<div dir="ltr"><div>[quote]</div><div>Let's say that election after election people<br>see that more and more people are voting for Nader,although he is not<br>winning. Thinking optimistically (as some people like to) that this might<br>
be the year that Nader could take it all, they put all their money on Nader<br>- they vote Nader, but *not* Gore. The result? Gore's numbers drop, Nader's<br>numbers rise a little, but Bush still get's the most!</div>
<div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>That's the old standard criicism against Approval. The answer to it hasn't changed, over all the thousands of times that objection has been made. Approval isn't a pairwise-count methods. Approval doesn't aspire to, or claim to achieve, the pairwise-cound ideal, whereby we can help Compromise against Worst, while also helping Favorite against Compromise. </div>
<div> </div><div>For that, we need rank-balloting. That's why, for the Green scenario, which I've defined here, I recommend IRV, Benham, and Woodall. But preferably Benham and Woodall, because of their Condorcet Criterion compliance. All of the party platforms that offer a better voting system offer IRV. Though not as good as Benham and Woodall, IRV is nevertheless an excellent choice for the Green scenario (in which a progressive party has been elected, and its progressive government and policies are in effect).</div>
<div> </div><div>Brief IRV definition:</div><div> </div><div>A candidate tops a ballot iff s/he is ranked (not necessarily along) at first rank position on that ballot.</div><div> </div><div>Determine which candidate currently tops fewest rankings. Delete hir from all of the rankings.</div>
<div> </div><div>Repeat till only one candidate remains un-deleted. Elect hir.</div><div> </div><div>[end of IRV definition]</div><div> </div><div>Benham:</div><div> </div><div>1. "X beats Y" means that the number of ballots ranking X over Y is greater than the number of ballots ranking Y over X.</div>
<div> </div><div>2. Do IRV till there's an un-deleted candidate who beats each of the other un-deleted candidates. Elect hir.</div><div> </div><div>[end of Benham definition]</div><div> </div><div>Woodall:</div><div> </div>
<div> </div><div>1 The Smith set is the smallest set of candidates such that every candidate in the set beats every candidate outside the set.</div><div> </div><div>2. Do IRV till only one initial Smith set member remains un-deleted. Elect hir.</div>
<div> </div><div>[end of Woodall definition]</div><div> </div><div>IRV, Benham, and Woodall meet the Mutual Majority Criterion and are free of the chicken dilemma. Benham and Woodall additionally meet the Condorcet Criterion. (In fact, they meet the Smith Criterion, which implies compliance with the Condorct Criterion and the Mutual Majority Criteion).</div>
<div> </div><div>There's much complain about IRV, when it fails the Condorcet Criterion (CC). But if you're in a mutual majority, then you have no need to not rank sincerely. Every mutual majority is assured that the winner will come from its majority-prefered set (the set of candidates whom that majority prefer to everyone else),merely by their ranking sincerely. ...even while freely voting _among_ that preferred set sincerely. </div>
<div> </div><div>That's the rank-balloting ideal, and the Mutual Majority Criterion (MMC) guarantees that, provided that mutual majorties' sincere voting isn't spoiled by media-induced favorite-burial, or the chicken dilemma. The Green scenario premise says that we no longer have disinformational media, or a public who could be deceived by them. IRV, Benham and Woodall have no chicken dilemma. </div>
<div> </div><div>Therefore, IRV, Benham, and Woodall fully offer the rank-balloting ideal, for mutual majorities.</div><div> </div><div>And, if your preferred proposals are any good, and if others' judgement is as good as yours, then you'll be in a mutual majority. So stop worrying.</div>
<div> </div><div>Summary: Yes, the rank-balloting ideal would be good, and it's available to mutual majorites. So you're right: IRV, Benham, and Woodall would be better than Approval,for the Green scenario.</div><div>
</div><div>And the Green scenario is the relevant condition for whicho evaluate and compare voting systems.</div><div> </div><div> </div><div>[quote]</div><div>This seems almost worse than plurality, in a way, because at least with<br>
plurality we all knew and admitted that we need to vote against the spoiler<br>effect, but Approval voting may actually suffer from it just as much while<br>not as obviously - meaning people may vote against there interests more by<br>
not seeing that.<br><br>Make sense?<br>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>No. In Approval, if you thought you needed to help Gore :-) against Bush, then you can still fully support Nader. Nader's support wouldn't be hidden. It certainlly was, with Plurality voting strategy combined with disinformational media.</div>
<div> </div><div>What makes Pluralilty so beautifully perfect for protecting the status-quo is that it can keep on electing two unliked parties forever, at Myerson-Weber equilibrium. It has been demonstrated that Approval won't do that.</div>
<div> </div><div>Another way of expressing the usual Approval criticism is that Approval won't immediately elect the voter-median candidate. No, Approval will quickly (in a few elections) home in on the voter-median, and then stay there. But it won't elect the voter-median in the first election. It won't guarantee MMC compliance, or guarantee majority rule in the 1st election. If you're in a hurry, then you want IRV, Benham or Woodall in Green scenario conditions; and ICT in current conditions; and MAM in ideal majoritarian conditons (but don't hold your breath waitng for ideal majoritarian conditions in U.S. official public poitical elections).</div>
<div><br>This notion of first geting a better voting system, in order to elect a better government is backwards: We won't get a better voting system under the current government. Why should this government's owners allow a better voting system? If we can actually vote for what we want in Plurality, then we can get a better government. (if we've insisted on, and gotten, a verifiable vote-count).</div>
<div><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br><br>[quote]</div><div>some of us may find that a<br>system in which people must accept that voting sincerely is not in their<br>best interest is not as good a system as one in which that is less likely.<br>
[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>Then support the best rank-method, for the paricular kind of conditions that you want to recommend for.</div><div> </div><div>[quote]</div><div>And the only point I was making is for the 3rd party supporter (when there<br>
are two stronger parties)</div><div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>Perhaps he meant "two parties that are represented in the media as more publicly-preferred, and are winning due public belief in the media's claims, and possiby due to unverifiable vote-count results."</div>
<div> </div><div>[quote]</div><div>, there is no practical difference between<br>Approval and Plurality - either way, if he votes smart, he helps Gore beat<br>Bush, and Nader doesn't win.</div><div>[/quote]</div><div>
</div><div>Benjamin means "if you vote timid and gullible".</div><div> </div><div>[quote]</div><div>If he votes less smart, he can even<br>regrettably (from his point of view) help Bush beat Gore by only Approving<br>
Nader.</div><div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>Benjamin means "If you aren't willing to vote for sleaze, or if you're willing to give the other voters a little credit for not preferring sleaze (in spite of what the media claim)."</div>
<div> </div><div><br> </div><div>[quote]<br>So the fact that he is penalized by support Nader *over* Gore by getting<br>his last choice Bush is something that I thought Approval (and by<br>extension, Range/Score) were supposed to fix.</div>
<div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>You thought wrong. I'm glad that you expressed that notion, giving me the opportunity to disabuse you of it.</div><div> </div><div>Approval is _not_ supposed to achieve the rank-balloting ideal.</div>
<div> </div><div>What is Approval supposed to do?</div><div> </div><div>1. Not force anyone to ever bury their favorite in orde to help a lesser-evil.</div><div> </div><div>2. Quickly (in a few elections) home in on the voter-median, and then stay there.</div>
<div> </div><div>No, Approval isn't deluxe. If you want deluxe, look elsewhere, choosing a good rank-method appropriate for the conditions for which you want to recommend.</div><div><br>[quote]<br>Since this isn't fixed, tell me what the benefit of Approval is in the real<br>
world over Plurality? </div><div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>See immediatey above.</div><div> </div><div>[quote]</div><div>I want to be CLEAR about this, so please let me: I<br>am not asking how the what supporters of Approval voting promise will<br>
happen, nor what Approval voting's creators intentions are - I am ONLY<br>asking about pragmatic and real-world RESULTS.</div><div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>People would find out the extent to which other voters want the same thing they want. Progressives would find out how many other voters want a progressive party (Greens, Justice, Pirate, etc.). When it's clear that there's no compelling need to help one sleaze beat another sleaze, because the progressive parties are showing to be at least as popular, then, people could start having the courage to actually stop voting for the sleaze who (supposedly) isn't quite as bad as the other sleaze. Dare we hope??</div>
<div> </div><div>For current conditions, ICT, or Symmetrical ICT is the best. It's better than Approval because 1) It is free of chicken dilemma; and 2) It lets you fully and fully-effectvely support both Favoite and Compromise, if that's what you chose to do, while also allowing you to, instead, sincerely rank Favorite over Compromise--thereby helping to make Compromse beaten and Favorite not beaten, and by helping Favorite's top-count against Compromse's top-count. ICT accomodates both kinds of voting.</div>
<div> </div><div>But Approval is, of course simpler and easier to propose, and simpler and easier to implement. Approval is the minimal improvement in Plurality. For those reasons, I say that Appoval is the best voting-system for current conditions.</div>
<div> </div><div>But, as I said, I don't there's any point in discussing voting-systems for current conditions. The Green scenaio is the condition for which it's relevant to discuss voting-system.</div><div> </div>
<div>That's why I ignore Approval these days, and emphasize the best methods for the Green scenario: IRV, Benham, and Woodall. </div><div> </div><div>We have a great head-start in that regard, since IRV is the only voting system proposed in party platforms (at least five of them, in the U.S.). And Benham is a minimal change from IRV, making Benham the most ahievable, most likely, improvement in IRV.</div>
<div><br>[quote]<br>It is easy I think to see that with the Gore/Nader/Bush example, a Nader<br>supporter has to choose between stopping Bush and voting his true<br>preference. It seems to me that whatever the criterion is named that<br>
covers that, that's an important one to embrace.</div><div>[/quote]</div><div> </div><div>Of course it's desirable. I don't think it's a criterion, but it's desirable. I call it the rank balloting ideal. In the Green scenario, IRV, Benham, and Woodall offer it for you if you're in a mutual majority.</div>
<div><br>Michael Ossipoff<br><br></div></div>