely frank, this needs either several RfCs for each section of disputed content, or a few WP:3O's from interested editors, or perhaps simply going to WP:DRN. Have either of you actually sought any of these options? Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 12:44, 14 September 2015 (UTC); edited 10:10, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
- Perhaps Admins haven't responded since they may end up blocking you both due to WP:BOOMERANG? You're argument of "Admins haven't done
- Dr Crazy 102: Thanks for your comments. I was prepared, almost expected, to be blocked too, at least that would have been a response. I reject your characterization: my grounds for reverting are documented repeatedly and at length above. Having tried reasoning on the Talk page, invoking WP:BRD, invoking WP:ANI and asking for help or suggestions on the Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Politics page (which is what a RfC would have done) I think I have done enough. So I am back to simply reverting again. I wasn't aware of WP:3O and WP:DRN but if you or anyone else want to try them you are welcome. --BalCoder (talk) 08:03, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
- BalCoder, I was perhaps a bit harsh with the wording of your reasoning for reverting (and have changed it), but what you wanted was for a response and for someone to be blocked (either Ontario, yourself or both). I would also like to point out that there is no onus on outside participants to mediate unless they are acting as volunteers for one of the above services, or they are an Admin volunteering their time. An RfC actually goes out to a lot more people than a single WikiProject. Have a look at the Feedback Request Service (a.k.a. RfC Members list) for what I mean, though it is good that you also put up a notice at the WikiProject Politics page.
- If you want me to, I can attempt to help with any resolution attempts you and/or Ontario want to make (through technical help or suggestions), or I can ask for an Admin to either mediate themselves or WP:PING another Admin who has more experience or inclination. Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 10:10, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102: Thanks again for your help - you are the only one to have offered any. I would be delighted if you could involve an admin. Unfortunately, if they do not know a little of the subject it might cost them a little time. Apart from hitting the undo button from time to time, I do not intend to spend any more time on User Ontario - his latest post below "I am thrilled..." etc (01:08 15 Sep) shows how pointless it is - but of course if any admin asks for clarification I will provide it. --BalCoder (talk) 13:50, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
BalCoder I am thrilled we have finally come to a consensus that 'mixed systems' is a distinct voting system. I noticed that you had previously removed the mention of mixed systems from the article several months prior to my contributions "(cur | prev) 11:27, 11 December 2014 BalCoder (talk | contribs) . . (75,151 bytes) (+17,245) . . (Lead: compress (WP:LEADLENGTH), simplify. Body: replace STV; change mixed to two-tier systems, replace MMP, add biproportional rep.; add sortition, some page nos.) (undo | thank)". This critical language has now been restored. I have added three scholarly articles to the already lengthy list of sources on the topic of mixed electoral systems. [3][4][5][6]: 22 [7][8] [9] [10] [11]. Hopefully this ends the contention about the existence of mixed systems. You have argued "some mixed systems (all but one) are not proportional". I encourage you to conduct research to substantiate this opinion and contribute sourced text. You might want to consider adding content to 'Additional Member System', and 'Alternative Vote Plus' in order to clarify why you feel AMS and AVP are less proportional mixed systems compared to MMP; which as a hybrid system is only somewhat proportional.
You have previously asserted that "all PR systems use districts". I am relieved that you have now observed that the Netherlands and Israel as well as the Ukraine and Russia (when they used PR) use party list PR without delineated districts. [12][13] [14] [15] [16] [17] [18] [19] [20] [14] That is to say, these nations are not subdivided into local constituencies, but rather the entire country is one zone. This fact is particularly relevant to the section 'Link between constituent and representative'.
However, I am deeply disappointed by your intentionally abrasive behaviour. Please treat other editors with the same level of respect with which you wish to be treated. Please take the time to practice good faith by researching your claims and post sourced contributions as I have done. Alternatively, if you do not wish to take the time and effort to research the topic and post sourced contributions to the article, you might want to consider pursuing other topics instead. Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 01:06, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
- Umm, Ontario Teacher BFA BEd, what are you saying in your second sentence? I think you may be wanting to use a Wikipedia:Diff link instead of showing the text of the said diff as the diff link shows far more information as well as the relevant content changes. At any rate, this seems to be the diff Ontario is referring to. Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 10:37, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102 Thank you for your mediation. I am disappointed that BalCoder has chosen not to research the topic and post sourced contributions, and instead has decided to periodically and arbitrarily revert the WP article. That being said, he/she has claimed that "some mixed systems (all but one) are not proportional". Although there was no sourced research to substantiate this opinion, it does bring up a valid point; if the article includes some Semi-proportional representation systems such as MMP, why not others such as Alternative Vote Plus, Additional Member System, and Majority bonus system? I have therefore included other mixed electoral systems, and included them in the article. So far, I have simply transferred existing content from their respective WP pages. I have also restructured the article to reposition 'Two-tier party list systems', 'Biproportional apportionment', and 'Sortition' into the 'Party List' PR section as these are not types of mixed electoral systems. I would welcome a fellow editor who is willing to put the time and effort into researching the topic and post sourced contributions.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 23:15, 15 September 2015 (UTC)
- I am hardly mediating compared to some of what I have seen, though I suppose I am in a small way. I have discussed BalCoder's reversion behaviour above, though I can understand where they are coming from; 'no one seems to have noticed or acted to mediate, they decided to attempt to solve the problem themselves'. While this is highly discouraged outside of exceptional circumstances, per WP:BRD and WP:IAR, it is understandable. To be frank with you as well, you seem to be a bit passive-aggressive with your own posts. Do not call out conduct unless absolutely needed, and try to do so in a productive way, not an "I don't like it" statement, as this can inflame the situation and just leads to general enmity.
- To be honest, I don't understand much of the political systems and can hardly remember how I came to this page (fuzzy memory of perhaps WP:ANI, rather ironic really). I have little opinion on the inclusion or exclusions of the content as I don't understand the systems. However, your statement: "I have simply transferred existing content from their respective WP pages," does raise some concerns as that typically needs a Template:Copied inserted to maintain a level of credibility and to show that it isn't actually your own work but, in fact, is someone else's (likely several someone else's). I'm not too fussed as your edits do seem to be in good-faith and you are still new to Wiki according to your account logs, so this is to inform you not reprimand. I will try to find an Admin to try better mediation, and to review the ANI posts. I will also start a new RfC about the disputed content, if that is still desired. Please remember to use indents (a.k.a.
:
) when posting comments that are in reply to something (preferably under what is being replied to), Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 07:22, 16 September 2015 (UTC); minor edit 09:17, 16 September 2015 (UTC)
- Proposition - Would either BalCoder or Ontario Teacher BFA BEd be opposed to moving this discussion to WP:DRN? Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 11:16, 19 September 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102: Thanks again for your perseverence. A pity that no-one with understanding of the subject seems willing to help, but understandable. I have looked at a few WP:DRN items and am dismayed by the amount of input required from the protagonists so I prefer User:Abecedare's talk page suggestion to User:Ontario, which amounts to WP:BRD: Ontario has been bold, I have reverted, now we discuss item by item. I am waiting for Ontario to propose the first change he wants to make. --BalCoder (talk) 13:40, 19 September 2015 (UTC)
- DRN only requires as much or as little input as you wish to provide. Considering how much you have discussed above, I didn't think this would be much of a problem. If BalCoder (you) and Ontario Teacher BFA BEd want, I can attempt to act as a mediator here instead of moving to DRN for discussion of each "item"/section, but I would have to act in a similar way to DRN volunteers/mediators and have you both agree and respect the same type of "rules" (I promise nothing stringent and restrictive). Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 04:35, 21 September 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102: You will have noted that in his response Ontario ignored your proposition. I expect him to continue to avoid discussion, because he dosen't have a leg to stand on. So I prefer to play his game and have provided some proposals as he requested. He will avoid answering, perhaps with the excuse I haven't provided sources (he wants sources that say his fanciful statements are wrong?) Please continue to keep an eye on this. --BalCoder (talk) 09:57, 21 September 2015 (UTC)
- The approach of User:BalCoder to revert all edits Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary, in particular minor edits Help:Minor edit such as: spelling and grammar errors, the addition of Wiki-links Help:Link (for closed, open, and local list PR), formatting that does not change the meaning of a page (such as adding a table based on existing data or creating subtitles for closed, open and local list PR), obvious factual errors (such as updating that Russia uses MMP now instead of PR), and fixing layout errors, has been counterproductive. The Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary states: "Don't revert a large edit because much of it is bad and you don't have time to rewrite the whole thing. Instead, find even a little bit of the edit that is not objectionable and undo the rest.". The Wikipedia:BOLD, revert, discuss cycle also states: "BRD is not a valid excuse for reverting good-faith efforts to improve a page simply because you don't like the changes.". In order to avoid Wikipedia:Edit warring, please follow the BRD cycle which states "A bold change during an edit war should be an adaptive edit to discourage further warring and not to escalate it; it should never be another revert.". This means mass reverts of another editor's content is unacceptable; it causes edit warring. Instead, reversions must incorporate minor edits, and only revert the specific areas of disagreement. Adaptive edits are how Wikipedia:Consensus is built. Once the updated version is restored, I look forward to User:BalCoder's proposal of specific adaptive reversions he/she wishes to make substantiated by sourced information. Any sourced information will be considered. Adaptive edits are a method of avoiding a Filibuster by striving to reach a consensus. Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 19:27, 19 September 2015 (UTC)
- I am aware of BalCoder's actions, and this has been discussed above. I have assumed good-faith on both parts considering the edit-war between both you and BalCoder. I have also assumed that both you and BalCoder are wanting to actually help the article but have come to loggerheads. Please see my above reply to BalCoder about whether you and BalCoder would appreciate Talk-Page moderation instead of DRN.
- For now, I would suggest starting a sub-section (i.e.
=== [area of article] ===
) for each area of contention but to keep the section intro brief. This at least allows talk-page discussion of the contested edits. Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 04:35, 21 September 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: My proposals for specific reversions? Here are three, which seem to be the basic misunderstandings on which your ideas are built (please supply the citation and the exact words you refer to):
- In your "Party list PR" section: "Pure proportional representation systems such as closed and open list do not use delineated electoral districts". Please provide two solid sources, one academic, for this. I first asked for these sources on Aug.26. You still have not provided one and are now spreading this mistake to other WP articles. I'll make it easier for you: ignore the "pure" bit. (NB. www.proportional-representation.org is not acceptable because it concerns only its own specific "one zone" system).
- MMP is semi-proportional. You don't actually say this in the article in so many words, but you have done on the Talk page, in Template:Electoral systems and in the MMP article, and you have moved MMP from "PR electoral systems" to a new "Mixed electoral systems" section and added there a link to the semi-PR article. You did that despite the three sources (one of which you deleted) in para.2 of the article as currently protected (refs 6,7,8) that contradict this. Please provide three solid sources for this including two academic sources, just like the sources you choose to overlook.
- You wrote in User:Abecedare's talk page : "The principal point of contention is User:BalCoder's belief that mixed electoral systems do not exist." Please identify one place anywhere in WP where I say this, and my exact words.
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: My proposals for specific reversions? Here are three, which seem to be the basic misunderstandings on which your ideas are built (please supply the citation and the exact words you refer to):
- If you can't provide these sources (they don't exist) please revert all related changes. --BalCoder (talk) 09:57, 21 September 2015 (UTC)
- BalCoder
- 1. You are required to follow the Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary policy. The onus is on you to provide sources (ideally scholarly) to substantiate your reversions. You must also target only the areas of contention without inadvertently reverting minor edits Help:Minor edit.
- 2. Pure Proportional Representation does NOT include delineated districts.
- As requested, here are three sources (including two which are scholarly) as evidence. References 12-18 also cover this content.
- "pure proportional representation… This means that there would be: no districts, or zones of multi-member districts”[21]
- “Systems of representation can be conceived in territorial terms: legislators represent territoriality defined constituencies or districts at one end of the spectrum and the whole country in systems of pure proportional representation.”Cite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - “the classic proportional systems are the “pure” forms, such as those in Israel and the Netherlands, where there is effectively one electoral district (the whole nation) whose vote totals determine the allocation of all the parliamentary seats”Cite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page).
- 3. MMP is a Mixed Electoral System, not a PR System. Reference 3 through 11 covers this content (References 9-11 are scholarly).
- You have previously stated: "so it is PR, like it or not" (26 Aug 15) "MMP is undubitably [you mean indubitably] a PR system" (27 Aug 15) "Placing "Mixed systems" at the same level as "PR electoral systems" as if it were something other than PR, is wrong and will mislead readers" (14 Sep 15).
- Mixed systems definitely exist and they are a distinct category separate from PR systems. 'Mixed Electoral Systems' is a critical third category in between majority/plurality systems and PR systems. Please provide scholarly sources to substantiate why you believe MMP is not a mixed system, or who you feel mixed electoral systems do not exist.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 01:56, 24 September 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: As I expected you have not answered the questions, and true to form employ smoke and mirrors by changing them.
- The question concerned "Pure proportional representation systems such as closed and open list...". Closed and open list PR are not pure in the sense used by the cited sources, except in the exceptional cases of the Netherlands and Israel, already pointed out in the article, and one or two others. All others use multiple districts, most of Europe uses only open lists with multiple districts, two examples of which, as I pointed out before (25 Aug.), are already discussed in the article and which you simply ignore. As to the word "pure", which you introduced only recently, why not say what you mean by it? Most readers would probably guess it distinguishes the basic mechanisms, party list and STV, from the hybrid.
- The question concerned "MMP is semi-proportional" not "MMP is mixed" which is uncontroversial and unimportant. You have no sources but that doesn't stop you from using the fantasy to drastically change the articles structure. Biproportional apportionment and sortition? They don't fit under "Party list PR" but put them there anyway, no-one will notice; and with a careless copy/paste you propagate this nonsense to other articles.
- You petulantly repeat that I think "mixed electoral systems do not exist" although you know it's untrue, and anyone can check. You add a dozen sources for no obvious reason other than to convince me that "mixed systems" exist - why so many? more smoke and mirrors. I reject the term because it causes confusion, as one of your sources (Massicotte) confirms: "Numerous scholars use the concept but do not agree on what it means exactly". But you know better: "mixed systems" are "critical". Why? No reason given. You do not grasp the elementary distinction between the means to an end: hybrid (or "mixed" if you insist), and the end itself: proportional representation. This article is interested in PR, whatever the means used to achieve it.
- So we can call these claims of yours what they are: lies. You cannot find sources for them but require me to find a source to refute them? Risible. And you don't even respect the sources that are already in the article as I have repeatedly demonstrated, e.g.refs
4, 5, and 66,7,and 8 (the most immediately accessible source so you deleted it). Even your own sources: You maintain FPTP enables even party leaders to lose their safe seats. But your source says that Ignatieff's seat was "expected to produce a tight race – as it did in 2008 and 2006", not safe at all, decidedly marginal. - You go on a bit about WP:Revert only when necessary, overlooking that it says "revert an edit made in good faith only after careful consideration". I have demonstrated repeatedly and at length that your edits are not "in good faith" so the article doesn't apply. For whatever reason, you are unscrupulously sabotaging the PR article (and other political articles). --BalCoder (talk) 08:29, 27 September 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: As I expected you have not answered the questions, and true to form employ smoke and mirrors by changing them.
- BalCoder,
- You have stated that the results of MMP are “produces proportionally representative parliaments” (26 Aug 15). However, the results of MMP are almost always semi-proportional. [22] [23] [24] Sometimes the FPTP seats greatly outnumber the list-PR seats (Mexico uses 32 list-PR seats, and 128 FPTP seats).[25] Other times, approximately half of the seats are distributed through party-list PR, and the other half are distributed through FPTP. Occasionally, there are Overhang seats which make the results slightly more proportional, but not every nation with MPP uses overhang seats (in fact, most don't) and the quantity of overhang seats are almost always insufficient to achieve full proportionality. Furthermore, many MMP systems require a minimum threshold of 4 or 5% in order for smaller parties to acquire seats, further distorting proportionality.
- Here are five modern examples of MMP electoral results which were semi-proportional:
- In the Bolivian general election, 2014, the Movement for Socialism received 61% of the popular vote, and received 67% of the seats. [26] In the Egyptian parliamentary election, 2011–12, the Nationalist Party received 37% of the popular vote, and 46% of the seats. [27] In the Hungarian parliamentary election, 2014, the Fidesz – Hungarian Civic Union received 44.5% of the popular vote, and 67% of the seats. [28] In the Nepalese Constituent Assembly election, 2008, the Communist Party of Nepal received 29% of the popular vote, and 38% of the seats. [29] In the Romanian presidential election, 2014, the Social Democratic Union received 37% of the popular vote, and 50% of the seats.
- That being said, regardless of whether or not you still believe your claim that MMP always achieves fully proportional results (which I have proven is false) nothing can possibly justify your persistent denial that MMP falls under mixed electoral systems. You have been unable to find a single source disproving this fact, yet continue to object to its inclusion in the article. You even incredulously portray my inclusion of mixed electoral systems in the article as “sabotage” even though the term mixed electoral systems was already present in the article prior to my contributions. Furthermore, it was you who renamed mixed to two-tier systems (11 Dec 14) several months prior to my edits without providing any sources to explain this nonsensical change.
- If you wish to demonstrate good faith you must A: follow Wikipedia’s Wikipedia:Civility policy and desist from making personal insults such as calling someone a liar, B: follow Wikipedia’s Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary policy and discontinue reverting Help:Minor edit such as the update that Russia now uses MMP instead of list-PR and the addition of Wiki-links Help:Link (for closed, open, and local list PR), and C: conduct research and provide sources Wikipedia:Citing sources for all of your reversions editing only the specific areas you strongly disagree with. This will require you to follow the Wikipedia:There is no deadline policy and take the time to conduct research, provide sources, and conduct an adaptive edit incorporating all of the minor edits and agreeable material which makes up the vast majority of the content that I have added to the article.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 03:06, 1 October 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: More of the same: half-truths, misrepresentations, and a total absence of any attempt to discusss the arguments. You still don't get WP:VERIFY: it doesn't matter how unproportional specific MMP results are, important is only what reliable sources say. Refs
4, 5 & 66,7,& 8 in the protected article are the sources for the statement that MMP "is also usually considered a distinct PR method". Your new ref 26 is another, it does not show what you purport, except when the system is "deliberately" designed to compromise proportionality. With your MMP examples you again argue fallaciously from the specific to the general. Germany and NZ? - you ignore them and hope no-one notices. Overhang seats by definition impair, not improve, proportionality, and are discussed in the article. Minimum thresholds, too. The Hungarian 2014 election is also mentioned. I dont claim MMP produces fully proportional results, nor do I deny MMP is a mixed system (how many times must I say that?). You mis-represent (by qualifying it) my use of the word "sabotage". "Two tier" is most certainly supported by sources. Anyone can inspect my WP contribs and judge my good faith. If you don't want to be called a liar answer the questions, which you asked for, "in good faith". Once you have been banned from WP I will change the line for Russia in the "List of countries" to "MMP". --BalCoder (talk) 08:53, 3 October 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: More of the same: half-truths, misrepresentations, and a total absence of any attempt to discusss the arguments. You still don't get WP:VERIFY: it doesn't matter how unproportional specific MMP results are, important is only what reliable sources say. Refs
- BalCoder has stated "I dont (he/she means don't) claim MMP produces fully proportional results, nor do I deny MMP is a mixed system (how many times must I say that?)". Therefore a consensus has been reached that A. MMP is in fact a mixed electoral systems, and B. MMP does not produce fully proportional results. BalCoder has cited (without sources) that Germany is a rare exception of a fully proportional MMP system. This is incorrect. In the 2013 German federal election, the Alternative For Germany and Free Democratic Party received approximately 2 million votes each and received no seats whereas the Christian Social Union in Bavaria received approximately 3 million votes and received 56 seats. [30] Additionally, I have, in good faith, given BalCoder an extra 3 weeks after the article was locked temporarily to provide sources to substantiate his/her arguments. So far, this user has not provided any sources whatsoever to justify his/her reversions. If any users would like to contribute to the article, please remember that edits and reversions are expected to be sourced. Users are also expected to follow the Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary rule be performing adaptive edits in order to avoid deliberate Wikipedia:Edit warring. Users are also expected to avoid violating the Wikipedia:Civility policy, which specifically forbids personal attacks Wikipedia:No personal attacks (such as calling someone an unscrupulous liar or resorting to ad hominem attacks). Users are expected to use strikeout tags (
HTML strikeout tags) and apologize for uncivil comments. I look forward to engaging in a civilized discussion with other editors on this topic. Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 12:09, 18 October 2015 (UTC)
- BalCoder has stated "I dont (he/she means don't) claim MMP produces fully proportional results, nor do I deny MMP is a mixed system (how many times must I say that?)". Therefore a consensus has been reached that A. MMP is in fact a mixed electoral systems, and B. MMP does not produce fully proportional results. BalCoder has cited (without sources) that Germany is a rare exception of a fully proportional MMP system. This is incorrect. In the 2013 German federal election, the Alternative For Germany and Free Democratic Party received approximately 2 million votes each and received no seats whereas the Christian Social Union in Bavaria received approximately 3 million votes and received 56 seats. [30] Additionally, I have, in good faith, given BalCoder an extra 3 weeks after the article was locked temporarily to provide sources to substantiate his/her arguments. So far, this user has not provided any sources whatsoever to justify his/her reversions. If any users would like to contribute to the article, please remember that edits and reversions are expected to be sourced. Users are also expected to follow the Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary rule be performing adaptive edits in order to avoid deliberate Wikipedia:Edit warring. Users are also expected to avoid violating the Wikipedia:Civility policy, which specifically forbids personal attacks Wikipedia:No personal attacks (such as calling someone an unscrupulous liar or resorting to ad hominem attacks). Users are expected to use strikeout tags (
- User:Drcrazy102: Can you help again? Please stop user Ontario Teacher BFA BEd. Either again fully protect the article as from Sep.17 - Oct.13, or block User:Ontario. His edits are politically partisan, in support of the Conservative Party of Canada, no doubt in connection with tomorrow's Canadian national election. At least one CPC opponent ([1]) supports introducing mixed member proportional representation, so that article, too, should be protected. There is nothing "good faith" about him, from his first edit on this page he has employed attack rather than discussion. If you are still unpersuaded check out his reverting as "vandalism" an edit citing a New York Times editorial in Environmental_policy_of_Canada. --BalCoder (talk) 14:01, 18 October 2015 (UTC)
BalCoder, I do not have the ability to block or ban users, nor to issue page protections as that is an "Admin user-right" and I am only a regular editor. I will ping a couple of admins that I know, and the admin who previously helped in this dispute for their opinions, or alternatively you can take half of the issue to WP:ANI to see about having Ontario Teacher BFA BEd blocked and get the page re-protected using WP:RFPP after reading WP:PP to find an appropriate protection template. I would first recommend going to a WP:DRR venue such as DRN or Formal mediation. Admin pings:Martin, SpacemanSpiff, EdJohnston; would any of you please be able to review this discussion and provide guidance on how to continue? Cheers, Drcrazy102 (talk) 23:31, 18 October 2015 (UTC)
- My suggestion at this point is to use WP:DRN first. There's too much reading and understanding for me at this point to suggest any other course of action. If another admin has followed this discussion earlier then they'd have a better opinion. cheers. —SpacemanSpiff 03:57, 19 October 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks. As suggested, I have opened a WP:DRN incident. --BalCoder (talk) 09:46, 19 October 2015 (UTC)
- I have reverted User:Ontario Teacher BFA BEd's edits. While we wait for something on WP:DRN to happen the article should be in a state that has been generally accepted for a year. It is at the level before Ontario's changes and as protected by User:Abecedare. --BalCoder (talk) 08:18, 20 October 2015 (UTC)
- Thanks for starting the DRN discussion. That is the right venue to resolve the current content dispute. In the meantime, while I am leaving the article unprotected so that routine, unctroversial edits or ones that have consensus can be made, I hope that the previous edit-war over the disputed changes will not be resumed. Abecedare (talk) 16:52, 20 October 2015 (UTC)
- Mixed Member Proportional is a mixed electoral system. ALL mixed electoral systems share elements of both PR and Plurality voting systems. Sharing an element with either end of the spectrum does not mean that MMP is somehow on one end. It is, quite frankly, in the middle. This fact is confirmed by sources 1-11. Additionally, User:BalCoder has agreed that MMP is a mixed electoral system (Oct 3), and therefore a consensus has been reached. In order to prevent Edit warring, users are encouraged to perform ADAPTIVE EDITS. In adaptive edits, only the content that editors disagree with is removed, and the remainder of uncontroversial content is left unmolested. Moreover, in order to display good faith, editors are encouraged to provide SOURCES on the talk page to substantiate their positions. I hope BalCoder will perform an adaptive edit, and provide sources for the specific points of disagreement so the previous edit-war will not resume. Additionally, I hope this "131.104.138.174" IP Address is not BalCoder editing while logged out. This user has posted the dubious phrase "PR systems (in overwhelming majority of countries pretending to be democratic)" under the "PR systems in the broader family of voting systems" section on October 29th.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 21:22, 1 November 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: I take you at your word, some twelve hours ago here, that you are still willing to participate in a WP:DRN dispute so I have opened a new dispute. This time, please be timely in posting your responses. I have again reverted your latest article edit. --BalCoder (talk) 10:54, 2 November 2015 (UTC)
- User:BalCoder You must provide SOURCES for your reversions. You must also perform ADAPTIVE EDITS and only revert the specific content you disagree with. Mass reverting all contributions, including minor edits such as the update that Russia currently uses MMP instead of list-PR, is the only cause of the current edit war. Please discontinue the edit war by providing SOURCES to substantiate your opinions, and revent ONLY THE SPECIFIC CONTENT YOU DISAGREE WITH. This is how good faith editing is achieved. Right now, you are stonewalling by refusing to budge. Additionally, did you insert the following point-of-view edit: "PR systems (in overwhelming majority of countries pretending to be democratic)" while logged out? If so, this is a completely unacceptable form of sock puppetry.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 01:31, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- I have reverted your edits again, this time preserving the change of the Russian system, despite your very weak source. There are no other changes of yours that deserve preservation. Sources: I remind other readers that I am trying to preserve the status quo against Ontario's edits, I am not adding text, Ontario is. The sources that support the status quo are naturally already in the article, for example, refs 6, 7, 8 which Ontario chooses to ignore and to which I have drawn his attention seven times. I also point out that I suggested WP:BRD, the usual method of good faith discussion, to Ontario on Aug.24 and he ignored it. I did not make that IP edit. --BalCoder (talk) 09:52, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- User:BalCoder The IP edit states: "The single winner (FPTP) system exists only in Canada, UK, and US." This is incorrect. There are 47 countries which use FPTP.[31] However, since this unsourced anonymous addition (which may have been done by you) follows your anti-plurality voting system narrative, so you have of course left this change in place. This IP edit also states that PR is used "(in overwhelming majority of countries pretending to be democratic)" This POV editing is also unsourced. You need to take the time to read through contributions and separate your own personal bias. The vast majority of the contributions I have made were minor edits. These include subtitles for party-list PR, separating [closed list], [open list], and [localized list] and adding wiki-links for each one. This is a minor structural change that does not change the content of the article. The Manchester University Press and Voice of Russia are reliable sources. The Voice of Russia is the government broadcaster, like the CBC in Canada. Please demonstrate good faith by leaving minor edits in place, and revert only the specific content you disagree with and provide sources to substantiate your disagreement.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 12:21, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- Ontario Teacher BFA BEd: I am reverting your reversion. You should check out WP:EW, in particular the sections on WP:3RR and WP:AVOIDEDITWAR: we have agreed to use WP:DRN, i.e.a mediated discussion, so you should not also carry on reverting. During this discussion the article should remain as before your edits, as it was during the last WP:DRN attempt, and as protected by User:Abecedare. User:Abecedare, above, has specifically not protected the article to allow "routine" edits, of which the IP edit (from a Canadian IP) is an example - anonymous edits are almost always POV and unsourced, decidedly routine - my limited energy is entirely taken by a more substantial problem: you (also Canadian). When our dispute is finally at an end, it will go because I intend to delete the entire "broader family" section, which only exists as a sop to an editor who was pushing mixed systems. That editor too was a Canadian. --BalCoder (talk) 13:54, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- User:BalCoder You have admitted that other editors in the past have included mixed electoral systems on this WP article! Yet, you are the ONLY editor who is against the inclusion of mixed electoral systems in this article. Why? You have not reached a consensus to remove this critical category. You changed mixed electoral systems to two-tier systems on December 11th 2014. Sources 1 through 11 prove that mixed electoral systems exist. Sources 19-32 proved that mixed electoral systems, including the fact that in the vast majority of cases, the results of MMP are semi-proportional. You have also flip flopped on whether or not mixed electoral systems exist, and whether or not MMP is fully proportional or only semi-proportional. You have incredulously added that Britain, Canada, and the U.S.A. are the only countries that use FPTP. Why would you include such nonsense? The following countries use FPTP:
Anguilla Antigua and Barbuda Azerbaijan Bahamas Bangladesh Barbados Belize Bermuda Botswana British Virgin Islands Canada Cook Islands Dominica Ethiopia Gambia Ghana Grenada India Isle Of Man Jamaica Kenya Liberia Madagascar Malawi Malaysia Maldives Micronesia Myanmar Nigeria Pakistan Palau Saint Kitts and Nevis Saint Lucia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Sierra Leone Singapore Solomon Islands Swaziland Tanzania Tonga Trinidad and Tobago Uganda United Kingdom United States Yemen Zambia Zimbabwe[32]
- Are you trying to artificially inflate the quantity of nations using PR by adding all nations using mixed systems to that list, while simultaneously intentionally misleading readers to assume that only 3 nations use FPTP in order to present FPTP as unusual and therefore obsolete? If so, you are intentionally engaging in academic dishonestly to promote a political perspective. Now you are also presenting mixed electoral systems as some sort of Canadian conspiracy. The sources which describe mixed electoral systems, such as the Electoral Reform Society of the U.K. (which argues in favour of PR), are international. Please provide a SOURCE to substantiate your removal of mixed electoral systems (which you have admitted exists). Please provide a single SOURCE to back up your outlandish claim that only 3 nations use FPTP. Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 21:08, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- I am afraid the above is simply incoherent. I have reverted your revertion again, let's discuss using WP:DRN, as you agreed. If you revert again you will have contravened the WP:3RR rule. . --BalCoder (talk) 22:15, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- Are you trying to artificially inflate the quantity of nations using PR by adding all nations using mixed systems to that list, while simultaneously intentionally misleading readers to assume that only 3 nations use FPTP in order to present FPTP as unusual and therefore obsolete? If so, you are intentionally engaging in academic dishonestly to promote a political perspective. Now you are also presenting mixed electoral systems as some sort of Canadian conspiracy. The sources which describe mixed electoral systems, such as the Electoral Reform Society of the U.K. (which argues in favour of PR), are international. Please provide a SOURCE to substantiate your removal of mixed electoral systems (which you have admitted exists). Please provide a single SOURCE to back up your outlandish claim that only 3 nations use FPTP. Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 21:08, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
User:BalCoder, YOU have violated the WP:3RR rule. I have contacted User:Øln, and User:Reallavergne to provide assistance on this article. Judging by the archives, you have previously engaged in edit wars with these two editors. User:Reallavergne has mentioned on User:Øln's talk page: "I'm afraid I am going to have to launch a formal complaint against BalCoder, as all he can do is revert and criticize. He has now reverted everything I have contributed en masse three times now, and has not contributed one edit himself in response to our discussions. At least if he was selective in his reversions or offered some text of his own to try to address the concerns I have expressed, I could understand. It seems he is incapable of considering any changes at all to what he wrote back in August - not even stylistic errors - and so no progress is being made on the page. However, I know you have been reading at least some of our discussion, so perhaps before I launch a call for dispute resolution, you have a comment offer on the talk page?Reallavergne (talk) 14:27, 27 September 2014 (UTC)". In fact, you have previously been part of a dispute resolution Wikipedia:Administrators' noticeboard/IncidentArchive854 "24. Mass reversion and disrespectful language - Proportional Representation" on this same topic for the same unacceptable conduct! It seems you have routinely engaged in edit wars in the past on this article where you mass reverted content. You should have selectively removed only the areas of disagreement. These other editors also noted that you did not provide sources to back up your opinions. You were also extremely rude to these other editors as well. For example, on September 24th, 2014, User:Reallavergne noted "I don't find that you are being respectful here. Let us please try to avoid accusations such as the above and assume that we are working in good faith." To sum up, you have been repeatedly told by other editors (on this very same article) that mass reversions are unacceptable, that you need to provide SOURCES, and that you must act in a civil manner. Moreover, there is nothing incoherent about pointing out the OBVIOUS difference between the numbers 47 and 3! How could you possible expect people to believe that only 3 nations use FPTP? I am reverting this blatant vandalism.Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 22:51, 3 November 2015 (UTC)
- Hi User:BalCoder, Ontario Teacher BFA BEd, I am afraid that proper treatment of your dispute would require more time than I can afford to put into it. There are certainly some strange things going on. Why, Balcoder would you ever want to say that only three countries use FPTP? You know that is nonsense as much as I do. But Ontario, I am just as befuddled by your treatment of MMP. MMP can be quite highly proportional - certainly as proportional as STV, but it is also relatively rare (Germany, New Zealand and Scotland - that is about it). That you recognize neither of these points perplexes me. Maybe you are confusing semi-proportional MMM systems and MMP. Both are mixed systems, but one is more proportional than the other.
- Ontario, I recognize your complaints against Balcoder, as I had the same complaints and eventually gave up working on this Wikipedia page because I found Balcoder to be abusive and too hard to work with (Sorry Balcoder, it's the truth). So, Balcoder, I admit that I started to review your dispute with some bias against you. However, I recognize that you play a useful policing role, and as I reviewed some of the changes that Ontario had made, they did not seem to me to be improvements over what was there before and tended to muddy the waters, so I tend to sympathize that your approach may have been best in this case and it's probably a good thing that you are prepared to do it.
- I see that this dispute goes back to August 17, and I have already spent about three hours just trying to disentagle things a bit for myself. So, without investing hours or even days of time that I don't have right now, I am afraid I don't have a solution to your current impasse. Looking at a few of the reversions, I am inclined to believe that the mass revert in this case may have been largely justified. It's messy, that's for sure. All I can say is that this can happen in Wikipedia. I can't afford the time to try to do any more to help fix this one and feel sorry that both of you have invested so much time and effort into this, apparently to little avail. Reallavergne (talk) 02:16, 4 November 2015 (UTC)
References for Edits and Reversions by BalCoder and Ontario Teacher BFA BEd
- ^ "Electoral Systems". Administration and Cost of Elections (ACE) Project. Retrieved 31 Aug 2015.
- ^ O’Neal, Brian. "Electoral Systems". Parliament of Canada. Retrieved 31 Aug 2015.
- ^ "Voting Systems Made Simple". Electoral Reform Society.
- ^ "Electoral Systems". Administration and Cost of Elections (ACE) Project. Retrieved 31 Aug 2015.
- ^ O’Neal, Brian. "Electoral Systems". Parliament of Canada. Retrieved 31 Aug 2015.
- ^ "Voting Counts: Electoral Reform for Canada" (PDF). Law Commission of Canada. 2004. p. 22.
- ^ Forder, James (2011). The case against voting reform. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. ISBN 978-1-85168-825-8.
- ^ "Electoral Systems and the Delimitation of Constituencies". International Foundation for Electoral Systems. 2 Jul 2009.
- ^ Moser, Robert G. (Dec 2004). "Mixed electoral systems and electoral system effects: controlled comparison and cross-national analysis" (in Volume 23 and Issue 4). Electoral Studies: An International Journal: 575–599.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ Massicotte, Louis (Sep 1999). "Mixed electoral systems: a conceptual and empirical survey" (in Volume 18 and Issue 3). Electoral Studies: An International Journal: 341–366.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ Manow, Philip (2007). "Electoral rules and legislative turnover: Evidence from Germany's mixed electoral system" (in Volume 30 and Issue 1). Electoral Studies: An International Journal: 195-207.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link) - ^ "The Electoral System in Israel". The Knesset.
- ^ "The Electoral System in Israel". Israel Government Portal.
- ^ a b "Dutch politics — a primer for foreigners". Quirksmode.
- ^ "Electoral Systems: District Magnitude". ACE The Electoral Knowledge Network.
- ^ Against All Odds: Aiding Political Parties in Georgia and Ukraine (UvA Proefschriften) by Max Bader, Vossiuspers UvA, 2010, ISBN 90-5629-631-0 (page 93)
- ^ Regional Politics in Russia by Cameron Ross, Manchester University Press, 2012, ISBN 0-7190-5890-2 (page 45)
- ^ "Putin signs into law Duma mixed electoral system: http://sputniknews.com/voiceofrussia/news/2014_02_24/Putin-signs-into-law-Duma-mixed-electoral-system-5992/". Radio The Voice of Russia. 24 Feb 2014.
{{cite web}}
: External link in
(help)|title=
- ^ "Party List PR". Electoral Reform Society.
- ^ Fobes, Richard (2006). Ending the Hidden Unfairness in U.S. Elections. Solutions Through Innovation. p. 95. ISBN 0-9632221-2-0.
- ^ "Benefits of Proportional Representation". Retrieved 2015-09-23.
- ^ "International Elections". Retrieved 2015-09-30.
- ^ Fatima Sbaity Kassem (2011). "Party Variation in Religiosity & Women's Leadership Lebanon in Comparative Perspective". Columbia University. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite has empty unknown parameter:|1=
(help); Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ "Comparisons: Mixed Member Systems". Geometric Voting. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
- ^ http://www.eleccion2012mexico.com/project-definition
- ^ "Tribunal Electoral de Bolivia analiza cronograma de elecciones 2014". Prensa Latina. 2013-11-06. Retrieved 2013-11-12.
- ^ "Official Elections Website".
- ^ "Hungary's election offers some disturbing lessons for Europe". The Guardian. 2014-04-09. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
- ^ "Constituent Assembly Election Result 2008". Election Commission of Nepal. Retrieved 2015-09-30.
- ^ "Final result of the Election to the German Bundestag 2013". The Federal Returning Officer. Retrieved 2015-10-18.
- ^ "Countries using FPTP electoral system for national legislature". idea.int.
- ^ "Countries using FPTP electoral system for national legislature". idea.int.
Protected edit request on 22 September 2015
This edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. |
I would like to ask if this table could be re-inserted under the section "PR systems in the broader family of voting systems" to allow a simple overview of the types and categories of the systems of Proportional Representation, preferably at the bottom of the section unless you (admin editing) feel it would be better placed elsewhere.
It does not seem to be contentious content, only a contentious author (see above discussion of edits). I have asked for clarification of which block vote is meant by Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (original author of table) but have not yet received a reply clarifying.
Proportional Representation Systems | Mixed Member Systems | Plurality/Majority Systems |
---|---|---|
Single Transferable Vote | Mixed Member Proportional | First Past the Post |
Party List Proportional Representation | Alternative Vote Plus | Alternative Vote/Instant-runoff voting |
Additional Member System | Borda Count | |
Majority Bonus System | Limited Vote | |
Supplementary Vote | ||
Preferential block voting | ||
Two-Round System |
Thanks, Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 00:57, 22 September 2015 (UTC)
- Not done: please establish a consensus for this alteration before using the
{{edit protected}}
template. — Martin (MSGJ · talk) 11:33, 22 September 2015 (UTC)
- BalCoder, are you opposed to such an addition? Is there anything you would like to change? Ontario Teacher BFA BEd, I assume you are still wishing for this to be added? MSGJ, there are two users besides myself. How do you propose getting a "two/three-person" consensus unless we make an RfC for the first handful of individual edits until more users deign to watch and comment? It is confusing when the page is blocked because of two users at loggerheads. Thanks, Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 23:34, 22 September 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102: I am emphatically opposed to including this table in the article. (1) The article already has a voting system classification table, Template:Electoral systems, a second is superfluous. (2) It is a copy of the Electoral Reform Society's "Voting systems made easy" table that is already linked to by citation 5 in the protected article, so for this reason there is no need to embed it in the article. (3) Though it has been slightly modified it is obviously a copy of the ERS table which seems to be copyright. WP being sensitive to copyright violations, I doubt the table would survive long in the article (User Ontario has copy/pasted the whole section to several other articles). --BalCoder (talk) 09:54, 23 September 2015 (UTC)
- I was unaware of
thatthe copyvio. If I had've known I would not have made the request, sorry. Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 22:57, 23 September 2015 (UTC)
- I was unaware of
- Dr Crazy 102 There is no evidence of any copyright violation with this table. The Electoral Reform Society is properly sourced, which would forego any possibility of copyright infringement. The table is also not unique to any single source. Here are a few example of other sources which use a table to group the electoral systems into: PR systems, Mixed Systems, and Plurality/Majority Systems. Cite error: The
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tag has too many names (see the help page). Cite error: The<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). Cite error: The<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). These categories were already present in the article prior to my contributions. I merely transferred existing information (an added supplementary sources) into an easy-to-understand table. Therefore, there should be no legitimate objection to this Help:Minor edit as it falls under the category of "Formatting that does not change the meaning of the page". The Wikipedia:Revert only when necessary policy states "Don't revert an edit because it is unnecessary — because it does not improve the article. For a reversion to be appropriate, the reverted edit must actually make the article worse". Ontario Teacher BFA BEd (talk) 01:55, 24 September 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102 There is no evidence of any copyright violation with this table. The Electoral Reform Society is properly sourced, which would forego any possibility of copyright infringement. The table is also not unique to any single source. Here are a few example of other sources which use a table to group the electoral systems into: PR systems, Mixed Systems, and Plurality/Majority Systems. Cite error: The
- Looking at the table on Idea.int makes me wonder why this article does not have a section actually listing what type is used where. I am curious about if creating such a table, but properly referenced and only partially based on the Idea.int's table would placated both arguments. So including a sortable table of system, place, category of system, etc. to show the widespread useage but to also show the differing types and their usage. Is this more viable? Dr Crazy 102 (talk) 05:33, 24 September 2015 (UTC)
- couch, BalCoder and Ontario Teacher BFA BEd, see above please. Cheers, Drcrazy102 (talk) 05:08, 1 October 2015 (UTC)
- Dr Crazy 102: Is the section "List of countries using proportional representation" not what you are talking about? Please don't forget that the article is about PR specifically, not voting systems in general. User Ontario is trying to fundamentally corrupt the basic article, a table of usage is not going to paper over such cracks. --BalCoder (talk) 08:56, 3 October 2015 (UTC)