I heard about this in the UK elections recently, and someone recommended it to me recently for the US elections, because I said I empathize with the people who are voting against Kamala because of the genocide, despite being a Kamala supporter myself (you've probably seen me around arguing as such lol).
Basically, it's a system where people in safe states, like me, agree to trade votes with someone in a swing state. So the safe state person would vote with the heart of the person in the swing state, so they can kind of vote their heart and mind at the same time.
Is this a thing we could set up? Would it be legal to make a community for that, or would it rub against laws about affecting votes or something? There was even a whole site for the UK, but not sure if it would work in the US.
Whoops might have accidentally deleted the post I was trying to crosspost instead of the duplicate post I made earlier 🤦
Basically, the idea is, if someone would want to vote for a third party because they don't like a candidate's pro-genocide policies or fracking or something, but they feel uncomfortable because they also live in a swing state and don't want their least favorite candidate to win the election (probably Trump), they make an agreement with someone who lives in a safe state, who will vote for the third party that person wants instead.
Seems simple enough to set up and might assuage some people's conscience instead of risking them voting for a third party, while still giving that party increased numbers this election. It also shows displeasure in the two party duopoly without risking the election itself for a candidate the person doesn't want.
Would people be interested in a community or thread set up for this here on Lemmy and/or Reddit?
The issue is that by voting their conscience for a third party, they might get a candidate they hate, because of the way the electoral college works every swing vote is super important, the margins can get so small. It's risky. So they ensure the one they like least in the party duopoly doesn't get elected, while still ensuring a third party they like can get a boost.
Or course if they really don't care who gets elected between Trump and Kamala, then it doesn't matter. But a lot of third party voters would still have some preference between those two, and they are aware there's no chance their candidate is getting elected. It's more of a protest number to use elevated numbers to show displeasure, which I feel can be done nationally and not just in individual states. Of course, the protest vote is more powerful if the closer candidate actually loses a swing state because they didn't acquiese to the protest's demands, but then you risk getting the other candidate you really didn't want most, so this seems like a safer alternative/compromise.