In an STV election a candidate who reaches the quota is elected while any votes a candidate receives above the quota in many cases have the opportunity to be transferred to another candidate in accordance to the voter's next usable marked preference. Thus the quota is used both to determine who is elected and to determine the number of surplus votes when a person is elected with quota. When the Droop quota is used, often about a quota of votes are not used to elect anyone (a much lower proportion that under the
first-past-the-post voting system) so the quota is a cue to the number of votes that are used to actually elect someone. The Hare quota was devised by
Thomas Hare, one of the first to work out a complete STV system. The number of votes in the quota is determined by the
district magnitude of the district in conjunction with the number of valid votes cast.
Example Suppose an STV election using the Hare quota has two seats to be filled and three candidates: Andrea, Brad, and Carter. One hundred voters voted, each casting one vote and marking a back-up preference, to be used only in case the first preference candidate is un-electable or elected with surplus. There are 100 ballots showing preferences as follows: Because there are 100 voters and 2 seats, the Hare quota is: : \frac{100}{2} = 50 To begin the count the first preferences cast for each candidate are tallied and are as follows: • Andrea:
60 • Brad: 26 • Carter: 14 Andrea has reached the quota and is declared elected. She has 10 votes more than the quota so these votes are
transferred to Carter, as specified on the ballots. The tallies of the remaining candidates therefore now become: • Brad:
26 • Carter: 24 At this stage, there are only two candidates remaining and one seat open. The most-popular candidate is declared elected; the other is declared defeated. Although Brad has not reached the quota, he is declared elected since he has more votes than Carter. The winners are therefore
Andrea and
Brad. == Use in party-list PR ==