Informed Voting: Debate First, Then Vote
Most platforms let you vote with a click and no context. Informed Voices is different: you take a position, take part in a structured debate, and cast your vote only after the discussion period has closed. That way your vote is informed by the best arguments on both sides — and we can measure how many people change their mind.
1. Debate
Each topic has a clear motion. You declare For, Against, or Undecided, then contribute arguments, evidence, or questions. Everyone can read both sides and upvote the strongest points. The debate runs for a set period (e.g. 72 hours).
2. Vote
When the debate closes, voting opens. You cast a final vote: For, Against, or Abstain. People who took part in the debate can receive a slightly higher vote weight. No last-minute pile-on: the vote reflects what people think after seeing the discussion.
3. Results
Results show percentages for and against, the top arguments from each side, regional breakdowns (England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland), and how many participants changed their position after debating. Full methodology is published so you can see exactly how we calculate everything.