Condorcet//FPP
David Marsay
djmarsay at dra.hmg.gb
Wed Sep 24 05:49:04 PDT 1997
I am interested in multi-party decision making, but have no experience
in elections.
It seems from the archives that if M is some candidate method (such
as FPP) then Smith//M will be no worse, and will often reduce some
of the main failings of M. Condorcet (where preference cycles are
broken where there is a least strong majority) is an obvious
replacement for Smith in this role. It has some problems, but
I argue that they are acceptable. Is there some significant property
of voting systems that I should consider?
In particular, Condorcet may declare X < Y, contradicting a pair-wise
majority. However, it only does this where there is a chain of
preferences from X to Y that are each stronger than the pair-wise
preference of X over Y. If this is regarded as reasonable, then one
must abandon Condorcet and look for a superior 'M'. (From the
archives, this would seem to be unprofitable).
I have some ways of rationalising Condorcet. For now, let us suppose
that above behaviour is accepted. Then it has to accepted that
candidates that create such contrary preferences are 'relevant'. Thus
when considering phenomena like 'stalking horses', one has to allow
that some changes may be legitimate. I claim that the stalking-horse
like phenomena for Condorcet are much less serious than those for
FPP. Moreover, considering ballots that have cyclic preferences
shows that any method that breaks cycles must have similar problems
to Condorcet.
Condorcet is responsive to single additional ballots. Thus cycles are
unstable (unlike Smith). Tactical voting may break cycles, but this
is not as serious as FPP. Moreover, I claim that tactical voting
could easily back-fire. Considering ballots that have cyclic
preferences shows that any method must have
similar problems to Condorcet.
Thus Condorcet is not significantly more prone to these problems than
other methods. Moreover, Condorcet provides some
protection against vote-splitters and the rich party syndrome.
Condorcet//M appears entirely reasonable, M being relatively
unimportant. It therefore seems preferable to both M and Smith//M.
>From this point of view, the answer has to be Condorcet//M, and it
remains to find a suitable rationalisation for Condorcet.
I welcome comments, particularly on:
- other properties to consider;
- published rationalisations for Condorcet.
Also, is there a translation of Condorcet around?
Ta.
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Sorry folks, but apparently I have to do this. :-(
The views expressed above are entirely those of the writer
and do not represent the views, policy or understanding of
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