Political use Historical A crude form of score voting was used in some elections in ancient
Sparta, by measuring how loudly the crowd shouted for different candidates. This has a modern-day analog of using
clapometers in some television shows and the judging processes of some athletic competitions. Beginning in the 13th century, the
Republic of Venice elected the
Doge of Venice using a multi-stage process with multiple rounds of score voting. This may have contributed to the Republic's longevity, being partly responsible for its status as the longest-lived
democracy in world history. Score voting was used in
Greek legislative elections beginning in 1864, during which time it had a
many-party system; it was replaced with
party-list proportional representation in 1923. According to Steven J. Brams, approval was used for some elections in 19th century England.
Current Score voting is used to elect candidates who represent parties in
Latvia's
Saeima (parliament) in an
open list system. The
selection process for the
Secretary-General of the United Nations uses a variant on a three-point scale ("Encourage", "Discourage", and "No Opinion"), with
permanent members of the United Nations Security Council holding a veto over any candidate. Proportional score voting was used in
Swedish elections in the early 20th century, prior to being replaced by
party-list proportional representation. In 2018,
Fargo, North Dakota, passed a local ballot initiative adopting
approval voting for the city's local elections, becoming the first US city to adopt the method. Score voting is used by the
Green Party of Utah to elect officers, on a 0–9 scale. The
Pirate Party Germany uses variants of score voting such as Reweighted Range Voting (RRV) in some of its internal elections. The system has been used in the
Bavarian branch for selecting candidates for the
Bundestag list, and in the
NRW branch for general decision-making and internal elections.
Non-political use Members of
Wikipedia's Arbitration Committee are elected based on a three-point scale ("Support", "Neutral", "Oppose"). Non-governmental uses of score voting are common, such as in
Likert scales for
customer satisfaction surveys and mechanism involving users rating a product or service in terms of "stars" (such as rating movies on
IMDb, products at
Amazon, apps in the iOS or
Google Play stores, etc.). Judged sports such as
gymnastics generally rate competitors on a numeric scale. A multi-winner proportional variant called
Thiele's method or reweighted range voting is used to select five nominees for the
Academy Award for Best Visual Effects rated on a 0–10 scale. ==Example==