[EM] Dave reply. ARLO and power-truncation.
Dave Ketchum
davek at clarityconnect.com
Sun Feb 18 18:33:48 PST 2007
I agree with much, but differ as to truncation
Given acceptable candidates A and B, plus equally unacceptable rejects C
and D:
If A and B are equally acceptable:
Approval can say this.
Also Condorcet: A=B - which gets remembered as A=B, A>C, A>D, B>C,
B>D.
There can be debate as to remembering A=B. For each 2 such votes I would
count as if there was 1 each of A>B and B>A.
If I PREFERRED A, I Need Condorcet to say so:
A>B - which gets remembered as A>B, A>C, A>D, B>C, B>D.
All the above assumes normal truncation permitted. Truncation variations:
Prohibited: Flip a coin and add >C>D or >C<D or >C=D - which
affects C vs D, but not the fact that I prefer A or B.
Power truncation: As I read Michael's words, it would get
remembered as C>D and D>C - does not look useful.
ARLO? Seems complicated beyond believable value, so I am tempted to
attack. Think of an election for governor. Why should we not expect some
Republicans to place all non-Republicans below the line, and some
Democrats to respond in kind?
DWK
On Sun, 18 Feb 2007 12:57:02 +0000 Michael Ossipoff wrote:
>
> First, I want to express my agreement with the statement that we’re here
> because public elections are important. We’re not here because of campus
> elections or organizational elections, etc. I suggest that campus
> governments and organizations be urged to use methods that are suitable
> for, and proposable for, public elections. To help get precedent, public
> experience and public exposure for better public voting systems.
>
> Dave wrote:
>
> While we can learn by participating in polls, we need to remember that
> our proper goal is assisting average voters in elections.
>
> I reply:
>
> Yes, and that’s all the more reason why we should have experience
> regarding what it’s like to use what we’re selling. Polls are the only
> way to get that experience.
>
> Dave continued:
>
> Perhaps we need to debate need for ranking all the candidates with
> Condorcet.
>
> I reply:
>
> I probably wouldn’t rank them all. In fact I’d power-truncate most of
> them if power-truncation were available. (I’ll define power-truncation
> later in this posting).
>
> Dave continued:
>
> There is no such need, and demanding more ranking than might be useful
> can even end up with false ranking if voters are forced to pretend to
> decide value of candidates that do not interest them positively.
>
> I reply:
>
> Faced with a ballot with 20 rank positions could discourage someone from
> voting. In one of our presidential polls, the nominations got sillier
> and sillier, till we had about 46 candidates. Only 7 people voted.
> Ranking all the candidates, as I did, was a bit of work. Rating them all
> was _a lot_ of work. Approval voting, however, was easy.
>
> Dave continued:
>
> Those voters who find they can fully express their desires in a race
> with Approval, should be allowed to express EXACTLY the same desires
> with Condorcet with the same effort.
>
> I reply:
>
> Quite so. And that’s why I’ve proposed power-truncation and the ARLO
> option. I’m not saying that Condorcet _needs_ them, but they’d reassure
> people who worry about strategy. And they’d please the principled voter
> who wants to show his opinion of his less-liked candidates. I’ll define
> them either at the end of this posting, or in a subsequent one later
> tonight or tomorrow morning when I next get a chance to get on the computer.
>
> For me as a voter (as opposed to what I believe that others need)
> Approval would be fine. It’s other voters who, I feel, need Condorcet. I
> admit that that’s my subjective opinion, because other progressives
> disagree with me about what is acceptable and approvable.
>
>
> I’d said:
>
>
> Yes, I’d rather have SSD, but if it’s to be a handcount, or there are
> lots of candidates, and you might not want to ask people to rank that
> many candidates, then the much easier Approval offers a very good
> substitute for Condorcet’s expressiveness, Approval’s own kind of
> expressiveness. Approval would be my 2nd choice then.
>
>
>
> Dave replies:
>
> To me, depends on what kind of expressiveness I wish for in a particular
> race
>
> I reply:
>
> Well, one thing I’d enjoy about Approval would be showing my disgust for
> candidates by not voting for them. Likewise, for the same reason, I’d
> enjoy using power-truncation and ARLO, even though it’s very unlikely
> that they’d actually be needed in Condorcet.
>
> About education: Polls in public places, such as outdoor fairs, or on
> the Internet, or use of better voting systems in campus elections and
> organizations would be good ways to show people how interesting and
> useful better voting systems are.
>
> A few definitions:
>
> Power truncation (PT):
>
> If you indicate that you want to power truncate everyone below a certain
> rank position (In an EM poll, you’d do that by writing “PT” above those
> rank positions), then your ballot casts a pair-wise vote for every one
> of the other candidates (whether power-truncated or not) over every
> power truncated candidate. So, for example, say there are 20 candidates,
> and you power-truncate 15 of them. For each one of those 15
> power-truncated candidates, your ballot casts a pair-wise vote for each
> of the other 19 candidates over that candidate.
>
> In general, no matter what the rank method, your ballot would treat each
> power truncated candidate as if you’d ranked every one of the other
> candidates over him/her.
>
> ARLO (Automatic Rank Line Option):
>
> ARLO uses up to 3 counts.
>
> If you indicate that you want to use ARLO at a certain point in your
> ranking (In an EM poll you’d do that by writing ARLO at that point in
> the ranking), then your ballot truncates (power truncates, if power
> truncation is allowed--and it should be allowed) every candidate below
> ARLO. The candidates above ARLO are left in the order in which you
> ranked them.
>
> If, in the 1st count, a candidate below at least one voter’s ARLO line
> wins, then there will be a 2nd count.
>
> If, in the 2nd count, a candidate below at least one voter’s ARLO line
> wins, there will be a 3rd count.
>
> If a below-line candidate wins at least one of the first two counts,
> then your ballot promotes all the above-line candidates to equal 1st
> place, and they stay there.
>
> If there’s a 2nd count, and it is won by a below-line candidate, then
> your ballot un-truncates the below line candidates, and they’re treated
> as any ranking would treat them, according to where you have them
> ranked. In other words, they’re restored to where you’ve ranked them,
> instead of being truncated or power-truncated.
>
> An example of a ballot with ARLO:
>
> 1. Ralph Nader
> 2. Peter Camejo
> ARLO
> 3. Dennis Kucinich
> 4. Barak Obama
> 5. Hillary Clinton
> 6. John McCain
>
> If you don’t want to restore the below-ARLO candidates in the event that
> a below-ARLO candidate wins, then that can be achieved by
> unconditionally power-truncating the below-ARLO candidates. Obviously
> then there’s no need to rank them:
>
> 1. Ralph Nader
> 2. Peter Camejo
> ARLO
> PT
>
> But maybe you’d like to unconditionally power-truncate some, but not
> all, of the below ARLO candidates. That too can be easily done by how
> you place PT:
>
> 1. Ralph Nader
> 2. Peter Camejo
> ARLO
> 3. Dennis Kucinich
> PT
> Of course you could rank the below-PT candidates if you wanted to, but
> there’s no reason to.
>
> You don’t want a Republocrat, but if it appears that one is going to
> win, then you want to try to make it Kucinich.
>
> I re-emphasize that it would be very unlikely for power truncation or
> ARLO to actually be needed in an SSD, CSSD or BeatpathWinner election.
> But it’s a way to make a statement,
>
> Oh now look what I’ve gone and done! I’ve revealed how I’d vote in a
> Condorcet election between those candidates, if ARLO and PT are
> available, and how I’d vote in an EM presidential poll with those
> candidates. There goes the element of surprise. But you haven’t voted
> yet, so there’s still a reason to conduct an EM presidential poll.
>
> Mike Ossipoff
--
davek at clarityconnect.com people.clarityconnect.com/webpages3/davek
Dave Ketchum 108 Halstead Ave, Owego, NY 13827-1708 607-687-5026
Do to no one what you would not want done to you.
If you want peace, work for justice.
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list