[Election-Methods] RE : Measuring power in a multi winner election
Kevin Venzke
stepjak at yahoo.fr
Sun Sep 23 10:27:52 PDT 2007
Hi,
--- Howard Swerdfeger <electorama.com at howard.swerdfeger.com> a écrit :
> but most of these reforms fail to recognize that that Seats do not equal
> power. So we are still still stuck with a similar problem (votes !=
> power)
>
> I was looking into 2 methods of measuring power in a weighted voting
> system.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banzhaf_Power_Index
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shapley-Shubik_power_index
>
> I was wondering first if there are any methods of measuring power in a
> legislature that I am unaware of? Secondly if anybody has tried to
> design a generic system where by votes are kept proportional to power,
> via allocation of seats?
I find this question very interesting... But I am guessing that you don't
have many allocation possibilities, especially with a small number of
factions.
Another thing: I guess it wouldn't be cloneproof. Say there's normally
only three parties and everybody votes for a party list. I guess a
party could gain an advantage by running two lists instead of one.
Kevin Venzke
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