Dear Curt, Daniel and All,

On May 3, 2005, at 02:06, Curt Siffert wrote:

You cannot derive, from a Condorcet ballot collection, how much percentage support each candidate got. You can't give each candidate a share of 100% in a way that all candidates would agree on. If you can, I'd love to know how.

Is this an already identified criteria? The ability to determine percentage support? The Siffert Criteria? :-) If so, Condorcet fails it; at least, I haven't seen a technique that would allow it to pass it. What voting methods can convincingly a) identify the total available support (in terms of that vote method) for all candidates, and b) determine what percentage of that support each candidate received ?

I think ability to give clear information that indicates who how clearly someone won and how well the other candidates performed is a useful requirement. I however think it is not necessary to have measures that can be summed up to 100% but any easily understandable measurements would do fine. I'd thus propose to widen the definition a bit and require only the ability to present some (numeric) values that clearly describe the strength of wins, losses and/or final strength of each candidate.

This kind of criterion is useful in real life where one may want e.g. to show graphics on TV illustrating how well each candidate performed - percentages, number of votes or whatever as long as people get a good understanding on what happened in the elections. Ability to see what really happened in the election may also increase the trust in the used election method.

Daniel Bishop's mail gave some interesting measures.

On May 3, 2005, at 05:56, Daniel Bishop wrote:

Here's a method I tried a few months ago:

Start by determining the number of additional "bullet votes" each candidate would need in order to win or tie.

For example, suppose you polled 7 people for an {A, B, C, D} election, and:
* D is the winner
* A would win with the additional ballots 4:A
* B would tie D with the additional ballots 3:B
* C would win with the additional ballots 6:C

Counting additional ballots that are needed to become a Condorcet winner means the MinMax (margins) method (aka "Least Additional Votes"). Daniel seems to refer to additional ballots needed to win in general, not ones needed to become a Condorcet winner (but allow me a reference to MinMax since that is one of my favourite methods :-) ).

Question to David. Why weren't you happy with the numbers in the beginning part of your mail that I referred above? Those measures look very logical to me. A's defeat is worth 4 votes, which is a clear measure. B loses by 3 votes and C by 6. D's win is maybe worth 3 votes since that is the distance to the closest competitor (B).

Best Regards,
Juho

----
Election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info

Reply via email to