The concept of "lesser evil" voting (LEV) can be seen as a form of the
minimax strategy ("minimize maximum loss") where voters, when faced with two or more candidates, choose the one they perceive as the most likely to do harm and vote for the one most likely to defeat him, or the "lesser evil." To do so, "voting should not be viewed as a form of personal self-expression or moral judgement directed in retaliation towards major party candidates who fail to reflect our values, or of a corrupt system designed to limit choices to those acceptable to corporate elites" rather as an opportunity to reduce harm or loss.
Hannah Arendt argued that "Those who choose the lesser evil forget very quickly that they chose evil". In contrast
Seyla Benhabib argues that politics would not exist without the necessity to choose between a greater and a lesser evil. When limited to the two most likely candidates, "lesser evil" is the most likely "greater good", for the "common good", as
Pope Francis has said. In 2012,
Huffington Post columnist Sanford Jay Rosen stated that refusal to vote for the lesser of two evils became common practice for left-leaning voters in the
United States due to their overwhelming disapproval of the United States government's support for the
Vietnam War. Rosen stated: "Beginning with the
1968 presidential election, I often have heard from liberals that they could not vote for the lesser of two evils. Some said they would not vote; some said they would vote for a third-party candidate. That mantra delivered us to Richard Nixon in
1972 until Watergate did him in. And it delivered us to
George W. Bush and
Dick Cheney in
2000 until they were termed out in 2009". Green Party candidate
Jill Stein invoked this idea in her campaign stating, "Don't vote for the lesser evil, fight for the greater good". Green Party votes hurt Democratic chances in 2000 and 2016. This sentiment was repeated for the next two election cycles, both of which were between Trump and Democratic candidates
Joe Biden in 2020 and
Kamala Harris in 2024. Accordingly, the lesser evil principle should be applied to two front-runners among many choices, after eliminating from consideration "minor party candidates (who) can be spoilers in elections by taking away enough votes from a major party candidate to influence the outcome without winning." In his
DarkHorse podcast,
Bret Weinstein describes his
Unity 2020 proposal for the
2020 presidential election as an option that, in case of failure, would not asymmetrically weaken voters' second-best choice on a single political side, thereby avoiding the
lesser evil paradox. In elections between only two candidates where one is mildly unpopular and the other immensely unpopular, opponents of both candidates frequently advocate a vote for the mildly unpopular candidate. For example, in the second round of the
2002 French presidential election graffiti in Paris told people to "vote for the crook, not the fascist". The "crook" in those scribbled public messages was
Jacques Chirac of
Rally for the Republic and the "fascist" was
Jean-Marie Le Pen of the
National Front. Chirac eventually won the second round having garnered 82% of the vote. == Mythology ==