Dear Markus-- I replied to the your remarks about "strangeness" when I first re-subscribed to this list. I gave a list of reasons why it isn't a problem if the same candidate wins when the rankings are reversed. I'm more concerned about what happens with the voters' actual rankings, not about hypothetical modifications of them. As I said before, if rankings are reversed, with a 1-dimensional policy space, then everyone's 1st choice will be the 2 extremists. Usually 1 will have more 1st choice votes than the other & will be majority winner. The fact that yuo can devise some example where Condorcet(EM) elects the same candidate with reversed rankings doesn't seem meaningful unless you can relate it to common conditions and show how it causes real strategy dilemmas for voters. For more, check my initial "strangeness" posting in the archives. Mike
