[EM] percentage support
Curt Siffert
siffert at museworld.com
Mon May 2 16:06:44 PDT 2005
I know many of us are here to work on the best method for various
social choice purposes. But many of us are specifically interested in
political elections.
And there's a problem with this. Plurality actually serves two
purposes. It is a bad way to select a winner, but it is also a way to
track percentage support over a period of time, and by determining
proportional support when it's relevant.
Democratic primaries are an example. The proportion of votes a
candidate receives determines how many delegates they receive. But
even if that particular decision structure is done away with, there are
plenty of other reasons to track proportional support - polling, for
instance.
And this is something that Condorcet methods cannot do. You cannot
derive, from a Condorcet ballot collection, how much percentage support
each candidate got. You can't give each candidate a share of 100% in a
way that all candidates would agree on. If you can, I'd love to know
how.
Is this an already identified criteria? The ability to determine
percentage support? The Siffert Criteria? :-) If so, Condorcet fails
it; at least, I haven't seen a technique that would allow it to pass
it. What voting methods can convincingly a) identify the total
available support (in terms of that vote method) for all candidates,
and b) determine what percentage of that support each candidate
received ?
Thanks,
Curt
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