In my view, a true independent, is a candidate who is not funnelling votes to another candidate. With the way our preference system works, an independent can, though preference deals, alter the outcome of a local seat and in tight elections, this can influence the outcome. To understand why I claim to be a true independent, you need to understand how the preference system works.
How preferential voting works
The way the system works is that if you VOTE 1 – Andrew Williams, then I get your ‘primary vote’. If I end up being third or lower in the race, then I am knocked out and your vote then goes to whoever is ‘2’ on your ballot (1st
preference).
If your (1st preference) is knocked out, then your vote goes to your 3 vote (3rd preference). This keeps going until your vote ends up with one of the candidates in the top two.
This is how sometimes, when you follow a how-to-vote card with preferences on it, your vote can end up going to a candidate or party that you would not want to vote for.
Once I know who is standing, I will be releasing a how to guide on how to vote for each candidate as your second preference when you Vote 1 – Andrew Williams, this guide will also show, if it was a Liberal / Labor ending up in the first two positions, where your vote would effectively end up with either Liberal or Labor.
I am a true independent and I am not going to preference any candidate. Voting 1 -Andrew Williams then voting 2 for the party or candidate of your choice, will allow you to control exactly where your preference goes. The guide I will release will make it clear once I know who all of the candidates are.
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