[EM] Condorcet strategy
Dave Ketchum
davek at clarityconnect.com
Sun May 30 15:31:02 PDT 2004
On Sun, 30 May 2004 01:51:10 -0400 James Green-Armytage wrote in part:
> Ernie Prabhakar wrote:
>
>>But if they've guessed wrong by two votes, they could hand it to C,
>>right?
>>
> and:
>
>>At least for me, its hard to take seriously strategy problems that only
>>occur in what is effectively a statistical tie, or require
>>foreknowledge of greater precision than possible with polling data.
>>
> Also, Dave Ketchum wrote:
>
>>PROVIDED they have perfect information:
>> To few and they get nothing.
>> Too many and C wins - the voting pattern suggests this would be a
>>catastrophe and whoever proposed it better hide in a hole.
>>
>
>
> Yes, this is a good point, which a few people have brought up. Here's one
> thing that has occurred to me...
>
> 1. If it only takes a small portion of changed votes to steal the
> election, then the probability of the changed votes backfiring is higher.
> 2. If the probability of the changed votes backfiring is low, then it
> takes more changed votes to steal the election.
>
> For example...
> Given the sincere votes
> 27: A>B>C
> 25: B>A>C
> 24: C>A>B
> 24: C>B>A
> (27 first for A, 25 for B, 48 for C),
> Only 4 reversed votes (B>A>C to B>C>A) are necessary to change the winner
> to B. However, if the B-->C defeat was weaker than the A-->B defeat, C
> would take it... in this case they are only 1 vote apart. So yes, a 2 vote
> mistake in the estimate of A:B, plus an extra C>A vote, and it would
> backfire. Not a lot of comfort room.
>
> Given the sincere votes
> 28: A>B>C
> 27: B>A>C
> 23: C>A>B
> 22: C>B>A
> It would take 7 reversed votes (B>A>C to B>C>A) to change the winner to
> B. But they (the B voters) would have had to be off by at least 5 votes in
> their estimate B:C contest for the strategy to backfire.
>
> Continuing with this trend, we eventually get to an example like this:
> 46: A>B>C
> 44: B>A>C
> 5: C>A>B
> 5: C>B>A
> It would take 42 reversed votes (B>A>C to B>C>A) to change the winner to
> B. But they would have to be off by at least 40 votes in their estimate of
> the B:C contest for the strategy to backfire.
Get off to this extreme and your choices look more like:
Not practical - get most B backers to vote for enemy C as if
preferred over friend A (the sincere votes identify who are seen as
friends and enemies).
Practical - make B look better to attract some A>B votes to switch
to B>A.
...
>
> Dave Ketchum wrote:
>
>>IRV will award to one of the other candidates with first rank votes
>>(lower
>>ranks can affect which of them). Not seeing A unless a few voters change
>>ranking qualifies as UNSTABLE from here.
>>
>
> Maybe it is too strong to say that the problem makes Condorcet worse than
> IRV in public elections. After receiving everyone's feedback over the last
> few days I do feel a bit better about the strategy situation in Condorcet.
> At the same time, I would still feel more comfortable with a two-round
> procedure in a public election though. I think that these sort of
> strategic problems can occur, and *might* become rather serious.
> And for any kind of small group vote, I strongly recommend the
> multiple-round procedure rather than a vote that is binding after the
> first or second round.
> Maybe the best thing to do is to try Condorcet for real elections as much
> as possible. If a close examination of the results doesn't yield any
> indication that the burial strategy is a big problem, then maybe it isn't.
> I don't know myself, really, I just want to keep a process of critical
> examination going.
I still do not see it - seems better that cycles be recognized as near
ties, and not being too picky as to which wins on near ties, provided
reasonable effort is applied.
>
> Dave Ketchum wrote:
>
>>If this argument managed to kill Condorcet,
>>
> I wrote:
>
>>This is definitely not my intention.
>>
> Dave wrote:
>
>>And whoever took their eyes off the road to use a cell phone had no bad
>>intention to kill an accident victim - we need to think on expectable
>>results of our actions.
>>
>
> What bothers me about the Center for Voting and Democracy, and its
> satellite groups, is that they have already made up their minds about what
> methods to advocate, and they have mostly given up on critical discussion
> involving those methods. Any discussion that calls into question the
> perfection of IRV is regarded as potentially dangerous and thus to be
> avoided.
> Somehow your warning here seems to have a similar effect. Forgive me if I
> have misunderstood, but you seem to be suggesting that I avoid honest
> criticism of Condorcet because it might cast doubt on something that you
> would like to be seen as unambiguous, whether it is in fact unambiguous or
> not.
> I prefer to take a different approach. I think that any time you give up
> critical discussion of a proposal, no matter how good your intentions are,
> you run the risk of shutting out important information.
> I have a lot of respect for Condorcet's method, and I will probably go on
> advocating it for the rest of my life. However, I think that a discussion
> of its trouble areas is not only beneficial but also necessary if we want
> it to gain wide acceptance. Whether we discuss such things in full at this
> time or not, it will surely be discussed at any time when Condorcet is
> being considered for a big public election. And the burial issue is the
> main trouble area that I'm aware of for Condorcet methods. How serious is
> it? I don't know, and I hope that it isn't very serious. What I do know is
> that the question is important.
>
I am not for, and was not suggesting, suppressing investigation of the
possibilities - as you note, CVD has problems with making false decisions
and then having to suppress any discussions that might expose their problems.
I saw you selling a decision that Condorcet should be complicated by
attaching reruns, without demonstrating that reruns would help that much,
or that Condorcet would be weak, compared to other methods, without them.
A quick look:
Plurality was the practical method for many years. Reruns helped.
Approval lets me rank as many as I choose as acceptable - thus
ranking the rest as less acceptable - but I often wish for more ranks.
IRV lets me rank, separately, as many as I choose, but has strategy
and stability problems.
Condorcet uses the same ballot as IRV, and does not have the same
problems. Condorcet can permit giving equal ranks to multiple candidates
- not clear to me if IRV can do this.
French presidential election gave Plurality with reruns a black eye
- reads to me like an ad for Condorcet (which also came from France).
More complex methods - many exist, but questionable whether they
properly compete with Condorcet for voter power and simplicity for public
elections.
Note - equal rankings with Condorcet got several mentions today:
Truncating gives equal ranking to all truncated.
Voters like ability to do explicit equal ranking when they want to
give equal favor to multiple candidates without truncating them - I favor
this as pleasing voters at trivial expense.
Strategists talk of equal ranking - ALL I see in this is that A=B is
between A>B and B>A; nothing more.
Note: I am concerned only with public elections for the moment - a group
using Robert's Rules has different details to consider, and thus might
have different logic - although I doubt that.
> best,
> James
--
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.
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