[EM] Definite Majority Choice, first round public proposal (draft)
Araucaria Araucana
araucaria.araucana at gmail.com
Fri Mar 18 11:01:31 PST 2005
Below is a draft of a first round proposal for a single
general-election voting method replacement. Comments humbly
requested. Could the explanation be made any clearer?
As discussed previously, Definite Majority Choice (hat-tip to Forest
for the name) is just another name for Ranked Approval Voting (RAV),
Approval Runoff Condorcet (ARC), and finds the same winner as Pairwise
Sorted Approval. I believe that it finds the same winner as both
Ranked Pairs and Beatpath when defeat strength is measured by the
Approval of the pairwise winner. Among non-eliminated candidates,
there are no pairwise cycles, thus removing the biggest objection of
IRV advocates to Condorcet methods.
Note that Pairwise Sorting on a previously seeded ordering is also
known as Local Kemenization and is used in Rank Aggregation methods --
see, e.g., http://www10.org/cdrom/papers/577/. So if all else fails,
you could say that DMC finds the Google winner!
Credits: Forest Simmons, Jobst Heitzig, Russ Paielli, Chris Benham,
Kevin Venzke, and of course Steve Eppley, Markus Schulze and
Mike Ossipoff. Anybody else I should cite? Who first
proposed Graded Ballots? Adam Tarr?
-- Ted
,----[ definite-majority-choice-graded-ballot ]
| Definite Majority Choice:
|
| Voters can grade their choices from favorite (A) to least preferred
| (ungraded), and give some or all of their graded choices a "passing
| grade", signifying approval.
|
| Ranked ballots are added into a Round-Robin array, and the approval
| scores of each candidate are also tabulated.
|
| To determine the winner,
|
| - Eliminate any candidate that is defeated in a one-to-one match
| with any other higher-approved candidate. So by 2 different
| measures, a definite majority agrees that candidate should be
| eliminated.
|
| - If more than one candidate remains, the winner is the single
| candidate that defeats all others in one-to-one (pairwise)
| contests.
|
| How to vote:
|
| Graded ballot:
|
| A B C D E F G
|
| X1 ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
|
| X2 ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
|
| X3 ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
|
| X3 ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
|
| Lowest ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
| Passing
| Grade
| (optional)
|
| You can give the same grade to more than one candidate. By default,
| each graded candidates get a "passing grade" and one Approval point.
|
| Ungraded candidates are graded below all others and get no Approval
| points.
|
| Optionally, a voter can specify a Lowest Passing Grade (LPG), which
| means that any graded candidates with lower grades get no approval
| points.
|
| If this were a vote for president, one could compare the LPG selection
| to Gerald Ford. One might disagree whether he was a good or bad
| president, but anybody better than him would be a good president, and
| anybody worse than him would be bad.
|
| The main reason to grade candidates below the "Gerald Ford" mark would
| be if you're not optimistic about the chances for your higher-ranked
| favorite and compromise candidates. Grading candidate X below the LPG
| mark gives you a chance to say "I don't like X and don't want him to
| win, but of all the alternatives, he would make the fewest changes in
| the wrong direction." Then you have some say in the outcome, instead
| of leaving the choice among the alternatives to the most vocal and
| extreme parts of other factions.
`----
--
araucaria dot araucana at gmail dot com
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