If the 2020 Presidential Election were held today, for whom would you vote for? [this is an approval voting (instead of plurality voting) test so vote for 1 OR MORE of the following candidates:]

167 ballots

Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian) Leading

158 votes (95%)

95%

Joe Biden (Democrat)

11 votes (7%)

7%

Donald Trump (Republican)

7 votes (4%)

4%

Other

6 votes (4%)

4%

None of the Above

2 votes (1%)

1%

Approval Distribution

Number of Candidates Approved
Candidate 123
All Candidates
(167 voters)
91.0% 7.8% 1.2%
Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian)
(158 voters)
91.1% 7.6% 1.3%
Joe Biden (Democrat)
(11 voters)
45.5% 45.5% 9.1%
Donald Trump (Republican)
(7 voters)
28.6% 57.1% 14.3%
Other
(6 voters)
66.7% 33.3%
None of the Above
(2 voters)
50.0% 50.0%

Co-Approval Matrix

Percentage of voters who approved the row candidate also approved the column candidate

Approved Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian)Joe Biden (Democrat)Donald Trump (Republican)OtherNone of the Above
Jo Jorgensen (Libertarian) 3.2% 3.2% 3.2% 0.6%
Joe Biden (Democrat) 45.5% 0.0% 18.2% 0.0%
Donald Trump (Republican) 71.4% 0.0% 14.3% 0.0%
Other 83.3% 33.3% 16.7% 0.0%
None of the Above 50.0% 0.0% 0.0% 0.0%

Anyone But Analysis

No "Anyone But" voting patterns detected (no ballots with exactly N-1 approvals)

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.

Allocation Steps

Cast Vote Record