Bridging Voting and Deliberation with Algorithms: Hybrid Participatory Budgeting Assembly
Joshua C.
Yang, and Fynn
Bachmann
Integrating voting and deliberation in democratic processes is increasingly recognized as vital, prompting calls for hybrid democratic innovations (HDIs). Notably, participatory budgeting and citizens’ assemblies—key democratic innovations over the past three decades—can significantly enhance community engagement and decision-making when combined. This emerging combination presents substantial opportunities for algorithmic decision-making, where citizens are guided by their own votes toward more constructive and meaningful collective outcomes in deliberations. This community-based participatory research examines the Kultur Komitee Winterthur 2024, which integrated these methods by employing a hybrid model of the Method of Equal Shares (MES) voting and group deliberation, clustered using PCA reduction, in its decision-making process. The committee, consisting of 30 randomly selected citizens, utilised a budget of CHF 400,000 to support cultural projects, with voting input from online approval votes and real-time MES calculation interactive display informing and guiding in-person deliberations. We found distinct outcomes between online MES voting and deliberative selections, with the committee deciding that voting should dictate only half the budget, with grouped deliberation deciding the rest of the budget. This hybrid model highlights the potential of combining voting and deliberation for informed, inclusive, and fair funding decisions in participatory budgeting.