[EM] Smith Sets with >3 members
    Forest Simmons 
    fsimmons at pcc.edu
       
    Tue Feb 26 14:47:17 PST 2002
    
    
  
On Tue, 26 Feb 2002, Markus Schulze wrote:
> Dear Alex,
>
> methods that always choose one of the candidates with
> the largest number of pairwise victories are called
> "Copeland methods". The main problem of Copeland methods
> is that they are manipulable by clones in a very
> straight forward manner.
>
It seems to me that another problem of Copeland methods is that they
encourage favorite betrayal in the same way IRV does: if your compromise
has a better chance of winning the election than your favorite, but your
favorite has a good chance of beating your compromise, then you (and like
minded voters) vote your compromise above your favorite to maximize your
compromise's chance of getting one more win.
Forest
    
    
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