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SAMPLE BALLOT

CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT 3 (Multi-Member)

General Election - November 2, 2032


INSTRUCTIONS: STAR Voting (Score - Then - Automatic - Runoff)

This district elects 5 Representatives to the United States House of Representatives.

How to Vote:

  • Give your favorite candidate(s) five stars (⑤)
  • Give your least favorite candidate(s) zero stars (⓪) or leave blank
  • Score other candidates as desired based on your level of support
  • You may give the same score to multiple candidates
  • Equal scores indicate equal support

How Your Ballot is Counted:

Your scores help determine which candidates are elected proportionally. The highest-scoring candidates are elected with vote reweighting to ensure fair representation. All your ratings count throughout the process.


U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Congressional District 3 - 5 seats

Rate each candidate from 0 to 5 stars

Candidate Party Registration Party Endorsements Rating (Worst → Best)
Sarah Martinez Democratic Democratic, Working Families ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
James Chen Republican Republican ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Maria Rodriguez Democratic Democratic, Green ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Thomas Anderson Republican Republican, Forward ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Jennifer Kim none Independent ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Robert Wilson Libertarian Libertarian ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Patricia O'Brien Democratic Democratic, Working Families, Green ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Michael Torres Republican none ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
David Park none Forward ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Elizabeth Harris Republican Republican ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Carlos Mendez Democratic none ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤
Sophia Patel Green Green, Working Families ⓪ ① ② ③ ④ ⑤

CANDIDATE INFORMATION

Sarah Martinez

Party Registration: Democratic | Party Endorsements: Democratic, Working Families

Small business owner and former city council member. Focuses on affordable housing, workforce development, and small business support. Advocates for community-driven economic development and accessible childcare programs. Coalition support from Working Families Party signals strong labor ties.


James Chen

Party Registration: Republican | Party Endorsements: Republican

Attorney and community leader with 15 years in private practice. Priorities include tax reform, public safety, and regulatory streamlining. Supports evidence-based criminal justice reform while maintaining law-and-order credentials.


Maria Rodriguez

Party Registration: Democratic | Party Endorsements: Democratic, Green

Environmental scientist and education advocate with Ph.D. in climate science. Emphasizes climate action, renewable energy transition, and public education funding. Green Party endorsement reflects strong environmental credentials while maintaining Democratic Party support.


Thomas Anderson

Party Registration: Republican | Party Endorsements: Republican, Forward

Military veteran (Major, U.S. Marine Corps, retired) and technology entrepreneur. Focuses on infrastructure modernization, veteran services, and bipartisan problem-solving. Forward Party endorsement signals reform-minded approach and willingness to work across party lines.


Jennifer Kim

Party Registration: none | Party Endorsements: Independent

Healthcare administrator with 20 years experience in hospital management. Advocates for healthcare access, mental health services, senior care, and rural healthcare infrastructure. True independent with no party registration or major party endorsement.


Robert Wilson

Party Registration: Libertarian | Party Endorsements: Libertarian

Economics professor at state university and civil liberties advocate. Priorities include fiscal responsibility, individual freedom, criminal justice reform, and ending qualified immunity. Supports reducing government intervention while protecting civil liberties.


Patricia O'Brien

Party Registration: Democratic | Party Endorsements: Democratic, Working Families, Green

Labor union organizer with 25 years experience in public sector unions. Champions workers' rights, environmental justice, progressive taxation, and union organizing protections. Maximum three-party endorsement demonstrates broad progressive coalition support.


Michael Torres

Party Registration: Republican | Party Endorsements: none

Former state senator who did not receive Republican Party endorsement. Emphasizes traditional conservative values, border security, agricultural policy, and rural community development. Running without party endorsement after internal party disputes.


David Park

Party Registration: none | Party Endorsements: Forward

Software engineer and civic tech advocate with background in government technology systems. Focuses on government modernization, electoral reform, anti-corruption measures, and digital infrastructure. Not registered with any party but endorsed by reform-focused Forward Party.


Elizabeth Harris

Party Registration: Republican | Party Endorsements: Republican

Small business owner (retail and e-commerce) and local chamber president. Priorities include economic development, Main Street revitalization, regulatory reform, and supporting local entrepreneurship. Moderate Republican focused on practical business solutions rather than culture war issues.


Carlos Mendez

Party Registration: Democratic | Party Endorsements: none

Community college instructor and immigrant rights advocate. Focuses on education access, immigration reform, student debt relief, and expanding career technical education. Registered Democrat but has not received party endorsement, possibly due to crowded Democratic field.


Sophia Patel

Party Registration: Green | Party Endorsements: Green, Working Families

Organic farmer and sustainable agriculture advocate with 15 years farming experience. Emphasizes agricultural policy, environmental protection, food security, climate-resilient agriculture, and supporting family farms. Coalition endorsement from Working Families Party shows labor-environmental alliance.


UNDERSTANDING YOUR BALLOT

Party Registration vs. Party Endorsements

Party Registration (shown in the table): - Shows which party, if any, the candidate is registered with - Examples: Democratic, Republican, Libertarian, Green, none

Party Endorsements (shown in the table): - Shows which parties formally endorsed this candidate - Candidates may receive up to three endorsements - Examples: Democratic, Working Families | Republican | Independent

What It Means:

  • Democratic | Democratic, Working Families (Martinez) = Democrat endorsed by Democrats and Working Families Party
  • Democratic | Democratic, Working Families, Green (O'Brien) = Maximum three endorsements showing broad progressive coalition
  • Republican | Republican, Forward (Anderson) = Republican with additional Forward Party endorsement
  • Republican | none (Torres) = Republican who lost party endorsement, running without support
  • Democratic | none (Mendez) = Democrat without party endorsement
  • none | Independent (Kim) = True independent, not registered with any party
  • none | Forward (Park) = Not registered with a party, but endorsed by Forward Party
  • Green | Green, Working Families (Patel) = Green Party member with coalition endorsement

HOW PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION WORKS

With 5 seats to fill and 12 candidates running, this district uses STAR Proportional Representation to ensure voters across the political spectrum get fair representation:

  1. Your scores matter: Rate candidates honestly based on your level of support
  2. Proportional allocation: The system ensures that groups of voters who share preferences get representation roughly proportional to their numbers
  3. No wasted votes: Unlike single-member districts, your vote counts even if your top choices don't all win
  4. Coalition representation: The 5 winners will likely represent different viewpoints, reflecting the diversity of the district

Example Outcome: If voters in this district are roughly 40% progressive, 35% conservative, and 25% moderate/independent, the 5 elected Representatives might be: - 2 progressive Democrats (Martinez, Rodriguez, or O'Brien) - 2 Republicans (Chen, Anderson, or Harris) - 1 moderate/independent (Kim, Park, Wilson, or Patel)

This ensures everyone gets representation, not just the plurality.


CANDIDATE SCENARIOS ILLUSTRATED

Democratic Party Division

The four Democratic candidates show party diversity: - Sarah Martinez (Dem, WF) - Moderate, business-focused with labor support - Maria Rodriguez (Dem, Green) - Progressive with environmental focus - Patricia O'Brien (Dem, WF, Green) - Most progressive with maximum coalition support - Carlos Mendez (Dem, none) - No party endorsement despite registration

This demonstrates how proportional representation allows parties to run multiple candidates representing different wings without splitting votes destructively.

Republican Party Division

The four Republican candidates show conservative diversity: - James Chen (Rep) - Law-and-order moderate with legal background - Thomas Anderson (Rep, Forward) - Reform-minded veteran with cross-party appeal - Elizabeth Harris (Rep) - Business-focused pragmatist - Michael Torres (Rep, none) - Lost party endorsement, running independently

Torres's lack of endorsement signals internal party conflict - voters can see clearly that his own party doesn't support him.

Independent and Third-Party Options

Five candidates outside the Democratic-Republican binary: - Jennifer Kim (none, Ind) - Healthcare-focused true independent - Robert Wilson (Lib) - Academic libertarian, civil liberties focus - David Park (none, Forward) - Tech-focused reformer - Sophia Patel (Green, WF) - Environmental-labor coalition

These candidates provide alternatives to major party options while building coalitions through Joint Endorsement Lists.

Coalition Building Through Endorsements

Note the coalition patterns: - Progressive coalition: O'Brien (Dem, WF, Green), Patel (Green, WF) - Reform coalition: Anderson (Rep, Forward), Park (Forward) - Labor coalition: Martinez (Dem, WF), O'Brien (Dem, WF, Green), Patel (Green, WF) - Single party: Chen (Rep), Harris (Rep), Wilson (Lib), Rodriguez (Dem, Green)


WHY RATE ALL CANDIDATES?

Even if you have clear favorites, rating all candidates helps:

  1. Backup preferences: If your favorites get elected early, your scores for other candidates help determine remaining winners
  2. Coalition building: Your ratings show which candidates you find acceptable, helping elect representatives who can work together
  3. Prevent worst outcomes: Rating candidates you dislike as 0 prevents them from being elected with your support
  4. Full participation: All your scores count throughout the proportional allocation process

You can't hurt your favorites by rating others! The proportional system ensures that once your highly-rated candidates are elected, your ballot is reweighted to give other voters fair influence on remaining seats.


STRATEGIC VOTING EXAMPLES

Progressive Voter

A progressive voter might rate: - O'Brien: ⑤ (maximum coalition support) - Rodriguez: ⑤ (strong environmental credentials) - Martinez: ④ (moderate but acceptable) - Patel: ④ (Green-labor coalition) - Mendez: ③ (progressive but unendorsed) - Kim: ③ (independent, healthcare focus) - Park: ② (reformer, acceptable moderate) - Wilson: ① (libertarian, disagree on economics) - Anderson: ① (Republican but reform-minded) - Harris: ⓪ (business Republican) - Chen: ⓪ (law-and-order conservative) - Torres: ⓪ (traditional conservative)

Conservative Voter

A conservative voter might rate: - Chen: ⑤ (solid conservative, legal expertise) - Harris: ⑤ (business-focused, practical) - Anderson: ④ (veteran, reform-minded) - Torres: ③ (conservative but no party support) - Wilson: ③ (libertarian, fiscal conservative) - Kim: ② (independent, acceptable moderate) - Park: ① (reformer but too centrist) - Martinez: ① (Democrat but business-friendly) - Rodriguez: ⓪ (progressive environmental focus) - O'Brien: ⓪ (union organizer, too progressive) - Mendez: ⓪ (progressive Democrat) - Patel: ⓪ (Green Party)

Independent/Moderate Voter

An independent voter might rate: - Kim: ⑤ (true independent, healthcare expertise) - Park: ⑤ (reformer, good governance focus) - Anderson: ④ (bipartisan veteran) - Martinez: ④ (pragmatic Democrat) - Harris: ③ (moderate Republican) - Chen: ③ (smart conservative) - Wilson: ③ (civil liberties focus) - Rodriguez: ② (smart but very progressive) - Patel: ② (good on agriculture) - Mendez: ① (education focus but unproven) - O'Brien: ① (too union-focused) - Torres: ⓪ (lost party support, concerning)


PARTY AND COALITION BREAKDOWN

By Party Registration

  • Democratic (4): Martinez, Rodriguez, O'Brien, Mendez
  • Republican (4): Chen, Anderson, Torres, Harris
  • Independent (2): Kim, Park
  • Libertarian (1): Wilson
  • Green (1): Patel

By Endorsement Pattern

  • Three endorsements (1): O'Brien (Dem, WF, Green)
  • Two endorsements (5): Martinez (Dem, WF), Rodriguez (Dem, Green), Anderson (Rep, Forward), Patel (Green, WF)
  • One endorsement (4): Chen (Rep), Wilson (Lib), Harris (Rep), Kim (Ind), Park (Forward)
  • No endorsement (2): Torres (Rep registered), Mendez (Dem registered)

VOTE BOTH SIDES OF BALLOT
Turn ballot over for additional races →


This is a mock ballot created for educational purposes to demonstrate STAR Proportional Representation voting and Joint Endorsement Lists as proposed in the Congressional Elections Modernization Act (CEMA).

📥 Download this document (opens on GitHub -- click the ⬇ download button)


Prepared by Albert Ramos for The American Policy Architecture Institute