Which candidates do you approve of for U.S. president in 2024?
660 ballots
Vermin Supreme (L) Leading
265 votes (40%)
Lars Mapstead (L)
176 votes (27%)
Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (D)
155 votes (23%)
Tulsi Gabbard (I)
109 votes (17%)
Peter Sonski (ASP)
109 votes (17%)
Chase Oliver (L)
99 votes (15%)
Spike Cohen (L)
86 votes (13%)
Joseph “Afroman” Foreman (I)
77 votes (12%)
Jill Stein (G)
73 votes (11%)
Jo Jorgensen (L)
68 votes (10%)
Ron DeSantis (R)
67 votes (10%)
Marianne Williamson (D)
66 votes (10%)
Donald Trump (R)
63 votes (10%)
Joe Schriner (ASP)
53 votes (8%)
Joe Biden (D)
49 votes (7%)
Angela Walker (G)
45 votes (7%)
Howie Hawkins (G)
44 votes (7%)
Vivek Ramaswamy (R)
43 votes (7%)
Larry Elder (R)
39 votes (6%)
Tim Scott (R)
37 votes (6%)
Nikki Haley (R)
31 votes (5%)
Pete Buttigieg (D)
29 votes (4%)
Cynthia McKinney (G)
25 votes (4%)
Corey Stapleton (R)
25 votes (4%)
Larry Hogan (R)
23 votes (3%)
Larry Johnson (ASP)
21 votes (3%)
Joe Manchin (D)
21 votes (3%)
Dave Smith (L)
21 votes (3%)
Jacqueline Abernathy (ASP)
19 votes (3%)
Asa Hutchinson (R)
19 votes (3%)
Erskine Levi Jr. (ASP)
19 votes (3%)
Jacob Hornberger (L)
17 votes (3%)
Dr. Shiva Ayyadurai
10 votes (2%)
Mike ter Maat (L)
9 votes (1%)
When electing multiple candidates to a board or committee Proportional Approval Voting ensures that no single voting group dominates the outcome, promoting fair representation and reflecting the diverse preferences of all voters. In scenarios where there are more seats than choices available and where each choice represents a party—this method can allow a popular party to be allocated multiple seats proportionally, mirroring the party’s share of overall support.