On 01/24/2012 07:28 AM, Bryan Mills wrote:
I've been looking at a voting system over the past week or so that I
think is really interesting: a combination of the "delegable proxy"
system with a sortition procedure to elect a standing legislature.

My objective is to find a way to use conventional voting
infrastructure to elect a proportional legislature of bounded size by
strategy-free means.  I'm not yet 100% certain whether the system
actually is strategy-free; I think it is but I haven't yet found a
proof.  (It's non-deterministic, so I don't think it runs afoul of
Arrow or Gibbard–Satterthwaite but proportionality is only
probabilistic.)

I can't imagine that I'm the first to examine this system, but I
haven't found it in any of the voting literature I've read so far
(most of Voting Matters and part of the Electowiki).  My own writeup
can be found at
(https://docs.google.com/document/pub?id=1XfoGtx2HBYNyZSYwwiQlcXU7mq_WkLhQzdghv8bGF4o).

Any direct insight or pointers to relevant documents would be appreciated.

I think it is strategy-proof, but I wonder if people would irrationally reason something like this:

"My chance of winning is very low, so I shouldn't keep my hopes up. Instead, I should delegate my vote so that I can feel I expressed myself if [popular candidate] wins."

Now, that makes no sense, but if people were game-theoretically rational, turnout would be very low (and it isn't). So I'm wondering if the people would irrationally be more mass-like than you'd want of a sortition-based system.

There might also be another problem: say that people delegate their votes so that some famous candidates have a certain chance of winning, but this chance isn't absolute. Then any of them could say "if I win, that's great, I'll do what I want". In other words, the doubly random nature of the process - first, where the candidates don't know who will delegate to them, and second, where it's not certain they will win even if lots of people delegate to them - could weaken the constituency feedback, making the "famous" candidates more likely to do their own thing than to take the voters' opinions into account. Or, the public, knowing this, might delegate to people of which they have a general good feeling, e.g. movie stars and the likes. They would then reason something like "I know that whoever I delegate won't know I helped him win. Thus I can't influence him, so who am I going to choose? Well, I know of Harrison Ford (or whoever) and his political position is somewhat close to me, so I'll pick him". Now, Ford's popularity as a actor has, in itself, no bearing upon his political skills - he would have a greater chance of winning for similar reasons to why, when asked for a random number, people tend to pick odd numbers.

Let's try to formalize that a little. Ordinary sortition works by picking a representative sample of the people. However, if the people were unrepresentative in their delegation - preferring those who were, for some reason or other, well known, then the sample picked by delegated sortition would not be representative anymore. In ordinary proxy democracy (liquid democracy, etc), on the other hand, giving your vote to Ford is next to pointless - if lots of people do that, you have no chance of pulling him in your direction, so you should vote for someone more local instead.

I don't have a solution for this, I'm just trying to find out what (possible disadvantegous) results could arise from combining delegation and sortition.

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