Thomas Hare
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Thomas Hare (March 28, 1806 - May 6, 1891) was an English barrister who was involved in the theory and advocacy of election methods.
Hare lends his name to the following:
- a system of proportional representation, also known as Single Transferable Vote (STV)
- the single-winner case of STV, instant-runoff voting
- a particular quota being used by STV, the Hare quota
- a seat allocation method, also know as the largest remainder method or Hamilton's method
An English barrister, political reformer, and close friend of philosopher John Stuart Mill, Hare "invented" the method of elections technically referred to today as STV (the Single Transferable Vote). Thomas Hare was not a mathematician, thus never subjected his STV system to a rigorous mathematical analysis.
This method of elections has since become the favorite of advocates of electoral reform, has been used throughout the world. While continuing to be the main method of elections in Australia and the Republic of Ireland, it has been widely used in numerous corporations and organizations, and has been employed as a single-member variant in local elections in a few jurisdictions of the United States.
Mill described Hare's system as "the greatest improvement of which the system of representative government is susceptible; an improvement which…exactly meets and cures the grand, and what before seemed inherent, defect of the representative system". Indeed, the popularity of Instant-runoff voting today could be attributed to Mill's pronouncements about STV, rather than actual scientific merit. [citation needed]
[edit] Works
- A treatise on election of representatives, parliamentary and municipal (1859)
- The election of representatives parliamentary and municipal : a treatise (1865)
- The machinery of representation (1875)