[EM] FairVote comment on Burlington dumping IRV
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
abd at lomaxdesign.com
Wed Jul 3 14:37:12 PDT 2013
At 12:31 AM 7/3/2013, Jameson Quinn wrote:
>Abd, I noticed something. I don't want to jump to any conclusions,
>so I'm asking you directly.
>
>2013/7/3 Abd ul-Rahman Lomax <<mailto:abd at lomaxdesign.com>abd at lomaxdesign.com>
>... Bucklin ...
>
>
> You said "Bucklin", not "EMAV". So, two questions and a comment:
>
>Q1. Why did you change?
EMAV is not a known method, it's brand new, I just announced it, and
this is a general post, not about details about the specific method.
>Q2. Is there anything that would convince you to switch to saying "MAV"?
Not in that context, not yet.
>Comment: To me, "Bucklin" is not a system, but a class of systems;
>at a minimum, it would include all different Progressive-era systems
>which were called "Bucklin" at the time, but to me, it includes all
>descending-approval-threshold-until-majority systems (including for
>instance MJ, GMJ, MCA, and MAV.)
My comments were referring to the class of systems, but also
specifically to Bucklin -- which primarily means those early systems
-- and FairVote propaganda was about "Bucklin."
Of course I'd love to promote EMAV, but promotion is not my primary goal.
The subject post was written to review Richie's response to the
Burlington debacle, and traditional Bucklin -- say, three-rank,
mandatory single votes in first and second rank, almost exactly the
same as some of the old implementations -- would have fixed the
Burlington problem easily. That does *not* mean that this would be ideal.
As to MAV, I'd support it if the "regression" were *necessary.* I
don't see it as that, and the fallback to higher preferences clearly
moves away from maximizing expressed utilities.
I understand that it was frustrating for you that I appeared to
support MAV, for a short time, but I think that we were pandering to
some shallow arguments, that we don't need to avoid the "chicken
dilemma," and that using the range ratings adequately addresses the concern.
I.e.:
original Bucklin: with a multiple majority, all at or above the found
majority rating are collapsed to approval. Same with majority
failure. The result is that a lower preference may count *the same*
as a higher one. It's the "approval problem"
MAV: under the multiple majority at a lower preference rule, the
system ignores the lower preference votes, using only higher-level
approval information. It does count the lower preference votes, but
not to distinguish between those candidates. I haven't done so, but I
could show some problem scenarios. It solves the "approval problem,"
but at the cost of apparent expressed utility.
EMAV: The system uses all the votes in the two cases (multiple
majority and majority failure.) Thus lower preference votes do count,
but only at deprecated value. The difference between full preference
and minimal approval is 1/2 vote. The difference between full
prefeence and the below-approval rank that is above maximum
opposition is 3/4 vote. So EMAV is intermediate to original Bucklin and MAV.
The attempt to fix on a consensus method, on the CES list, was
premature. The voting done was premature. Ad-hoc list process can do
this: it can start to vote on something before the discussion is
complete. Basic democratic process: there is no vote until there is a
*supermajority* declaring that the question is fixed and agreed upon
and it's time to vote.
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