by VE
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Hello,

I would like to know whether an analogous organization/platform to GiveWell exists, but for voting; i.e., a platform that informs the citizens of different countries on how to maximize the effectiveness of their vote depending on which issues/policies they care the most about.

I bring this up since most of the working population that I know doesn't have the time and energy to sift through the propaganda of each party, which number in the dozens in some WEIRD countries. I find it specially germane given the recent rise in populism. Sorry if this is 'too political' for this space.

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Perhaps https://justfacts.votesmart.org/ is what you’re looking for?

I think this is a quite hard problem, perhaps much harder that is seems initially. Besides the fact that different voters have different opinions and priorities about policy (or character, for that matter), it is for the most part not the case that serious candidates lay out their policy prescriptions in detailed/possible ways. That’s because doing so tends to make oneself less electable. The way to get into office is to keep things vague enough that any particular voter could convince themselves that the candidate supports, or at least might be persuaded later to support, whatever the voter is looking for. And if you keep things vague then you can present an impossible platform, such as promising funding for particular programs without specifying what unpopular policies (taxes or budget cuts) would produce that funding. Furthermore electorates change their mind and a successful politician needs to be able to follow the crowd without being accused of flip-flopping. Finally, candidates also want to be able to tailor their messaging to different constituencies or donor groups.

The bottom line is that candidates and political parties (at least, serious ones) aren’t going to subject themselves to a GiveWell-like process, at least not without a really significant and legible benefit (votes or $$) available on the other end.

When it comes to local or regional elections, the problem is even harder because the issues vary from place to place and office to office, and information about candidates is not widely disseminated, often available only in the local paper or candidate forum.

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