The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with Western culture and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (November 2013) |
This article may be unbalanced toward certain viewpoints. (September 2024) |
Vote trading is the practice of voting in the manner another person wishes on a bill, position on a more general issue, or favored candidate in exchange for the other person's vote in the manner one wishes on another position, proposal, or candidate. Nearly all voting systems do not make vote trading a formal process, so vote trading is very often informal and thus not binding.
One form of vote trading that is formal is one that involves the trading of proxy voting rights – party A gets Party B's voting right formally, e.g. as a filled in proxy form with signature, perhaps authenticated by secretariats, and in this case party A may use B's vote on issue 1, and B uses A's vote on issue 2.
Vote trading can be a type of logrolling. For discussion of vote trading between individual voters, rather than legislators, see vote swapping.