On 01/24/2013 01:08 PM, Ross Hyman wrote:

          http://www.knesset.gov.il/elections19/eng/list/results_eng.aspx


          The official Israeli election results show that of the parties
          receiving more than the 2% threshold needed to get into the
          Knesset, the center-left parties actually got a higher
          percentage of the vote, 46.67%, than the right parties,
          46.25%. Yet the center-left parties will get 59 seats and the
          right parties 61 seats.

Israel uses what is basically D'Hondt (but with a negotiation system where parties can pair up; such a agreement gives the larger party an extra seat if the surpluses for the two add up to another seat).

Though I don't know which parties are center-left and which parties are right in Israel, I imagine using Sainte-Laguë would give a fairer distribution. I would also suggest not having the whole nation as one big district. If accuracy is really important, it's possible to have both that and multi-districts with something like the leveling seats system.

According to Wikipedia (and my Sainte-Laguë calculator), the actual (and Sainte-Laguë) results are/would have been:

Party name               Votes   Seats    Sainte-Laguë

Likud                   884631      31              30
Yesh Atid               543280      19              18
Labor                   432083      15              15
The Jewish Home         345935      12              12
Shas                    331800      11              11
United Torah Judaism    196038       7               7
Hatnuah                 189168       6               6
Meretz                  172382       6               6
United Arab List        138362       4               5
Hadash                  113610       4               4
Balad                    96926       3               3
Kadima                   79487       2               3

The differences are that Likud and Yesh Atid would get a seat less each, and UAL and Kadima would get one more each.

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