[EM] "Beatpath GMC" compliance a mistaken standard?
Paul Kislanko
kislanko at airmail.net
Sat Jan 10 14:56:37 PST 2009
I am still not understanding. In the second scenario only A has a majority
of voters' support. So how does B get included in the second scenario?
-----Original Message-----
From: election-methods-bounces at lists.electorama.com
[mailto:election-methods-bounces at lists.electorama.com] On Behalf Of Kevin
Venzke
Sent: Saturday, January 10, 2009 4:07 PM
To: election-methods at electorama.com
Subject: Re: [EM] "Beatpath GMC" compliance a mistaken standard?
Hi Paul,
--- En date de : Sam 10.1.09, Paul Kislanko <kislanko at airmail.net> a écrit :
> If a majority of voters (with the new voters, and where did
> they come from
> anyway)
You can view them as voters who are debating staying home instead of
voting. The issue is whether this can benefit them and whether it matters.
> the only candidate with a majority win is A.
A criterion more similar to what you have in mind, and which I consider
more essential and effective than mutual majority, is this rendition of
minimal defense:
"If a majority of the voters vote for X and don't vote for Y, then Y must
not win."
Although, the effect of that criterion is that {A,B} are the possible
winners in both scenarios.
Kevin Venzke
----
Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list