No subject
Tue May 6 19:13:21 PDT 2014
A and B are supposed as frontrunners doesn't mean one will win, particularly
if they are both low-utility, and if the voters are reasonably split on which
of the two they prefer. (If the Approval vote shows 85%-15% for A over B, the
odds seem reduced that some other candidate will be able to win by topping 85%.)
I think a concern about bad information about frontrunners is that it might
convince some voters not to bother with candidates who are not predicted to
do well. But this is a concern with all methods, not just Approval.
Kevin Venzke
stepjak at yahoo.fr
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