Raph Frank wrote:
On Sat, Jan 31, 2009 at 4:17 PM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm
<[email protected]> wrote:
Therefore, it's useful to know what election methods one can combine with
loser elimination so that the result passes mutual majority. Now, it might
be that my intuition is wrong here and you can get a good multiwinner method
out of something that doesn't pass mutual majority, but I don't quite see
how; it probably won't be much like STV.

Assuming you give the voter's vote to their first choice and
automatically elect any candidate once he meets the Droop quota, then
the elimination method doesn't matter.

No matter what order you eliminate the candidates in the faction,
eventually there will be only one of them left.

That candidate will thus receive the faction's entire vote and since
the faction is larger than a Droop quota (by definition), the
candidate will automatically be elected.

Reading the rest of your post, I think you have come to the same
conclusion, but for single seaters.

It might be. I was going to say that perhaps vote splitting could invalidate that, but I'm not sure. The difference between a single-winner method and the multi-winner method is that the single-winner method can afford to eliminate all but the single mutual majority winner that becomes a (plain) Majority winner. A multiwinner method, on the other hand, has to elect all the winners dictated by the DPC, so it can only afford to eliminate extraneous candidates.

The vote splitting would go like this: Say a Droop quota votes { A B C } in each permutation with equal probability, then a bunch of other candidates. The other voters vote the other candidates randomly before any of A B C. Then a method using Plurality with random elimination might end up eliminating one of A, B, or C, before it finds out that a Droop quota supports the set {A B C}. I don't know if this is actually possible, though.

Strictly speaking, it's not that difficult to meet the DPC. Just make a DSC/DAC variant where you count all possible subsets. Elect the candidates that the DPC say must win, then do whatever you want after that. Such a method would be nearly useless in practice, since it would have a great discontinuity - it wouldn't elect near-DPC-eligible candidates any more often than it would elect candidates far from the DPC (unless the base method somehow had this property).

For STV, I think the reweighting matters in letting the method discover the Droop quotas. Again, I'm not sure. If elimination order doesn't matter, then one could make a DPC version of Random Ballot: pick the candidate/s above quota if there is/are any, then eliminate the candidate that ranks last on a random uninspected ballot. Afterwards, mark that ballot inspected. If the vote-splitting argument above works, elimination order *does* matter, though.
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