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Election Matrix

Wednesday, 16 November 2022  | Chris White


Election Matrix

Originally compiled on 8 November 2010 by Chris White. Updated in 2019 by Armen Gakavian.

You can download the PDF version here.

 

AREA/ITEM                                                    WEIGHT OF IMPORTANCE     ALP      LNP     GREENS

                                                                       (Scale 1-3)                             (Low – high, 1-5)


Personal Ethics
Abortion                                                           ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Euthanasia                                                       ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Bioethics                                                          ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Pornography                                                     ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Sexualisation of young                                      ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Removal of sex bias/discrimination                     ___                                          ___      ___      ___

 - but not accepting same-sex marriage              ___                                          ___      ___      ___

 

Social Ethics                                                              

Housing                                                            ___                                          ___      ___      ___

The poor                                                           ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Disabled                                                           ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Religious tolerance                                            ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Economic management                                     ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Health                                                              ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Mental Health                                                   ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Education                                                         ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Alcohol & drugs                                                ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Law & order; prisons                                         ___                                          ___      ___      ___

 

Environmental Ethics                                               

Energy (oil/coal/CC&S/wind/solar/tidal)              ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Water (rivers/buyback/desalination)                   ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Climate change reduction                                  ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Forest & species preservation                             ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Other recycling                                                 ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Transport policy (public, rail etc.)                       ___                                          ___      ___      ___

 

Overall factors                                                                      

Ability to govern/influence                                 ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Assessment of leadership                                  ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Acceptance of individual conscience                    ___                                          ___      ___      ___

Integrity, transparency & accountability              ___                                          ___      ___      ___

 

TOTAL RATINGS                                             ___                                          ___      ___      ___



Comments

Bill Walker
November 9, 2010, 10:27AM
Chris, this is a really helpful matrix. I am inclined to think that some weightings are needed especially for the overall factors. My main problem is one of time to complete the research needed to fill it out!
To make it practical for voting one further area to cover concerns the criteria for assessment of the candidates themselves. Maybe you can help us with that too?
regards Bill
Chris White
November 10, 2010, 11:27AM
When I originally did this for the Federal Election, I allocated weights between 0 and 10, but totalling 100, for each item in the three areas (personal, social, environmental) plus overall factors.

What this approach forces you to do is allocate priorities, and get away from "single issue" thinking. It involves compromise, which many Christians find difficult, but which of course is at the heart of political decisions in this fallen world. And the more individual items you include, the less overall impact each one has on the resulting total rating.

I agree with Bill that you need to rate the overall factors (leadership, etc) and including ratings for the individual candidate as well as the party level factors is a good idea. "Integrity, transparency and accountability" has an individual candidate as well as a party/leadership dimension, and one additional one to include might be "Christian ethics of local candidate".

Chris White (10 Nov 10)
Wilson Lim
September 2, 2013, 8:55PM
I applaud the concept to clarify broader thinking. However, the grid is fundamentally though subtly skewed towards where the number of issues that appear on the list. Eg: If there are 20 items on the Social Ethics but only 10 on Personal Ethics - guess which item will by default gain more priority?
Chris White
September 3, 2013, 9:26AM
Not necessarily, Wilson. Obviously the weights can vary by size according to your preferences, and you can add other items within the areas if you feel important aspects are left out. A way to counter any perceived bias towards areas with more items would be to group like items together and allocate weights to the resulting items and groups of items, and/or allocate total weights by the three areas, then split the totals up among the items.

I have also found the ABC's online tool VoteCompass helpful in positioning me in relation to the two major parties and the Greens. Given I'm not going to blindly hand my preferences over to any of the parties by voting "above the line" in the Senate, I've grouped all the minor/one issue parties according to three categories - "absolutely not!", "Indifferent", and "they've got a point (or two)", and interspersed preferences for those three groupings amongst (or before or after) my preferences for the main three.

If you're going to vote "below the line" in the Senate, you really do need to run off the list of candidates (from the AEC website) - 97 in my case in Victoria - and make up your own "how to vote" card before you get to the polling station!
Amy Bayley
September 4, 2013, 2:26AM
A great research resource for answering questions here:http://www.biblesociety.org.au/election2013

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