Michael Ossipoff wrote:
> I’d like to improve my three examples that I posted the other day, so > that they’re genuine FBC failure examples for DMC. > > In these examples, with DMC, either the B &/or C voters need to use > informed Approval strategy to save the CW, enforce majority rule, and > defeat the greater evil, or else one C voter could achieve that by > burying his favorite. Mike, Does this compromising "one C voter" have to unapprove C? > 52: AC (offensive order-reversal) > 100: BA > 50: C/B A>C>B>A. Approvals: A152, C102, B100. A>C 152-50, C>B 102-100, B>A 150-52 DMC and ASM elect A. TACC elects C. AWP and WV elect B. Here if one C|B changes to B|C then DMC just becomes indecisive with B and C on the same approval score and pairwise tied. Methods that meet Definite Majority (Ranking), interpreting all candidates ranked above bottom or equal-bottom as approved, I believe meet your SFC when there are three candidates. Regarding the above example, I can't see any justification in the actual votes for suggesting that "majority rule" is violated by electing A. All three candidates have a majority-strength defeat. In general election results IMO need to be justifiable on the assumption that the votes are sincere and not just on some special presumption that some of the votes are insincere. In the example, given that a concept of approval is being used, I can't see how any post-election complaint that the most approved candidate should have been defeated by the least approved would be taken seriously. Chris Benham ---- election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info
