Briefly why I prefer Reg-Champ to Smith//Con
Bruce Anderson
landerso at ida.org
Tue Jun 4 01:48:09 PDT 1996
On May 27, 5:00pm, Steve Eppley wrote:
> Subject: Re: Attachment CRITTBL1
> Bruce, you've provided a table of some ranked ballot voting methods
> which meet or fail to meet 7 criteria. Quite a few of the methods
> meet all 7 criteria, including Smith//Condorcet.
>
> You've also written that you prefer Regular-Champion to
> Smith//Condorcet, but I don't recall you explaining why.
>
> Since we're probably going to poll ourselves soon on methods, I'd
> like to hear your reasoning; otherwise I feel compelled based on
> the discussion so far to rank Smith//Condorcet higher than
> Regular-Champion.
>
> I presume that you're planning to post definitions of the methods
> mentioned in the table. I'm looking forward to that, because many of
> the methods' names are unfamiliar to me and because I'm curious about
> how Condorcet is defined (and by whom).
>
> ---Steve (Steve Eppley seppley at alumni.caltech.edu)
>
>-- End of excerpt from Steve Eppley
If you, or others, would like more details on any of the voting methods I
recently described, please let me know which ones, and what kind of additional
details you would like to see. Otherwise, I will assume that the descriptions
are adequate for your purposes.
I have not get posted why I prefer Regular-Champion to Smith//Condorcet.
Briefly, the reasons are as follows.
First, from what I have seen so far, it seems to me that the strategy-protection
capabilities of Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet have been vastly oversold. I
have seen no precise statements of such strategy-protection criteria on this
list (maybe they were posted before I joined), and have seen no proofs of such
criteria anywhere. When I tried to formulate and prove similar criteria, I
found severe weaknesses in this supposed protection. I have not saying that
such criteria could not be precisely stated and formally proven. I'm just
saying them I have seen no proofs at all, and that the statements of such
criteria that I have seen had what I considered to be severe flaws. I will
attempt to post an example of such a flaw for the "lesser of two evils"
criterion in the near future.
Second, but less important, Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet can be vulnerable to
strategy manipulation in some cases when the methods I prefer (Regular-Champion,
Consensus-Champion, Complete-Champion, and Qualified-Champion) are not. This
certainly does not mean that the methods I prefer are necessarily better, but it
raises questions concerning exactly what are the meaningful properties that
Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet really do possess. I posted one example of this
vulnerability already. I'll post a second, closely related, example later
tonight.
Third, and most important, Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet can select as winners
what I believe the vast majority of voters (in economically developed countries)
would think are incredibly ridiculous choices. Such a selection may rarely
happen, but if it happens even once in an election of any significance, it could
set the single-winner reform movement back for decades, maybe even a century or
two. I don't think it's worth the risk for the minimal strategy protection that
has been meaningfully demonstrated so far for Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet.
Personally, I would feel quite comfortable defending any Regular-Champion (or
Consensus-Champion, Complete-Champion, or Qualified-Champion) winner before a
group of intelligent but hostile critics. Conversely, I see no way of defending
some of the winners that Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet can produce. I will
attempt to post relevant examples shortly.
Given the blatant losers that Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet can select as
"winners," the choice between Condorcet and Smith//Condorcet and methods that
cannot select such intuitive losers seems easy to me. The harder question is to
choose among those other methods. In particular, choosing among
Regular-Champion Consensus-Champion, Complete-Champion, Qualified-Champion,
Qualified-Kemeny, Kemeny//Random, Niemi-Riker//Random, Smith//Borda//Random, and
Smith//Bucklin-ext//Random is not so easy. I based my choice on my which I felt
was the simplest.
Bruce
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