First, I want to express my agreement with the statement that we’re here because public elections are important. We’re not here because of campus elections or organizational elections, etc. I suggest that campus governments and organizations be urged to use methods that are suitable for, and proposable for, public elections. To help get precedent, public experience and public exposure for better public voting systems.

Dave wrote:

While we can learn by participating in polls, we need to remember that our proper goal is assisting average voters in elections.

I reply:

Yes, and that’s all the more reason why we should have experience regarding what it’s like to use what we’re selling. Polls are the only way to get that experience.

Dave continued:

Perhaps we need to debate need for ranking all the candidates with Condorcet.

I reply:

I probably wouldn’t rank them all. In fact I’d power-truncate most of them if power-truncation were available. (I’ll define power-truncation later in this posting).

Dave continued:

There is no such need, and demanding more ranking than might be useful can even end up with false ranking if voters are forced to pretend to decide value of candidates that do not interest them positively.

I reply:

Faced with a ballot with 20 rank positions could discourage someone from voting. In one of our presidential polls, the nominations got sillier and sillier, till we had about 46 candidates. Only 7 people voted. Ranking all the candidates, as I did, was a bit of work. Rating them all was _a lot_ of work. Approval voting, however, was easy.

Dave continued:

Those voters who find they can fully express their desires in a race with Approval, should be allowed to express EXACTLY the same desires with Condorcet with the same effort.

I reply:

Quite so. And that’s why I’ve proposed power-truncation and the ARLO option. I’m not saying that Condorcet _needs_ them, but they’d reassure people who worry about strategy. And they’d please the principled voter who wants to show his opinion of his less-liked candidates. I’ll define them either at the end of this posting, or in a subsequent one later tonight or tomorrow morning when I next get a chance to get on the computer.

For me as a voter (as opposed to what I believe that others need) Approval would be fine. It’s other voters who, I feel, need Condorcet. I admit that that’s my subjective opinion, because other progressives disagree with me about what is acceptable and approvable.


I’d said:


Yes, I’d rather have SSD, but if it’s to be a handcount, or there are lots of candidates, and you might not want to ask people to rank that many candidates, then the much easier Approval offers a very good substitute for Condorcet’s expressiveness, Approval’s own kind of expressiveness. Approval would be my 2nd choice then.



Dave replies:

To me, depends on what kind of expressiveness I wish for in a particular race

I reply:

Well, one thing I’d enjoy about Approval would be showing my disgust for candidates by not voting for them. Likewise, for the same reason, I’d enjoy using power-truncation and ARLO, even though it’s very unlikely that they’d actually be needed in Condorcet.

About education: Polls in public places, such as outdoor fairs, or on the Internet, or use of better voting systems in campus elections and organizations would be good ways to show people how interesting and useful better voting systems are.

A few definitions:

Power truncation (PT):

If you indicate that you want to power truncate everyone below a certain rank position (In an EM poll, you’d do that by writing “PT” above those rank positions), then your ballot casts a pair-wise vote for every one of the other candidates (whether power-truncated or not) over every power truncated candidate. So, for example, say there are 20 candidates, and you power-truncate 15 of them. For each one of those 15 power-truncated candidates, your ballot casts a pair-wise vote for each of the other 19 candidates over that candidate.

In general, no matter what the rank method, your ballot would treat each power truncated candidate as if you’d ranked every one of the other candidates over him/her.

ARLO (Automatic Rank Line Option):

ARLO uses up to 3 counts.

If you indicate that you want to use ARLO at a certain point in your ranking (In an EM poll you’d do that by writing ARLO at that point in the ranking), then your ballot truncates (power truncates, if power truncation is allowed--and it should be allowed) every candidate below ARLO. The candidates above ARLO are left in the order in which you ranked them.

If, in the 1st count, a candidate below at least one voter’s ARLO line wins, then there will be a 2nd count.

If, in the 2nd count, a candidate below at least one voter’s ARLO line wins, there will be a 3rd count.

If a below-line candidate wins at least one of the first two counts, then your ballot promotes all the above-line candidates to equal 1st place, and they stay there.

If there’s a 2nd count, and it is won by a below-line candidate, then your ballot un-truncates the below line candidates, and they’re treated as any ranking would treat them, according to where you have them ranked. In other words, they’re restored to where you’ve ranked them, instead of being truncated or power-truncated.

An example of a ballot with ARLO:

1. Ralph Nader
2. Peter Camejo
ARLO
3. Dennis Kucinich
4. Barak Obama
5. Hillary Clinton
6. John McCain

If you don’t want to restore the below-ARLO candidates in the event that a below-ARLO candidate wins, then that can be achieved by unconditionally power-truncating the below-ARLO candidates. Obviously then there’s no need to rank them:

1. Ralph Nader
2. Peter Camejo
ARLO
PT

But maybe you’d like to unconditionally power-truncate some, but not all, of the below ARLO candidates. That too can be easily done by how you place PT:

1. Ralph Nader
2. Peter Camejo
ARLO
3. Dennis Kucinich
PT
Of course you could rank the below-PT candidates if you wanted to, but there’s no reason to.

You don’t want a Republocrat, but if it appears that one is going to win, then you want to try to make it Kucinich.

I re-emphasize that it would be very unlikely for power truncation or ARLO to actually be needed in an SSD, CSSD or BeatpathWinner election. But it’s a way to make a statement,

Oh now look what I’ve gone and done! I’ve revealed how I’d vote in a Condorcet election between those candidates, if ARLO and PT are available, and how I’d vote in an EM presidential poll with those candidates. There goes the element of surprise. But you haven’t voted yet, so there’s still a reason to conduct an EM presidential poll.

Mike Ossipoff


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