[EM] 12/13/02 - Giving `crutches to weak candidates':
Adam Tarr
atarr at purdue.edu
Wed Dec 18 10:03:18 PST 2002
Don Davison wrote:
>... why are
>you supporting Condorcet and/or Approval Voting? For, this is what these
>two method do, they give `crutches to weak candidates'.
Do you mean weak candidates like "Centrist", below?
10% FarRight>Right>Centrist>Left>FarLeft
10% Right>FarRight>Centrist>Left>FarLeft
15% Right>Centrist>FarRight>Left>FarLeft
16% Centrist>Right>Left>FarRight>FarLeft
15% Centrist>Left>Right>FarLeft>FarRight
13% Left>Centrist>FarLeft>Right>FarRight
11% Left>FarLeft>Centrist>Right>FarRight
10% FarLeft>Left>Centrist>Right>FarRight
Note that this is an easy, realistic example... I just put five candidates
on a standard political spectrum.
Let's look at who has the most first-place support:
31% Centrist
25% Right
24% Left
10% FarLeft
10% FarRight
Or who has the most second place support:
28% Centrist
26% Right
25% Left
11% FarLeft
10% FarRight
In addition to having the most first AND second place support, Centrist is
the only candidate that is never ranked lower than third on any
ballot. And yet, as you surely realize, Centrist loses in IRV. Right will
beat Left 51%-49% in the final runoff, even though Centrist would beat Left
or Right by around thirty percentage points -- absolute landslides.
How could anyone call Centrist a "weak candidate" with a straight
face? Weaker than who?
>Non-monotonicity is a bad joke, it does not exist, it has never
>happened in a real election,
This is because no real election has ever had three strong parties. IRV
keeps any third party from threatening the other two. History backs me up
on this. Is that a positive feature in your mind?
>A few months ago I posted some real ballots to this list and requested
>anyone to use the ballots and prove that Irving or STV can be
>non-monotonicity in the real world. No one responded.
That's a lie. Steph responded. He correctly pointed out that due to the
extremely strong support for a few candidates, there was no monotonicity
violation there. I'd draw an analogy to Condorcet voting - you're not
going to find a cycle every time. Monotonicity violations in IRV elections
would be a bit more common than cyclic ties in Condorcet elections. Which
is to say that neither would happen in elections with two strong factions.
It's worth noting that those were STV ballots, and it's not clear that
candidates and voters would have acted the same way if it had been a
single-winner election. It's also worth noting that I could have easily
drawn out a subset of the votes and found a Monotonicity violation lurking,
if those had been the only votes. But I don't think that proves much,
except that IRV can fail monotonicity (and we already knew that).
I don't think of monotonicity as the great demon of IRV. I think of it
more as a red flag. If a method fails Monotonicity, then it's a sign that
it can be manipulated or can produce unfair results in other cases. Which
is true for IRV.
>Pity votes will have little influence in an Irving election, but the bad
>effects of `pity votes' can easily happen in the two methods, Condorcet and
>Approval.
Approval, granted. It's easy to get bad results in approval if the voters
vote very stupidly.
But Condorcet? Show me the example, Don. Dream up something. Show me my
second-place votes beating my first place votes. Oh, you can do it, but
it's not easy at all. It takes some very strange breakdowns in
voting. When you finish making such an example, will you be able to say,
"that example is more realistic than the monotonicity violations"? Or will
you be able to say, "that's a less democratic result than the monotonicity
violations"? I'd guess no, and no.
Come up with an example, Don. Or are "charlatans" the only ones who create
examples?
-Adam
----
For more information about this list (subscribe, unsubscribe, FAQ, etc),
please see http://www.eskimo.com/~robla/em
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list