Janes--
That's a big subject.
You correctly point out that defensive strategy is a worse problem with margins than with winning-votes (wv).
Additionally, with wv, truncation can't steal the election from a well-supported CW, a CW who has a majority defeat against the truncators' candidate. That's the subject of the criterion SFC. GSFC generalizes SFC to situations where there's no CW. When defeats are measured by wv, then SSD and Ranked-Pairs meet the powerful GSFC. Plain Condorcet (PC) meets SFC.
In fact, SFC and GSFC describe plausible conditions under which, with complying methods (Condorcet wv), the majority who don't want X can be sure X won't win, _without having to do anything other than vote sincerel_. That's what I most like about Condorcet wv.
Your iniltial wording of the Condorcet count implies that defeats are measured by margins. That probably isn't intentional.
To put the problem in perspective, Condorcet wv has no defensive strategy need unless someone is going to try offensive order-reversal strategy. At its very worst, under less-than-likely worst-case conditions, Condorcet wv begins to share the strategy need that the other methods have all the time.
And, with Condorcet wv, in order for you to successfully steal the election, it's only possible if the people from whom you're stealing the election have tried to help you. Doesn't that make you feel proud of yourself? :-)
P.S. Don't expect them to rank your cxandidate again. Don't expect your winner to be able to show his face in public.
As you mentioned, it's like a game of chicken, when defensive truncation is threatened against would-be offensive order-reversers.
But please note that the supporters of the middle CW who is being protected will suffer less if no one chickens out, compared to how much the offensive order-reversers would suffer then. That's because, in your example, the C is farther away from the order-reversers than from the defenders.
Additionally, a defender has a more credible threat. A cat defending its territory has a more credible threat against an interloper than the other cat has. The defender, it's understood, is more willing to fight and risk getting hurt when defending what's rightfully his. This adds to the defenders' advantage in the game of chicken.
Sure, if no one chickens out, the result isn't desirable for the defenders either. Defensive truncation is a dominated strategy for them: But note that dominated deterrent strategies are common in legal systrems and in the animal kingdom. They wouldn't be used so much if they didn't work.
In public elections, effective offensive order-reversal would require public organizing. There' s just no way it could be done without its intended victims hearing about it and using defensive truncation.
So in public elections, offensive order-reversal is a losing proposition.
For all the above reasons, I don't consider offensive order-reversal a problem. Effectively, then, Condorcet wv is practically strategy-free. Remarkably strategy-free. No other method of comparable simplicity even comes close.
So, for that reason, I don't feel that it's necessary to include enhancements to further reduce that already near-nonexistent problem.
Of course, when Condorcet wv has been in use for a long time, and if by then people are discussing the order-reversal possibility, then, at that time, the anti-reversal enhancements could be proposed.
Even though I claim that they aren't needed in public Condorcet wv proposals, I'm going to discuss anti-reversal enhancements in a subsequent posting.
Mike Ossipoff
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