Talk:D'Hondt method
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I don't understand how d'hondt system may be applied in open list system. In fact I believe this is not possible.
May anybody review this? Explaining how is that possible or removing the reference to the use in open lists systems.
- I know for a fact that it is possible, because it is used in Finland. Each vote is give to a person who is always on a list. The number of elected candidates in a list is counted as in the closed list system. The people who get elected within a list are the ones who have got the most votes.
- Clarification on the issue of ranking candidates on an open-list:
- The amounts of "personal" (you only vote for a person, not a list) votes for each candidate are first used to determine each candidates ranking on the individual list. The candidate with the highest amount of pvotes gets first place, the candidate with the second highest second place etc. The votes are then distributed as in a closed-list system, using the order established by the personal votes. This procedure is explained in the linked open-list article, which I think is sufficent for the purposes of this article which mainly describes the method of seat distribution. Rackham 03:16, 19 Nov 2004 (UTC)
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[edit] d'Hondt method in Estonia
Estonian electoral system is a special case in at least two different ways. Firstly, there is a 5% threshold, but it does not mean that "any list which does not receive that threshold will not have any seats allocated to it, even if it received enough votes to otherwise have been rewarded with a seat". In Estonia, for any candidate, even if appearing on a party list which fails to reach the nationwide threshold, receiving the simple quota in one's electoral district is sufficient for receiving the seat in parliament (in the 1st round of vote counting). It is only in the 2nd (district level) and 3rd round (nationwide, modified d'Hondt method) of vote counting that mandates are awarded only to those candidate lists which have received more than the threshold of 5% of the votes nationally. Secondly, Estonia does not use a "typical d'Hondt system" as the (modified) method is used "only" in the 3rd round of vote counting. However, this does not mean that only very few mandates are allocated according to the d'Hondt system. There are 101 seats in the Estonian parliament and in the past elections the breakdown between the mandates awarded in the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd (" d'Hondt* ") rounds of counting have been the following: in 1992: 17, 24, 60*; in 1995: 15, 34, 52*; in 1999: 11, 44, 46*; and in 2003: 14, 60, 27*.--3 Löwi 16:16, 3 October 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Anyone do a fuller explanation?
The example of how the d'Hondt method works isn't really very clear. Perhaps a simpler example could be provided with more step-by-step working? I know this isn't a maths textbook, but I don't see the point of an example at all if it doesn't explain it. El T 08:14, 19 October 2005 (UTC.
EVEN my mother language is not english. I´ll try to explain you which is the approach. The problem related the edited is that the way in that divisors are calculated is wrong. I'll modify the page. But in any case the best external link I have found out is the next one http://www.elecciones.mir.es/web2004mir/menu_izq.htm# the problem is that it is in spanish.
[edit] Capitalization?
Is is "D'Hondt" or "d'Hondt" ? 68.39.174.238 20:30, 6 January 2006 (UTC)
- Definitely d'Hondt. Wikipedia's design can't handle initial letters being lowercase for some reason. El T 15:17, 7 January 2006 (UTC)
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- Not so definitely, since he was Belgian and it is a custom there to capitalize the first letter of the first prefix in a surname. Check the text at Victor_D'Hondt. And for all dutch-speaking countries it is true that if the given name is missing, the first letter of the first prefix will be capitalized. Therefore the phrase "the D'Hondt method" should contain a capitalized D also if the name was from the Netherlands. See Dutch_name#Surnames. -- Mipmip 15:47, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
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- Actually there is some inconsistency here! According to Dutch name#Surnames it should not be capitalized:
- "In Flanders tussenvoegsels of personal names always keep their original orthography: mevrouw van der Velde, mevrouw J. van der Velde and Jan Vanden Broucke."
- whereas the Victor D'Hondt article states the complete opposite:
- "Confusion may arrive when reading Dutch articles on D'Hondt, since in Dutch, when using the full name one should write: Victor d'Hondt (with a small d), while the surname all by itself would be D'Hondt (with a capital D). However, in Flemish it is always capitalized, hence: Victor D'Hondt."
- I'm not Flemish, so someone who is should check this and correct one of the two articles :) -- Mipmip 15:55, 10 December 2006 (UTC)
- Actually there is some inconsistency here! According to Dutch name#Surnames it should not be capitalized:
I've changed it to d'Hondt, based on how it's spelled in official Northern Ireland legislation: [1]. That could be wrong, of course, so it can be reversed in that case. William Quill (talk) 12:48, 22 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Type some crap title in here, please
The D'Hondt method is one of those things I had to learn by heart at high school but have completely forgot since then. I'm a computer programmer, I've been interested in mathematics and computers since childhood, I have no particular interest in politics. I like to know which political party wants to do what and form general opinions based on that, but that's as far as it goes. Therefore I don't know why this complicated D'Hondt method is any more useful than a straight ranking by count of votes. JIP | Talk 21:12, 17 January 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Why I've removed the image
I've removed the image because it was not representative. They didn't use proper d'Hont, but a modified version. At Finnish parliamentary election, 2003 you can see a party with more votes has less seats, so it can not be pure d'Hont. --83.36.162.72 00:28, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
- The parties are: Swedish People's Party 8 seats, 128,824 votes and Christian Democrats 7 seats 148,987 votes --83.36.162.72 00:32, 14 April 2006 (UTC)
It surely can be a natural consequence of applying D'Hondt in many constituencies; in one constituency such 'reverse' outcome cannot be, but when you add up votes and seats in many constituencies, it can happen.--Bancki 12:49, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
- Then, it was not an example of applying d'Hondt, but of adding the resolts of havinf applyed d'Hondt several times... ---81.38.174.231 14:40, 16 April 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Proportionality
We have to be careful sayin D'Hondt is less proportional than the Sainte-Laguë method, as there is no standard measure of "disproportionality". This is important to remember when discussing all electoral formulas. D'Hondt is a proportional method, in contrast with say Imperiali methods. - Matthew238 07:40, 6 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Proportionality
There is a common standard method in Maths to evaluate the deviation of a serial of values against a reference. See the standard deviation function (stdev) in the Excel worksheet. So, instead of using the average value as the reference, one may use the values comming from a proportional division and compare these "good" values againts the "bad" values of method results. So it is possible to measure a quality of a proportional method, in a form accepted anywhere. BUT, in politics, a electoral method is good if it fits the politics agenda. So, the discussion of a good method only using math is too much "theorical" and may be away from the reality.
The Webster method and its equivalent Saint-Lague method are considered the best ones for the proportionality. I have check it for some 50 values using the modified "standard" deviation (square of differences between a proportional representation (integer numbers) and the exact proportional division (real numbers). That sentence seems pretty right. AlvaroAnjo 11:46, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
Indeed, Webster / Sainte-Lague is the most proportionate - that's why it's usually chosen to apportion seats over territorial constituencies. Balynski & Young have written a book about that. However, it has other flaws: a party with >50% of the votes can get <50% of the seats and a party can win a seat by splitting in two (or two parties may loose one by merging) - that's why D'Hondt is usually chosen between parties.--Bancki 13:03, 22 December 2006 (UTC)
[edit] An applet
Hello,
it would be really neat to have an external link to an applet demonstrating the d'Hondt method. I myself haven't found one yet.Evilbu 18:58, 30 November 2006 (UTC)
- I see there is one behind this Prince Edward Island page, but one would have to rework the java somewhat. Maybe write to them for permission? -- Seejyb 21:54, 30 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] d'Hondt method in Bulgaria
Starting with 2007 european parliament elections in Bulgaria, the d'Hondt method was changed in favor of Largest Reminder Method AlexStanev 12:11, 2 December 2007 (UTC)