The earliest known proposals for a ranked voting system can be traced to the works of
Ramon Llull in the late 13th century, who developed what would later be known as
Copeland's method, which is similar to
Condorcet's method. Copeland's method was devised by
Ramon Llull in his 1299 treatise
Ars Electionis, which was discussed by
Nicholas of Cusa in the fifteenth century. A second wave of analysis began when
Jean-Charles de Borda published a paper in 1781, advocating for the
Borda count, which he called the "order of merit". This methodology drew criticism from the
Marquis de Condorcet, who developed
his own methods after arguing Borda's approach did not accurately reflect group preferences, because it was vulnerable to
spoiler effects and did not always elect the
majority-preferred candidate. In the 1700s, Condorcet considered
instant-runoff voting but rejected it as
pathological. In 1864, Edward J. Nanson, while noting Condorcet's concerns, said the IRV method is "a perfectly feasible and practicable one for elections on any scale".
MIT professor W. R. Ware held a demonstration STV election in 1871 by having 150 MIT students elect four English authors as their favorites. The field of candidates held the names of 35 authors in the first count and eventually concentrated a large proportion of the votes behind just four. Ware went on to surmise how a casual vacancy might be handled and found that countback would produce a winner. This proved that ranked transferable votes could be used to produce a single winner, despite the qualms of Condorcet and others.
Single transferable voting (multi-seat contests using contingent ranked transferable votes) later found common use in cities and to elect legislators in North America, Ireland and other parts of the English-speaking world, with single-winner versions, alternative voting (now known as
instant-runoff voting) and
contingent voting (also known as supplementary voting) being its companions for single-winner contests of mayors and others. Theoretical exploration of electoral processes was revived by a 1948 paper from
Duncan Black and
Kenneth Arrow's investigations into
social choice theory, a branch of
welfare economics that extends
rational choice to include community decision-making processes.
Adoption Plurality voting is the most common voting system, and has been in widespread use since the earliest
democracies. As
plurality voting has exhibited weaknesses from its start, especially as soon as a third party joins the race, some social scientists began to recommend transferable votes (facilitated by contingent ranked ballots) to reduce the incidence of wasted votes and unrepresentative election results. A form of the
single transferable vote system was invented by
Carl Andræ in Denmark, where it was used briefly before being abandoned in favour of
open list list PR. STV still carried on in Denmark until 1953 for indirect election of the
upper house. At approximately the same time, the
single transferable vote system was independently devised by British lawyer
Thomas Hare, whose writings soon spread the method throughout the
British Empire.
Tasmania used STV (called the Hare system) in government elections in the 1890s. STV began permanent and wider adoption throughout Australia beginning in 1907 and the 1910s. The STV system, using contingent ranked votes, has been adopted in Ireland, South Africa, Malta, and approximately 40 cities
in the United States and Canada. The single transferable vote system has also been used to elect legislators in Canada, South Africa, India and Nepal. In the early 2020s, the use of contingent ranked votes saw a comeback
in the United States. STV, for a time used only in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was adopted by
Portland, Maine, and several other American cities beginning in 2022. Single-winner ranked voting (specifically
instant-runoff voting) is used to elect politicians in the states of
Maine and
Alaska. In November 2016, the voters of Maine narrowly passed Question 5, approving ranked-choice voting (instant-runoff voting) for all elections. This was first put to use in 2018, marking the inaugural use of ranked votes in a statewide election in the United States (when Maine's statewide vote tally was used to determine the two at-large electoral college seats). In November 2020, Alaska voters passed Measure 2, bringing ranked choice voting (instant-runoff voting) into use from 2022. After a series of
electoral pathologies in Alaska's
2022 congressional special election, a poll found 54% of Alaskans supported a repeal of the system. This included a third of the voters who had supported
Mary Peltola, the ultimate winner in the election. However, a referendum on the issue in 2024 saw a narrow majority in favour of retention of IRV. Some
local elections in New Zealand use the multi-winner
single transferable vote system. STV is also used to elect local authorities in Scotland and Ireland. Nauru uses a rank-weighted
positional method called the
Dowdall system. == Equal-ranked ballots==