Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Juho
If one really wants a two-party system and doesn't want voters to  
change that fact then one could ban third parties and accept only two.  
That would solve the spoiler problem :-). From this point of view e.g.  
the US system is not really intended to be a two-party system but just  
a system (target state unspecified) that has some problems with third  
parties. On the other hand the option of third parties could be left  
in the rules intentionally. The voters are given a chance to change  
one of the two parties to some third party if they want that so much  
that despite of the associated spoiler problems they will eventually  
give the third party enough votes to beat one of the leading parties.  
Actually two-party systems need not be based on two parties only  
nation wide. In principle each district could have its own two parties  
that are independent of what the two parties are in other districts.  
There is however some tendency to end up with two or small number of  
parties nation wide.


Juho


On Nov 3, 2009, at 9:22 AM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm wrote:


Juho wrote:

On Nov 2, 2009, at 4:50 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote:
Is this acceptable PR? I hope your answer is of course not (if  
it isn't, we can have that discussion).
I note that a two-party system can be seen as one style of  
democracy that may be chosen intentionally. But if the target is to  
have PR then such single-seat FPTP systems are of course not good  
at all.


If the people truly want a two-party rule, then using STV (or some  
other party neutral PR method) can't hurt - they'll have that two- 
party rule if they want, and can at any moment escape from it if  
they change their minds. See Malta.


In addition, if the method is any good between the hard limits  
specified by the DPC or analogous proportionality criterion, then  
there will be competition between the candidates inside of the  
party. STV is IRV between the hard limits, so one may doubt how good  
it is at this, but in reality, it does at least provide some measure  
of that; my clustering methods are much more Condorcet and so  
presumably would provide greater such competition. My  
proportionality simulator shows it to be much better than STV, but  
I've discovered that said simulator also has a significant small- 
party bias, so I'm taking the results with some salt until I can get  
proper correlation going.



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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Raph Frank
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 7:41 AM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm
km-el...@broadpark.no wrote:
 Raph Frank wrote:
 If there are 5 seats and you have 20%+ of the votes, you are
 guaranteed to get 1 seat under both d'Hondt and Droop.

There is a typo there, I meant 4 seats and 20%+ (I replied in a different post).

 How about Sainte-Lague/Webster's? Since it's a divisor method, it would
 (seldomly) violate quota, and so a ballot-based version of it couldn't meet
 the DPC. Yet, I would say that such a version would (absent other flaws) be
 proportional - I just don't know how to actually construct it.

That might be possible by reducing the quota.  However, doing that
could result in to many candidates winning a seat.

If there are 4 seats, then a party is entitled to get 1 seat if they
get between 0.5 and 1.5 seat's worth of votes.

In a 2 party situation, where 1 party gets 12.5%+ of the vote, the
smaller party will still get 1 seat, even though it is only much lower
than the Droop quota.

This is why most jurisdictions don't use the standard version.

Instead of dividing by

1,3,5,7,9,...

they divide by
1.4,3,5,7,9,...

The effect is that it is harder for parties to get their first seat.
Parties with 2 or more seats are no affected.

PR-STV is inherently made up of single candidate parties, so this
defect is much worse.

St. Lague divisors can also be specified as
0.5, 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 4.5, 

This gives a better comparison to d'Hondt.

Using d'Hondt for the first seat and St. Lague for the rest gives
1, 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, 4.5, 

This is a little more severe of a penalty that the standard
modification.  However, it would reduce the tiny party exploit.

Applying that to PR-STV could be something like

- candidates must designate what party they are members of

Initially, the Droop quota is used as Quota_single, but it might take
a bit of tweaking to find one that gives the right number of seats, in
any given election (like Webster's method).

When a party has some members elected, the quota is reduced for all
other members of the party (but max 1 candidate may be elected at a
time).

No elected party members

Quota = Quota_single

At least one party member elected

Quota = Quota_single*(0.5 - (Quotas held by elected members - seats held))

Surpluses are only transferable if the candidate exceeds Quota_single

Thus if a party had won 2 seats, and both had achieved the full quota,
then the next party member would only need 0.5 quotas to get elected,
as the party would have 2.5 quotas at that point (and that would be
rounded upwards to 3).

It might even be possible to adjust this in order to remove the
requirement that candidates declare which party they are members of.

It is a lot of complexity in order to remove the large party bias.

Some of the other methods like CPO-STV and Schulze might achieve the same thing.

Also, if the districts are only 5 or so seats in size, then it doesn't
really help that much at all, as only large parties will get more than
1 seat anyway, though it could help medium parties get a 2nd seat.

 If the limitations of apportionment methods are true for party-neutral
 multiwinner methods as well, then it's impossible to have both population
 pair monotonicity (what we usually call monotonicity) and to always obey
 quota.

Well, PR-STV doesn't meet the monotonicity criterion.

I am not sure if an alternative elimination ording could help there,
but probably not.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread James Gilmour
Kristofer Munsterhjelm   Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 3:27 PM
  Juho wrote:
  If one really wants a two-party system and doesn't want voters to  change
  that fact then one could ban third parties and accept only two. That 
  would solve the spoiler problem :-). 
 Who is this one? Since that one is at odds with the voters, 
 that's not very democratic, is it?
 
 I guess that one democratic way of doing it would be to have the 
 question itself posed to the voters, but with a suitable low-pass filter 
 (e.g. supermajority required to change it, or a majority over a long 
 time); though then I think it'd be better just to have the 
 filter on the decision process itself.

Why in any country that would merit the description democracy would you want 
to impose a two-party system when the votes of the
voters showed that was not what they wanted?

James Gilmour

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Kristofer Munsterhjelm

James Gilmour wrote:

Kristofer Munsterhjelm   Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 3:27 PM

Juho wrote:
If one really wants a two-party system and doesn't want voters to  change
that fact then one could ban third parties and accept only two. That 
would solve the spoiler problem :-). 
Who is this one? Since that one is at odds with the voters, 
that's not very democratic, is it?


I guess that one democratic way of doing it would be to have the 
question itself posed to the voters, but with a suitable low-pass filter 
(e.g. supermajority required to change it, or a majority over a long 
time); though then I think it'd be better just to have the 
filter on the decision process itself.


Why in any country that would merit the description democracy would
you want to impose a two-party system when the votes of the
voters showed that was not what they wanted?


That is my question, too. The only way I see that there might be a 
conflict is with long term versus short term, hence the 
filtering/supermajority idea; but then I considered, since more parties 
provide a greater variety of opinions, then if short-term populism is a 
problem, it'd be better to put the supermajority/consensus requirements 
into the decision process rather than on the question of how many 
parties one should have.


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Kristofer Munsterhjelm

Raph Frank wrote:

On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 7:41 AM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm
km-el...@broadpark.no wrote:

Raph Frank wrote:

If there are 5 seats and you have 20%+ of the votes, you are
guaranteed to get 1 seat under both d'Hondt and Droop.


There is a typo there, I meant 4 seats and 20%+ (I replied in a different post).


How about Sainte-Lague/Webster's? Since it's a divisor method, it would
(seldomly) violate quota, and so a ballot-based version of it couldn't meet
the DPC. Yet, I would say that such a version would (absent other flaws) be
proportional - I just don't know how to actually construct it.


That might be possible by reducing the quota.  However, doing that
could result in to many candidates winning a seat.


Webster's method adjusts the divisor until it gives the right result. 
Perhaps something similar could be done with the quota? Adjust towards 
Hare until there are too many seats, then back off a bit. However, the 
quota doesn't use rounding, so the analogy to the divisor fails at that 
point.




If there are 4 seats, then a party is entitled to get 1 seat if they
get between 0.5 and 1.5 seat's worth of votes.

In a 2 party situation, where 1 party gets 12.5%+ of the vote, the
smaller party will still get 1 seat, even though it is only much lower
than the Droop quota.

This is why most jurisdictions don't use the standard version.

Instead of dividing by

1,3,5,7,9,...

they divide by
1.4,3,5,7,9,...


To my knowledge, this was actually a compromise between the largest 
party and the smaller parties, at least here in Norway: the largest 
party wanted Sainte-Laguë with the divisor at 1.5 whereas the smaller 
parties wanted Hare (because it did not discriminate against them). The 
former system was D'Hondt - and the compromise worked out to 
Sainte-Laguë with the first divisor at 1.4 (in exchange for the parties' 
cooperation regarding some other laws).



The effect is that it is harder for parties to get their first seat.
Parties with 2 or more seats are no affected.


Is that true? Consider a maximally unfair variant, something like
2.999, 3, 5, 7, 9...

Now the larger parties can get many seats before the intermediate and 
small parties get in the running. This naturally decreases the number of 
free seats that may be allocated to the small parties.



Applying that to PR-STV could be something like

- candidates must designate what party they are members of

Initially, the Droop quota is used as Quota_single, but it might take
a bit of tweaking to find one that gives the right number of seats, in
any given election (like Webster's method).

When a party has some members elected, the quota is reduced for all
other members of the party (but max 1 candidate may be elected at a
time).


[snip]

STV has an advantage in that it doesn't need to care about parties. I'd 
prefer to preserve that in any competing method. My Setwise Highest 
Average method treats solid coalitions as parties (roughly speaking, 
perhaps better is to consider them parts of a party with a tree 
structure) - this might be a way to do what you propose, but without 
explicit party information. On the other hand, Setwise Highest Average, 
is severely nonmonotonic, and it's not house-monotone either.



Also, if the districts are only 5 or so seats in size, then it doesn't
really help that much at all, as only large parties will get more than
1 seat anyway, though it could help medium parties get a 2nd seat.


Yes. If complexity is not a problem, Schulze's MMP proposal could be 
used to fix that. Norway has something like party list MMP: a certain 
number of seats are top-up and allocated to maximize proportionality 
after the district seats are allocated, with proportionality presumably 
being defined according to a national Modified Sainte-Laguë count.



If the limitations of apportionment methods are true for party-neutral
multiwinner methods as well, then it's impossible to have both population
pair monotonicity (what we usually call monotonicity) and to always obey
quota.


Well, PR-STV doesn't meet the monotonicity criterion.

I am not sure if an alternative elimination ording could help there,
but probably not.


If my reasoning is correct, then no tinkering with the elimination 
ordering would solve the problem completely, because the resulting 
method would in any case still always obey quota, and we can't have both 
quota and population-pair monotonicity.


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread James Gilmour
Kristofer Munsterhjelm   Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 4:34 PM
  James Gilmour wrote:
  Why in any country that would merit the description democracy would 
  you want to impose a two-party system when the votes of the voters 
  showed that was not what they wanted?
 
 That is my question, too. 

Maybe what the two-party advocates really want is guaranteed single-party 
majority government.  If that IS what they want, there
is a VERY simple and effective electoral solution.  If no party wins an 
absolute majority of the votes and seats, give 55% of the
seats to the party that wins the largest number of votes and divide the 
remaining seats among the other parties in proportion to the
their shares of the votes.

It has been done and it works.  Importantly, it's honest.  It sets out clearly 
what is considered to be the over-riding electoral
criterion and it fulfils it.  In the UK we suffer from a lot of nonsense about 
the desirability of single-party majority government
and even worse nonsense about the importance of FPTP in securing that.  In 
fact, in two of the most critical elections since 1945,
when the government of the day (one Labour, one Conservative) was seeking a 
renewed mandate for the continuation of its policies,
FPTP elected the wrong government. In both cases the outgoing government won 
the referendum on its policies (votes) and lost the
election (seats).

James Gilmour

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Raph Frank
On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 4:53 PM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm
km-el...@broadpark.no wrote:
 The effect is that it is harder for parties to get their first seat.
 Parties with 2 or more seats are no affected.

 Is that true? Consider a maximally unfair variant, something like
 2.999, 3, 5, 7, 9...

 Now the larger parties can get many seats before the intermediate and small
 parties get in the running. This naturally decreases the number of free
 seats that may be allocated to the small parties.

A party which was going to get 2 seats would still get 2 seats.

In fact, it makes it easier for them.

It is like as if the smaller parties don't get any seats, and thus
there are more available for the parties which can get 2+ seats.

The parties which lose out would be the ones who would have originally
obtained only 1 seat.

 STV has an advantage in that it doesn't need to care about parties. I'd
 prefer to preserve that in any competing method.

Well, I was just thinking out loud.  I agree that this is one of the
main benefits of PR-STV.

 Also, if the districts are only 5 or so seats in size, then it doesn't
 really help that much at all, as only large parties will get more than
 1 seat anyway, though it could help medium parties get a 2nd seat.

 Yes. If complexity is not a problem, Schulze's MMP proposal could be used to
 fix that. Norway has something like party list MMP: a certain number of
 seats are top-up and allocated to maximize proportionality after the
 district seats are allocated, with proportionality presumably being defined
 according to a national Modified Sainte-Laguë count.

Yeah, that is probably an easier method.  However, I like my earlier
proposal better.

I don't agree with the principle of deciding party support based on
first preference votes.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Juho

On Nov 3, 2009, at 5:27 PM, Kristofer Munsterhjelm wrote:


Juho wrote:
If one really wants a two-party system and doesn't want voters to  
change that fact then one could ban third parties and accept only  
two. That would solve the spoiler problem :-).
Who is this one? Since that one is at odds with the voters, that's  
not very democratic, is it?


I was thinking about the voters or their representatives who want to  
have a two-party system. Those groups can be considered to be the key  
decision makers in a democratic system.




I guess that one democratic way of doing it would be to have the  
question itself posed to the voters, but with a suitable low-pass  
filter (e.g. supermajority required to change it, or a majority over  
a long time); though then I think it'd be better just to have the  
filter on the decision process itself.


This is a good definition of democracy. I tend to think that if the  
voters have the opportunity to change any old rule if they really so  
want, then that society can be called democratic. (Also the two-party  
status (=one current practice of decision making) can be a topic to be  
changed.)





From this point of view e.g. the US system is not really intended to
be a two-party system but just a system (target state unspecified)
that has some problems with third parties.


That's most likely the case. AFAIK, the founding fathers just copied  
Britain's election methods (first past the post, etc.), and by the  
time parts of the US noticed this wasn't really optimal, those who  
benefitted from said methods' unfairness had acquired enough power  
to block the adoption of better methods (e.g. the red scare campaign  
leading to STV's repeal in New York).


One old proverb says that people tend to get the kind of government  
that they deserve. If people want change in a democratic system they  
should 1) understand and 2) act/decide.




There are some exceptions. To my knowledge, some state governors are  
elected by runoff rather than just winner takes it all. FPTP  
runoff may fail (such as with Le Pen in France, or more relevant -  
the better a lizard than a wizard second round in Louisiana), but  
at least it can't elect the Condorcet loser, which plain old FPTP  
has no problem doing.


The Le Pen case was maybe not a full failure. Although it was shocking  
to many that a candidate that large majority of the voters definitely  
didn't want to elect got to the second round he was not elected anyway.


(Btw, I think it is ok to elect the Condorcet loser in some extreme  
situations. If for example the target is to elect a candidate that  
would be stable in the sense that there is no major interest to  
replace her soon after the election with some other candidate then  
Condorcet loser can be a better candidate than any of a badly looped  
Smith set. Group opinions are not linear and therefore the fact that  
one of the candidates seems to be last can not be automatically  
taken as a conclusion that some other candidate should win.)


Juho




On  the other hand the option of third parties could be left in the  
rules
intentionally. The voters are given a chance to change one of the  
two parties to some third party if they want that so much that  
despite of the associated spoiler problems they will eventually  
give the third party enough votes to beat one of the leading  
parties. Actually two-party systems need not be based on two  
parties only nation wide. In principle each district could have its  
own two parties that are independent of what the two parties are in  
other districts. There is however some tendency to end up with two  
or small number of parties nation wide.


As another reply mentioned, this has happened in Canada. With very  
local exceptions, it hasn't happened in the US - at least not  
recently. I think a key difference is that the large US parties can  
gerrymander, whereas that is not the case in Canada (since Elections  
Canada does the redistricting there). When parties can pick their  
constituents before the constituents can pick their representatives,  
competition suffers because third parties can't get off the ground.



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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-03 Thread Juho
I commented in another mail that any system where people can change  
the system itself can be said to be a democracy. Even a two party  
system that bans third parties may still fall within this definition.  
Also multi-party systems have the same problem although in a milder  
form. The representatives of the voters may well make decisions that  
the voters do not approve, and they may not make decisions that the  
voters want. That is possible as long as the representatives do not  
get so arrogant in doing this that the voters would use their power to  
focus on this particular question in the (few) coming elections an  
force the system to change. Direct democracy is more direct than the  
two above mentioned forms of indirect representative democracy.


(I'll once more advocate tree voting a bit. One key idea behind it is  
that it would be possible that members and voters of all leading  
parties would form a pro-x interest group within their own party. Once  
all these subgroups within each party would grow and together reach  
50% of all the seats then that change (x) would happen. This change  
would take place in a very peaceful way, allowing the voters to stay  
within their own parties without the need to abandon them or vote  
against them or disagree with them, just slowly changing the opinion  
balance within these parties.)


Juho


On Nov 3, 2009, at 7:45 PM, James Gilmour wrote:


Kristofer Munsterhjelm   Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 4:34 PM

James Gilmour wrote:
Why in any country that would merit the description democracy  
would

you want to impose a two-party system when the votes of the voters
showed that was not what they wanted?


That is my question, too.


Maybe what the two-party advocates really want is guaranteed  
single-party majority government.  If that IS what they want, there
is a VERY simple and effective electoral solution.  If no party wins  
an absolute majority of the votes and seats, give 55% of the
seats to the party that wins the largest number of votes and divide  
the remaining seats among the other parties in proportion to the

their shares of the votes.

It has been done and it works.  Importantly, it's honest.  It sets  
out clearly what is considered to be the over-riding electoral
criterion and it fulfils it.  In the UK we suffer from a lot of  
nonsense about the desirability of single-party majority government
and even worse nonsense about the importance of FPTP in securing  
that.  In fact, in two of the most critical elections since 1945,
when the government of the day (one Labour, one Conservative) was  
seeking a renewed mandate for the continuation of its policies,
FPTP elected the wrong government. In both cases the outgoing  
government won the referendum on its policies (votes) and lost the

election (seats).

James Gilmour

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Kathy Dopp
I agree that the Droop quota or some similar quota should try to be
satisfied. STV doesn't always satisfy it due to exhausted ballots.
Vote-splitting does mean less proportional representation using STV if
more candidates run relative to some groups' constituency share
compared to other groups.  That and all STV's other extreme flaws is
why any of the other better proportional systems are more proportional
and also better in a host of other ways.



On Sun, Nov 1, 2009 at 9:14 PM, Raph Frank raph...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 4:17 PM, Kathy Dopp kathy.d...@gmail.com wrote:
 I believe that you misunderstood what I was saying below. It is the
 relative *number* of candidates who run for office relative to the
 number of the voters they represent compared to the same ratio for all
 other candidates that determines whether or not STV achieves
 proportional representation. I.e. STV is subject to vote splitting or
 insufficient candidates running to represent any group of voters.

 Vote splitting is not a major issue with PR-STV.   (it is also less of
 an issue with IRV than it is with plurality).  There can be some
 tactics required due to the fact that voters don't always vote based
 on party.

 If a party has 20%+ of the support in a 4 seater, it will get 1 seat.
 (Assuming that the voters rank all the party's candidates as the top
 ranks).

 As for insufficient candidates, well if a party doesn't run enough
 candidates, then it is their own fault.

 It can be a problem where an incumbent doesn't want a 2nd candidate
 from the party running, in case the 2nd candidate ends up winning a
 seat.




-- 

Kathy Dopp

Town of Colonie, NY 12304
phone 518-952-4030
cell 518-505-0220

http://utahcountvotes.org
http://electionmathematics.org
http://kathydopp.com/serendipity/

Realities Mar Instant Runoff Voting - 18 Flaws and 4 Benefits
http://electionmathematics.org/ucvAnalysis/US/RCV-IRV/InstantRunoffVotingFlaws.pdf

Voters Have Reason to Worry
http://utahcountvotes.org/UT/UtahCountVotes-ThadHall-Response.pdf

Checking election outcome accuracy --- Post-election audit sampling
http://electionmathematics.org/em-audits/US/PEAuditSamplingMethods.pdf

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Jonathan Lundell

On Nov 1, 2009, at 10:51 PM, Juho wrote:

I wouldn't be as strict as saying that Droop proportionality is an  
absolute requirement. I'd be happy to classify all methods that  
approximate the principle of x% of votes means x% of seats as  
acceptable PR.


I'd like to see a definition of what that really means.

To harp on California again: we have 53 Congressional districts, all  
(of course) single-seat FPTP. The distribution of Democratic and  
Republican seats is surprisingly close to representing state party  
registration.


Is this acceptable PR? I hope your answer is of course not (if it  
isn't, we can have that discussion).


The important thing about DPC is that it guarantees proportional  
representation to solid coalitions. The PR isn't dependent on  
strategic nomination or voting, on segregated or gerrymandered  
districts, or on fortunate accident.


If we didn't have DPC methods, then we'd certainly be justified in  
finding alternative acceptable methods. But since we do, it seems to  
me that alternative methods have a high bar to meet.


(I'd class party lists as at least potentially meeting the DPC, within  
whatever nomination and threshold constraints they have.)




Note that even if some method strictly follows e.g. Droop  
proportionality there may be other factors that distort the picture.  
It is for example typical that the size of electoral districts  
causes bigger deviation from proportionality than the method that is  
used within each district. In the extreme case single member  
districts may give disproportional power to few (e.g. two) parties  
(even if the actual method would be proportional (like plurality in  
a way is for single member districts :-)). Also e.g. 10 districts of  
10 seats each typically means considerable bias in proportionality  
in favour of the large parties.


If the votes (and proportionality) are counted at national level  
that fixes the (district fragmentation related) problem. STV is at  
its best in small districts with small number of candidates and  
seats, so it typically leaves some space to distortion in  
proportionality as caused by the district structure. List based  
methods have also similar problems but in them it is easier to have  
the whole country as one district (= better proportionality but  
weaker local representation (and as a result weaker regional  
proportionality)), or they can be easily extended to count the  
political proportionality at national level but still allocate the  
seats in the districts (and thereby maintain also regional  
proportionality and more local representation).


Certainly if we had national PR in the US (or even statewide PR in the  
larger states), we'd have a degree of locality--STV within multi-seat  
superdistricts, say, or some variation of MMP.




My point thus is that proportionality should be observed at the  
national level, taking into account also factors like districts  
and number of available candidates and parties, cutoffs,  
restrictions in nomination etc.




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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread James Gilmour
Kathy Dopp   Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 1:20 PM
 Vote-splitting does mean less proportional 
 representation using STV if more candidates run relative to 
 some groups' constituency share compared to other groups.  

Must be some misunderstanding here.  Because the surplus votes of elected 
candidates and the votes of eliminated candidates are
transferable, the votes will progressively concentrate onto the appropriate 
number of candidates to represent each group
proportionately.


 That and all STV's other extreme flaws is why any of the 
 other better proportional systems are more proportional and 
 also better in a host of other ways.

Proportionality is dependent solely on district magnitude.  For the same 
district magnitude, STV-PR is as proportional as any other
PR voting system  -  no more, but no less.

Extreme flaws and better both require definition and exposition.

For many voters, the ability to rank all the candidates freely on any basis 
whatsoever makes STV-PR better than any other PR
voting system.  One reason why these voters consider that better is the 
effects it can have on the relationships between the
elected members and the local voters, between the elected members and their 
parties, and between the elected assembly and the
executive, especially where the executive is based within the assembly (as in 
parliamentary system).  These political effects
(beyond simple PR) are important considerations, especially from the voters' 
perspective.

James Gilmour



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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Anthony O'Neal



Kathy Dopp wrote:

Condorcet is only a single seat method.
  
Yes but it can be expanded to be proportional mutli-seat and to be 
winner-take-all multi-seat.  I was really talking about the IRV 
properties of STV, since STV is essentially IRV with surplus vote 
transfer added on top.

There are lots of alternative proportional multi-seat methods such as
the ones mentioned by Ab dul and others on this list in response to my
original email such as the tree method, list method and others
mentioned by Abd ul - all of them better by far than STV.
  
STV isn't as bad as you are exaggerating it too be and it's the only one 
that has any chance of ever passing, besides party lists.

Again, STV does not achieve proportional representation unless the
number of candidates running who represent each interest group is also
proportional to the number of members of each interest group. Other
methods achieve proportionality more reliably and also lack the severe
flaws that STV/IRV exhibit.
  
I am not sure where you are getting this bizarre property.  STV can 
sometimes distort proportionality if you are using the Hare quota and 
you run more candidates than you have seats.  But this can be largely 
avoided in the Droop quota.

I prefer Condorcet for single seat districts any day over STV. Any
voting method on the planet is better than IRV/STV short of
dictatorship (OK I exagerate this point)
  

Just a tiny bit.

Cheers,

Kathy

On Sun, Nov 1, 2009 at 2:52 AM, Anthony O'Neal watermar...@gmail.com wrote:
  

I was thinking of a simialar system before - but not for the same reasons
you are.  It was after the BC-STV debacle, and I named it simplified STV.
 My thoughts were that an STV system without the complications of the second
part, and only the part that made it proportional, would be easier to sell
and less easy to attack by infusing confusion in the population.  I know,
however, that such a compromise would actually make the system less than
ideal, and my primary hope in proposing such a simplified system is that we
could go back and change it later on.

My usual thought about IRV is that it basically takes the largest group, and
has that group decide amongst itself whom their candidate will be.
 Condorcet, on the other hand, takes the largest group, and has that
electorate at whole decide who their favorite candidate out of said group
will be.  That isn't necessarily an advantage for Condorcet - often people
who are voting for more moderate candidates are simply doing so out of
spite, and so their opinion is of less usefulness.  I don't think a moral
argument can really be made for one or the other, but Condorcet is harder to
sell and susceptible to more obvious strategy problems.

Kathy Dopp wrote:


People keep asking me how to achieve a proportional representation system
so

talking out loud...

A fair proportional multiseat STV representation system could be made
by eliminating STV's elimination rounds but using the rank choices to
transfer partial votes to a 2nd choice candidate in cases where more
voters than needed for the threshold for each candidate voted for the
same 1st choice candidate.

If the rank choices were limited to a 1st choice and a 2nd choice
candidate only, unlike Fairytale Vote's IRV/STV method this method
would would be monotonic and precinct-summable (and so be OK to
manually audit and countable in the precincts) using an n x n matrix
where n is the number of candidates running for office.

In other words, for a multi-seat election where we want proportional
representation, limit voters' choices to a 1st and 2nd choice and
count all voters' 1st choices and transfer excess votes to the voters'
2nd choices and you're done - no rounds and no transfers of already
transferred votes.

However, just like with Fairytale Vote's STV system whether or not
this system actually results in proportional representation still
depends on how much vote-splitting results when more or fewer
candidates run for office in proportion to the total number of
candidates running for office, as compared to the proportion of voters
whose interests they represent. I.e. too many candidates running who
represent your interests, or too few and proportional representation
is not achieved using either the Fairytale Vote's STV method or my
(maybe someone else thought of it before) new improved monotonic,
fairer STV method sans any elimination rounds.

Therefore, a better alternative proportional representation system is
the party list system where as many candidates on each party list
take office in proportion to the number of voters who vote for that
party, but this new version of STV I figured out this a.m. (maybe
someone else has thought of it before) would work fine as well as long
as the voters were restricted to ranking only a 1st and 2nd choice
candidate.

Any method of proportional representation must be precinct-summable in
a reasonable fashion and give all voters' votes equal treatment,
unlike with the 

Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Juho

On Nov 2, 2009, at 4:50 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote:


On Nov 1, 2009, at 10:51 PM, Juho wrote:

I wouldn't be as strict as saying that Droop proportionality is an  
absolute requirement. I'd be happy to classify all methods that  
approximate the principle of x% of votes means x% of seats as  
acceptable PR.


I'd like to see a definition of what that really means.


I don't have any exact formulation, but the idea is that one can  
deviate from the basic principle only because of rounding errors,  
moderate distortion caused by districting, maybe some generally  
accepted thresholds to party size etc. Not very exact but the meaning  
is exact, implement full proportionality except where there are valid  
(practical) reasons to (slightly) deviate from it.




To harp on California again: we have 53 Congressional districts, all  
(of course) single-seat FPTP. The distribution of Democratic and  
Republican seats is surprisingly close to representing state party  
registration.


Yes, FPTP in single-seat districts is statistically proportional, but  
of course it very strongly favours large parties. This is thus  
proportional in some sense but doesn't fit well in my definition above  
since deviation from full proportionality (that would allow also  
smaller groups to survive) is much larger than what would be necessary.




Is this acceptable PR? I hope your answer is of course not (if it  
isn't, we can have that discussion).


I note that a two-party system can be seen as one style of democracy  
that may be chosen intentionally. But if the target is to have PR then  
such single-seat FPTP systems are of course not good at all.




The important thing about DPC is that it guarantees proportional  
representation to solid coalitions. The PR isn't dependent on  
strategic nomination or voting, on segregated or gerrymandered  
districts, or on fortunate accident.


If we didn't have DPC methods, then we'd certainly be justified in  
finding alternative acceptable methods. But since we do, it seems  
to me that alternative methods have a high bar to meet.


(I'd class party lists as at least potentially meeting the DPC,  
within whatever nomination and threshold constraints they have.)


I agree that DPC is a nice criterion. In practice I'm not that strict  
since I believe also methods that are close to DPC work quite well.  
For example basic d'Hondt with party lists may be close enough to PR  
although that method slightly favours large parties (when allocating  
the fractional seats). As already noted districting typically causes  
larger deviation from PR than the algorithm that is used within each  
district. There are many ways to implementing PR well enough. Maybe  
in most cases there are no major strategy and fairness related  
problems although DPC was not met fully. _Approximation_ of DPC is  
however a requirement if one wants reasonable PR.






Note that even if some method strictly follows e.g. Droop  
proportionality there may be other factors that distort the  
picture. It is for example typical that the size of electoral  
districts causes bigger deviation from proportionality than the  
method that is used within each district. In the extreme case  
single member districts may give disproportional power to few (e.g.  
two) parties (even if the actual method would be proportional (like  
plurality in a way is for single member districts :-)). Also e.g.  
10 districts of 10 seats each typically means considerable bias in  
proportionality in favour of the large parties.


If the votes (and proportionality) are counted at national level  
that fixes the (district fragmentation related) problem. STV is at  
its best in small districts with small number of candidates and  
seats, so it typically leaves some space to distortion in  
proportionality as caused by the district structure. List based  
methods have also similar problems but in them it is easier to have  
the whole country as one district (= better proportionality but  
weaker local representation (and as a result weaker regional  
proportionality)), or they can be easily extended to count the  
political proportionality at national level but still allocate  
the seats in the districts (and thereby maintain also regional  
proportionality and more local representation).


Certainly if we had national PR in the US (or even statewide PR in  
the larger states), we'd have a degree of locality--STV within multi- 
seat superdistricts, say, or some variation of MMP.


Yes, I think STV s a quite natural step for countries that have a two- 
party history. MMP could be popular since it can offer some form of  
single local representative. That sounds safer to voters and  
politicians that are used to the very local representatives (=one of  
the good points of FPTP) of the single-seat district style of FPTP.


Also other paths are possible in politics although in these questions  
I expect many important players to have an interest not to 

Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Raph Frank
On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 8:38 PM, Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 On Nov 2, 2009, at 1:53 PM, Raph Frank wrote:
 Districts with 7+ seats seem reasonable, and give reasonable
 proportionality.

 I guess there is some practical limit to how may candidates the voters are
 willing to evaluate and rank. Districts of 7+ already offer reasonable
 proportionality (approximate quite well the x% of votes = x% of seats
 principle). Also the number of candidates should be small enough in this
 case so that the voters need not rank too many candidates (e.g. 10
 candidates from each party).

Well, even with a larger number of seats, a voter would waste very
little of their vote, even if they only voted for 2-3 candidates.

Assuming you only ranked 3 candidates and they all get elected with
double the quota, only 12.5% of your vote would be exhausted.

In practice it is rare that candidates get much more than 10% above
the quota (except the candidates who are elected on the first count).

A reasonable rule would be to keep ranking until you hit a candidate
who has a reasonable chance of being elected, but isn't so popular
that he will gain much more than a quota in the first round.

 Also the number of districts has an impact here. If there are e.g. 10
 districts of size 7 there could be a party with 10% support and no seats
 although from a nation wide perspective 10% of the votes would justify 7
 seats.

True, however that assumes that the party has very constituent support.

If it varies a little from region to region, then maybe they would win
a few seats at least.

The could also decide to focus their resources from the whole country
on the 7 regions that they are most likely to win a seat in.  (though
that might get a backlash due to using outsiders).

 Yes, districts with independent elections set similar limitations in all
 systems. In list based systems it is just somewhat easier to extend them
 e.g. so that proportionality will be counted at country level. Candidate
 lists could still be regional if one so wants (the summed up votes would
 determine proportions at the country level, and seats could then be
 propagated back down (as in the Finnish proposal)).

You could also pretend that there is just 1 national constituency and
voters just happened to only vote for local candidates.

Also, you could list local candidates on the ballot, but give a
write-in slot.  The write in could allow voters to vote for a
candidate from other regions.

This reduces the complexity of the ballot for locals, but also allows
voters to vote for a write in candidate if they wish.

 Yes, this is one way to extend STV to offer better proportionality at the
 country level. This method seems to combine some list type features with STV
 voting.

 (Btw, did you consider the possibility of parties running their most popular
 candidates (that will be elected in any case) outside the party list. Is
 that a valid strategy in this method?)

It depends on what you mean here.

It doesn't suffer from the same problem as MMP, where you can gain
extra votes by using a decoy list.  Only votes which would otherwise
be exhausted are transferred to the national level.

A voter who votes for an independent doesn't also get to cast a party
vote, so you can't have your supporters support a fake independent
locally while still voting for the party with their party vote.

However, the method would still have the standard issues with vote
management.  This is pretty much inherent to PR-STV.  If party
supporters vote for the weaker party candidates instead of a very
popular candidate, then when the popular candidate is elected, fewer
of the party supporters' votes are used up.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Raph Frank
On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 8:56 PM, Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 On Nov 2, 2009, at 4:50 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote:
 To harp on California again: we have 53 Congressional districts, all (of
 course) single-seat FPTP. The distribution of Democratic and Republican
 seats is surprisingly close to representing state party registration.

 Yes, FPTP in single-seat districts is statistically proportional, but of
 course it very strongly favours large parties. This is thus proportional in
 some sense but doesn't fit well in my definition above since deviation from
 full proportionality (that would allow also smaller groups to survive) is
 much larger than what would be necessary.

That is a surprising election result.

Did they intentionally gerrymander it to work that way?

Normally, with impartial districting, the result isn't actually proportional.

Normally, the larger party will get more seats than it is entitled to.

If you have 60% of the votes, and your supporters are spread randomly,
then it is pretty sure than you will have, say 55-65% of the votes in
every district.

This amplification like effect leads to more stable governments (which
is argued to be a good thing for parliamentary systems).

 I agree that DPC is a nice criterion. In practice I'm not that strict since
 I believe also methods that are close to DPC work quite well. For example
 basic d'Hondt with party lists may be close enough to PR although that
 method slightly favours large parties (when allocating the fractional
 seats).

d'Hondt is the same as Droop (assuming that all parties vote as a single block).

If there are 5 seats and you have 20%+ of the votes, you are
guaranteed to get 1 seat under both d'Hondt and Droop.

 Yes, I think STV s a quite natural step for countries that have a two-party
 history. MMP could be popular since it can offer some form of single local
 representative. That sounds safer to voters and politicians that are used
 to the very local representatives (=one of the good points of FPTP) of the
 single-seat district style of FPTP.

Ironically, PR-STV creates an even stronger local link.  It is one of
the main complaints about PR-STV here in Ireland (at least by
politicians).  The effect is that politicians have a local rather than
a national perspective.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread James Gilmour
Raph Frank   Sent: Monday, November 02, 2009 9:41 PM
  To harp on California again: we have 53 Congressional districts, all (of
  course) single-seat FPTP. The distribution of Democratic and Republican
  seats is surprisingly close to representing state party registration.
 
  Yes, FPTP in single-seat districts is statistically proportional, but 
  of course it very strongly favours large parties. This is thus 
  proportional in some sense but doesn't fit well in my definition above 
  since deviation from full proportionality (that would allow also 
  smaller groups to survive) is much larger than what would be 
  necessary.
 
 That is a surprising election result.
 Did they intentionally gerrymander it to work that way?
 Normally, with impartial districting, the result isn't actually proportional.
 Normally, the larger party will get more seats than it is entitled to.

As I have written several times previously, the results of FPTP elections in 
the USA are the ones that are anomalous because the US
results are much more proportional and there are fewer minority members than 
for FPTP elections in most other countries that use
FPTP (e.g. UK, Canada).  Successful incumbent gerrymandering in the US is 
probably the main factor in producing these anomalous
results.  The holding primary elections may also be a contributing factor.


 If you have 60% of the votes, and your supporters are spread 
 randomly, then it is pretty sure than you will have, say 
 55-65% of the votes in every district.

Not necessarily so.  In many countries there are clear urban-rural differences 
in support for different political parties.  In many
cities there are similar clear differences between poorer inner city areas and 
more prosperous suburbs. In these circumstances (e.g.
UK), FPTP produces electoral deserts where one party or another appears to 
have no support at all because it wins no seats.  But
the votes tell a different story.  These distortions of representation have 
dangerous political effects on government policy as the
.government party has little or no representation from one area or the other.


 This amplification like effect leads to more stable 
 governments (which is argued to be a good thing for 
 parliamentary systems).

Such governments are stable only in that they have a large overall majority 
as a result of the defective FPTP voting system.
There is no real stability because at the next election the distortion may go 
the other way.  Then you have reversal of policy and
no stability at all.  Look at the political history of the UK from 1945 for a 
prime example of such instability with severely
detrimental effects on the country in almost every branch of policy: economic, 
social, educational, health, etc, etc.

James Gilmour


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Juho

On Nov 2, 2009, at 11:30 PM, Raph Frank wrote:


On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 8:38 PM, Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:

On Nov 2, 2009, at 1:53 PM, Raph Frank wrote:

Districts with 7+ seats seem reasonable, and give reasonable
proportionality.


I guess there is some practical limit to how may candidates the  
voters are
willing to evaluate and rank. Districts of 7+ already offer  
reasonable
proportionality (approximate quite well the x% of votes = x% of  
seats
principle). Also the number of candidates should be small enough in  
this

case so that the voters need not rank too many candidates (e.g. 10
candidates from each party).


Well, even with a larger number of seats, a voter would waste very
little of their vote, even if they only voted for 2-3 candidates.

Assuming you only ranked 3 candidates and they all get elected with
double the quota, only 12.5% of your vote would be exhausted.


Number of candidates is maybe the actual problem and the number of  
seats mainly influences the number of candidates. If the number of  
candidates is large then it may be necessary to rank numerous  
candidates to be sure that at least one of them will be elected (and  
the vote is not wasted).


There is also the risk that voters will vote for the strongest  
candidates and not their (possibly weaker) favourites because of this  
problem.


I'm thinking e.g. the Finnish elections where currently there can be  
some 150+ candidates to rank. It might be necessary to rank quite many  
candidates if I don't want to support the incumbents.




In practice it is rare that candidates get much more than 10% above
the quota (except the candidates who are elected on the first count).

A reasonable rule would be to keep ranking until you hit a candidate
who has a reasonable chance of being elected, but isn't so popular
that he will gain much more than a quota in the first round.


Yes. But maybe I should rank until I'm quite sure that at least one of  
the ranked candidates will be elected. In elections where there are  
numerous candidates (ref. Finland) it is also important to rank those  
good candidates that may not be elected this time but whom I want to  
promote so that they will be elected in the next elections (i.e. the  
next time potential winners will be picked by the voters in these  
elections and not by the party officials (that may offer just a  
limited set) just before the next elections).





Also the number of districts has an impact here. If there are e.g. 10
districts of size 7 there could be a party with 10% support and no  
seats
although from a nation wide perspective 10% of the votes would  
justify 7

seats.


True, however that assumes that the party has very constituent  
support.


Yes, districts tend to favour local groupings over evenly spread ones.



If it varies a little from region to region, then maybe they would win
a few seats at least.

The could also decide to focus their resources from the whole country
on the 7 regions that they are most likely to win a seat in.  (though
that might get a backlash due to using outsiders).

Yes, districts with independent elections set similar limitations  
in all
systems. In list based systems it is just somewhat easier to extend  
them
e.g. so that proportionality will be counted at country level.  
Candidate
lists could still be regional if one so wants (the summed up votes  
would

determine proportions at the country level, and seats could then be
propagated back down (as in the Finnish proposal)).


You could also pretend that there is just 1 national constituency and
voters just happened to only vote for local candidates.


Yes. Usually the number of seats in each district is based on  
population. It would be an interesting trial if the number of seats in  
each district would be based on the number of valid votes in that  
district. That might improve the turnout :-).




Also, you could list local candidates on the ballot, but give a
write-in slot.  The write in could allow voters to vote for a
candidate from other regions.


One could also allow anyone to vote any candidate from any region but  
still allocate a fixed number of seats to each district. The voter  
could then vote for her favourite (and thereby guarantee that she will  
be elected) even if that favourite would be from another district.


Juho




This reduces the complexity of the ballot for locals, but also allows
voters to vote for a write in candidate if they wish.

Yes, this is one way to extend STV to offer better proportionality  
at the
country level. This method seems to combine some list type features  
with STV

voting.

(Btw, did you consider the possibility of parties running their  
most popular
candidates (that will be elected in any case) outside the party  
list. Is

that a valid strategy in this method?)


It depends on what you mean here.

It doesn't suffer from the same problem as MMP, where you can gain
extra votes by using a decoy list.  Only votes which 

Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Juho

On Nov 2, 2009, at 11:40 PM, Raph Frank wrote:


On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 8:56 PM, Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:

On Nov 2, 2009, at 4:50 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote:
To harp on California again: we have 53 Congressional districts,  
all (of
course) single-seat FPTP. The distribution of Democratic and  
Republican
seats is surprisingly close to representing state party  
registration.


Yes, FPTP in single-seat districts is statistically proportional,  
but of
course it very strongly favours large parties. This is thus  
proportional in
some sense but doesn't fit well in my definition above since  
deviation from
full proportionality (that would allow also smaller groups to  
survive) is

much larger than what would be necessary.


That is a surprising election result.

Did they intentionally gerrymander it to work that way?

Normally, with impartial districting, the result isn't actually  
proportional.


Normally, the larger party will get more seats than it is entitled to.

If you have 60% of the votes, and your supporters are spread randomly,
then it is pretty sure than you will have, say 55-65% of the votes in
every district.

This amplification like effect leads to more stable governments (which
is argued to be a good thing for parliamentary systems).


Two-party systems can in general be claimed to produce more stable  
(single party) governments than multi-party systems. Also multi-party  
governments can be very stable since typically politicians love the  
power when they manage to get it in their hands :-).


Two-party systems also tend to set the border line between the parties  
at some median set of opinions. Individual district opinions may  
deviate from this median opinion set. That means that one party wins  
most of the time. Also in this situation voters are likely to get fed  
up with the ruling party and therefore the other party may win  
occasionally. Maybe this means proportionality in time (on party rules  
50% of the time). And that could mean also that the number of  
districts that each party wins may on average follow quite closely the  
party registration numbers (but not necessarily steadily).




I agree that DPC is a nice criterion. In practice I'm not that  
strict since
I believe also methods that are close to DPC work quite well. For  
example
basic d'Hondt with party lists may be close enough to PR although  
that

method slightly favours large parties (when allocating the fractional
seats).


d'Hondt is the same as Droop (assuming that all parties vote as a  
single block).


Droop guarantees the first seat already with somewhat less than votes/ 
seats number of votes but d'Hondt does not = ??




If there are 5 seats and you have 20%+ of the votes, you are
guaranteed to get 1 seat under both d'Hondt and Droop.

Yes, I think STV s a quite natural step for countries that have a  
two-party
history. MMP could be popular since it can offer some form of  
single local
representative. That sounds safer to voters and politicians that  
are used
to the very local representatives (=one of the good points of FPTP)  
of the

single-seat district style of FPTP.


Ironically, PR-STV creates an even stronger local link.  It is one of
the main complaints about PR-STV here in Ireland (at least by
politicians).  The effect is that politicians have a local rather than
a national perspective.


Yes, locality may be also too strong. Maybe one medicine could be to  
increase the size of the districts, or maybe to allow votes to any  
candidate of any district (as discussed above).


Juho



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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Raph Frank
On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 11:58 PM, Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
 Droop guarantees the first seat already with somewhat less than votes/seats
 number of votes but d'Hondt does not = ??

Sorry meant a 4 seater.

In a four seater, a party with 20%+ of the vote is guaranteed a seat
no matter how the other votes go, d'Hondt and Droop.

A party with 79% of the vote and 3 seats will have a divider of 4 and
will thus be unable to take the last seat, as the 20%+ party will have
a divider of 1 and 79/4 is less than 20.

Also, in d'Hondt splitting a party into 2 sub-parties can never result
in an increase in the number of seats. Thus, no matter how that 79% is
split between other parties, the 20%+ party is guaranteed to at least
retain its seat.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Kristofer Munsterhjelm

Juho wrote:

On Nov 2, 2009, at 4:50 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote:
Is this acceptable PR? I hope your answer is of course not (if it 
isn't, we can have that discussion).


I note that a two-party system can be seen as one style of democracy 
that may be chosen intentionally. But if the target is to have PR then 
such single-seat FPTP systems are of course not good at all.


If the people truly want a two-party rule, then using STV (or some other 
party neutral PR method) can't hurt - they'll have that two-party rule 
if they want, and can at any moment escape from it if they change their 
minds. See Malta.


In addition, if the method is any good between the hard limits 
specified by the DPC or analogous proportionality criterion, then there 
will be competition between the candidates inside of the party. STV is 
IRV between the hard limits, so one may doubt how good it is at this, 
but in reality, it does at least provide some measure of that; my 
clustering methods are much more Condorcet and so presumably would 
provide greater such competition. My proportionality simulator shows it 
to be much better than STV, but I've discovered that said simulator also 
has a significant small-party bias, so I'm taking the results with some 
salt until I can get proper correlation going.


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-02 Thread Kristofer Munsterhjelm

Raph Frank wrote:

On Mon, Nov 2, 2009 at 8:56 PM, Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk wrote:



I agree that DPC is a nice criterion. In practice I'm not that strict since
I believe also methods that are close to DPC work quite well. For example
basic d'Hondt with party lists may be close enough to PR although that
method slightly favours large parties (when allocating the fractional
seats).


d'Hondt is the same as Droop (assuming that all parties vote as a single block).

If there are 5 seats and you have 20%+ of the votes, you are
guaranteed to get 1 seat under both d'Hondt and Droop.


How about Sainte-Lague/Webster's? Since it's a divisor method, it would 
(seldomly) violate quota, and so a ballot-based version of it couldn't 
meet the DPC. Yet, I would say that such a version would (absent other 
flaws) be proportional - I just don't know how to actually construct it.


If the limitations of apportionment methods are true for party-neutral 
multiwinner methods as well, then it's impossible to have both 
population pair monotonicity (what we usually call monotonicity) and 
to always obey quota. Although I haven't checked this in detail, it does 
seem like the limitations would hold, because: otherwise, assume some 
party-neutral multiwinner method X passes both - then you could just 
have everybody vote party list style in X, and so use X as an 
apportionment method, but that would cause a contradiction.


So if that reasoning is correct, then in order to have a monotone 
multiwinner method (I don't know of any), we must accept that it some 
times fails the DPC. Of course, if the DPC is the only acceptable 
criterion of proportionality, then no proportional multiwinner method 
can be monotone.


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-01 Thread Jonathan Lundell

On Oct 31, 2009, at 7:29 AM, Kathy Dopp wrote:


3. STV does *not* achieve proportional representation at all unless
there is no vote splitting and just the right number of candidates run
who support each group's interests. I.e. the success of methods like
STV to achieve proportional representation rest in the unlikely
assumption that just the right proportion of candidates run (or more
precisely an equal proportion of candidates run) in proportion to the
number of voters in each separate group.  This is just simple
mathematical fact.


STV satisfies the Droop Proportionality Criterion. Any competing  
proposal for a proportional system must accomplish at least that, it  
seems to me, to be taken seriously. 


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-11-01 Thread Raph Frank
On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 4:17 PM, Kathy Dopp kathy.d...@gmail.com wrote:
 I believe that you misunderstood what I was saying below. It is the
 relative *number* of candidates who run for office relative to the
 number of the voters they represent compared to the same ratio for all
 other candidates that determines whether or not STV achieves
 proportional representation. I.e. STV is subject to vote splitting or
 insufficient candidates running to represent any group of voters.

Vote splitting is not a major issue with PR-STV.   (it is also less of
an issue with IRV than it is with plurality).  There can be some
tactics required due to the fact that voters don't always vote based
on party.

If a party has 20%+ of the support in a 4 seater, it will get 1 seat.
(Assuming that the voters rank all the party's candidates as the top
ranks).

As for insufficient candidates, well if a party doesn't run enough
candidates, then it is their own fault.

It can be a problem where an incumbent doesn't want a 2nd candidate
from the party running, in case the 2nd candidate ends up winning a
seat.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Kristofer Munsterhjelm

James Gilmour wrote:

Kathy Dopp   Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 4:45 PM

A fair proportional multiseat STV representation system could be made
by eliminating STV's elimination rounds but using the rank choices to
transfer partial votes to a 2nd choice candidate in cases where more
voters than needed for the threshold for each candidate voted for the
same 1st choice candidate.


If the rankings were limited in this artificial way, the
proportionality obtained would be poor, and very poor in some
circumstances.


I agree with what you're saying there. However...


If the rank choices were limited to a 1st choice and a 2nd choice
candidate only, unlike Fairytale Vote's IRV/STV method this method
would would be monotonic and precinct-summable (and so be OK to
manually audit and countable in the precincts) using an n x n matrix
where n is the number of candidates running for office.


As has been explained many times, it is not possible to devise a
voting system that simultaneously meets all the desirable
criteria. Voting systems that comply with 'monotonicity' fail 'later
no harm'. As has also been explained, monotonicity is of no
importance whatsoever in public elections because it cannot be
exploited either by the candidates or by the voters. In contrast,
failure to comply with 'later no harm' opens the way for undesirable
strategic and tactical voting. Also, compliance with 'later no
harm' does seem to be important to real voters.


Untrue. DAC and DSC meet monotonicity and either LNHelp or LNHarm. The 
thing which you can't have is both LNHelp and LNHarm, as well as 
monotonicity[1].


As for monotonicity itself: IMHO, it's not a strategy issue, but rather 
an issue of the method being in conflict with itself. Rather like, say, 
Condorcet Loser for Condorcet methods: the method claims some property 
is desirable, but also some times elects those that would lose when 
ranked according to that property. In the case of monotonicity, the 
method elects X due to support of X, but further support of X causes X 
not to be elected, and so the inconsistency is that the support both 
helps and harms.


Finally, the Schulze method (as used by Wikimedia, Debian, and others) 
fails later-no-harm, something it must do since it's a Condorcet method. 
This fact doesn't seem to have upset the voters much.



In other words, for a multi-seat election where we want proportional
representation, limit voters' choices to a 1st and 2nd choice and
count all voters' 1st choices and transfer excess votes to the voters'
2nd choices and you're done - no rounds and no transfers of already
transferred votes.


If you cannot eliminate candidates and transfer their votes in
accordance with the voters' instructions, you cannot obtain 
proportional representation (or only very poor PR).


In my previous post, I gave an example of a method that doesn't use 
elimination. Schulze STV (but probably not CPO-STV) is another. 
Technically, my Setwise Highest Average method doesn't use elimination 
either, but you could argue that its use of Sainte-Laguë on the 
coalitions serves the same effect.


Of course, if your point of view is that the voters' ballots are like 
the punchcards to the program - explicit instructions to the method 
itself about which candidates should be eliminated and in what order, 
then the above fails. By that reasoning, only the voters' intended 
method fits (be it STV, Bucklin with winner elimination, CPO-STV, whatever).


-

[1] Actually, I'm not even sure about this. Woodall's impossibility 
theorems listed in Voting Matters #6 say only that mutual majority (he 
calls it Majority), LNHelp and LNHarm implies nonmonotonicity. Perhaps a 
method can have both LNHs as well as monotonicity if it gives up on 
mutual majority. Plurality would be such a method (technically 
speaking), though it is a really bad one.


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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Kathy Dopp
Rather than reply individually to the three response to my former
post, I'll just make some observations:

1. It seems like the pro-IRV/STV group has begun to dominate this list,

2. the assumption that Later-no-harm is a desirable feature of a
voting method is very odd. I would claim that the opposite is true, in
agreement with Abd ul Lomax. Later-no-harm is a feature that prevents
a voting method from finding majority-favored compromise candidates
and ensures that IRV/STV tends to find candidates supported by either
extreme leftist or rightist groups

3. STV does *not* achieve proportional representation at all unless
there is no vote splitting and just the right number of candidates run
who support each group's interests. I.e. the success of methods like
STV to achieve proportional representation rest in the unlikely
assumption that just the right proportion of candidates run (or more
precisely an equal proportion of candidates run) in proportion to the
number of voters in each separate group.  This is just simple
mathematical fact.

4. STV does not solve the spoiler problem and the vote-splitting problem

5. It always amazes me how irrationally the supporters of IRV/STV
support a nonmonotonic system that creates more problems than it
solves when there are clearly better alternatives available that
actually solve more problems than they create.

Oh, and for those of you who do not like IRV/STV and want to show your
friends why, I've put up a new web page with links to some great new
educational youtube videos showing how IRV/STV really works (doesn't
find majority winners, eliminates the majority-favorite candidate, is
nonmonotonic, etc.)

Learn About Instant Runoff Voting Methods
http://kathydopp.com/serendipity/index.php?/categories/2-Instant-Runoff-Voting

Thassal.

Cheers,

Kathy Dopp

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Raph Frank
On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 2:29 PM, Kathy Dopp kathy.d...@gmail.com wrote:
 Rather than reply individually to the three response to my former
 post, I'll just make some observations:

 1. It seems like the pro-IRV/STV group has begun to dominate this list,

I am pro-PR-STV but against IRV.

As with all election methods, it is a trade-off.  The benefits of
PR-STV outweigh the disadvantages.  It gives max control to the voters
while giving reasonable PR.  The more seats elected the better.  With
small constituencies, it isn't so great.

I guess my thoughts would be that PR is better than a single seat
method, and PR-STV is better than a party list system.

 2. the assumption that Later-no-harm is a desirable feature of a
 voting method is very odd. I would claim that the opposite is true, in
 agreement with Abd ul Lomax. Later-no-harm is a feature that prevents
 a voting method from finding majority-favored compromise candidates
 and ensures that IRV/STV tends to find candidates supported by either
 extreme leftist or rightist groups

I agree with this too.  The biggest weakness of PR-STV is that is
collapses to IRV in the single seat case.

I think that it might be worth looking at the elimination ordering to
help with this.

For example, you could have an approval vote held at the same time and
eliminate the least approved remaining candidate, if no candidate is
elected.  This would collapse to (roughly) approval followed by
(instant) top-2 runoff in the single seat case.

The key point would be to use a different method for determining who
is eliminated than is used to determine who is elected.  The preserves
the proportionality of the method while allowing it perform better in
the single seat case.

The problem is that PR-STV is already reasonably complex and most
proposed changes make it even more complex.

There are methods like CPO-STV and Schulze-STV which are similar to
PR-STV.  Both of these methods are condorect compliant in the single
seat case (and so presumably break later-no-harm).  However, that are
so complex, that they would require a computer to perform the tally.

 3. STV does *not* achieve proportional representation at all unless
 there is no vote splitting and just the right number of candidates run
 who support each group's interests. I.e. the success of methods like
 STV to achieve proportional representation rest in the unlikely
 assumption that just the right proportion of candidates run (or more
 precisely an equal proportion of candidates run) in proportion to the
 number of voters in each separate group.  This is just simple
 mathematical fact.

Generally it does achieve reasonable proportional representation.
Parties might get less than proportional in one constituency and more
than proportionality in another, due to randomness.

However, the smaller the constituencies the bigger the seat bonus
given to larger parties.

Again, the more seats per constituency, the better, as that gives
better proportionality and makes it easier for smaller parties to get
seats.

 5. It always amazes me how irrationally the supporters of IRV/STV
 support a nonmonotonic system that creates more problems than it
 solves when there are clearly better alternatives available that
 actually solve more problems than they create.

I think the issue is that you look at PR-STV and IRV and refuse to see
any difference.

Many people (including many on this list) feel that IRV is a bad method.

However, PR-STV has some advantages over other PR methods.  That is
why people refuse to dismiss it out of hand.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Kathy Dopp
Ralph,

I believe that you misunderstood what I was saying below. It is the
relative *number* of candidates who run for office relative to the
number of the voters they represent compared to the same ratio for all
other candidates that determines whether or not STV achieves
proportional representation. I.e. STV is subject to vote splitting or
insufficient candidates running to represent any group of voters.

STV has all the same flaws of IRV and is hence unsuitable for use in
any elections. Its flaws far outweigh its benefits, esp given the
existence of methods that achieve proportional representation more
reliably and without causing all the other problems that STV causes.

Kathy


 3. STV does *not* achieve proportional representation at all unless
 there is no vote splitting and just the right number of candidates run
 who support each group's interests. I.e. the success of methods like
 STV to achieve proportional representation rest in the unlikely
 assumption that just the right proportion of candidates run (or more
 precisely an equal proportion of candidates run) in proportion to the
 number of voters in each separate group.  This is just simple
 mathematical fact.

 Generally it does achieve reasonable proportional representation.
 Parties might get less than proportional in one constituency and more
 than proportionality in another, due to randomness.

 However, the smaller the constituencies the bigger the seat bonus
 given to larger parties.

 Again, the more seats per constituency, the better, as that gives
 better proportionality and makes it easier for smaller parties to get
 seats.


-- 

Kathy Dopp

Town of Colonie, NY 12304
phone 518-952-4030
cell 518-505-0220

http://utahcountvotes.org
http://electionmathematics.org
http://kathydopp.com/serendipity/

Realities Mar Instant Runoff Voting - 18 Flaws and 4 Benefits
http://electionmathematics.org/ucvAnalysis/US/RCV-IRV/InstantRunoffVotingFlaws.pdf

Voters Have Reason to Worry
http://utahcountvotes.org/UT/UtahCountVotes-ThadHall-Response.pdf

Checking election outcome accuracy --- Post-election audit sampling
http://electionmathematics.org/em-audits/US/PEAuditSamplingMethods.pdf

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread robert bristow-johnson


On Oct 31, 2009, at 10:29 AM, Kathy Dopp wrote:


5. It always amazes me how irrationally the supporters of IRV/STV
support a nonmonotonic system that creates more problems than it
solves when there are clearly better alternatives available that
actually solve more problems than they create.


so, Kathy, i am curious as to which of these better alternatives you  
promote?


--

r b-j  r...@audioimagination.com

Imagination is more important than knowledge.





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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Juho
I agree with Raph Frank in that most EM activists probably have  
different opinions on IRV (for single winner elections) and STV (for  
multi-winner elections). Technically many of their properties are  
still the same but the final impact and nature of these elections  
(single winner vs. PR multi-winner) are quite different, and therefore  
one may not expect that people that promote IRV would promote STV and  
the other way around.


I agree that traditional closed and open lists allow more candidates  
to run than STV. They offer also a very simple and summable counting  
process. (I believe you wanted to see such properties.) But also STV  
offers full PR (with some small rounding errors that include some  
(unwanted) IRV style decisions on which candidates will get a seat),  
and it may well be the method of choice if one wants to maximize the  
ability of the voters to express their opinions (that may deviate from  
the existing party structure) and to provide proportionality also  
within the parties.


You mentioned also the possibility that candidates would determine  
their own preference (/vote inheritance) order. That would keep the  
ballots simple and summable (also in the more complex case where  
voters give two candidate names, and candidate given inheritance order  
could be used after that).


In addition to these options I'd like to mention the tree based method  
that lies somewhere between candidate given preference lists and open  
list based methods. Votes are still simple (just name one candidate).  
Tree structure allows also multiple voter opinions to be taken into  
account (not just party affiliation) and offers at that level also  
party internal proportionality. (One could have e.g. green  
conservatives as well as conservative greens in the tree structure.)  
Trees differ from the candidate given preference lists in that only  
groupings are named (not full list of individual candidates) (derived  
from the tree structure) and in that the end part of the inheritance  
order is the same for all members of each grouping.


One more argument in favour of trees is that in such structures the  
priorities of the candidates will be very clear to the voters and  
therefore the voters as well as elected representatives will know very  
well what the representatives are expected to promote. In some sense  
that gives the voters more power to determine the resulting political  
balance (e.g. if all parties have a pro-xyz grouping available). STV  
gives more freedom to the voters in expressing different vote  
inheritance orders and more fine grained proportionality within the  
parties/groupings. I'd say there are different needs and different  
traditions (including the ones related to the number of candidates,  
summability, need to protect against fraud etc.) and therefore  
different methods may be the best for different needs.


(PR makes sense in general but I wouldn't deny people the right to  
achieve the political balance using two-party systems if they so want.)


Juho



On Oct 31, 2009, at 6:17 PM, Kathy Dopp wrote:


Ralph,

I believe that you misunderstood what I was saying below. It is the
relative *number* of candidates who run for office relative to the
number of the voters they represent compared to the same ratio for all
other candidates that determines whether or not STV achieves
proportional representation. I.e. STV is subject to vote splitting or
insufficient candidates running to represent any group of voters.

STV has all the same flaws of IRV and is hence unsuitable for use in
any elections. Its flaws far outweigh its benefits, esp given the
existence of methods that achieve proportional representation more
reliably and without causing all the other problems that STV causes.

Kathy




3. STV does *not* achieve proportional representation at all unless
there is no vote splitting and just the right number of candidates  
run

who support each group's interests. I.e. the success of methods like
STV to achieve proportional representation rest in the unlikely
assumption that just the right proportion of candidates run (or more
precisely an equal proportion of candidates run) in proportion to  
the

number of voters in each separate group.  This is just simple
mathematical fact.


Generally it does achieve reasonable proportional representation.
Parties might get less than proportional in one constituency and more
than proportionality in another, due to randomness.

However, the smaller the constituencies the bigger the seat bonus
given to larger parties.

Again, the more seats per constituency, the better, as that gives
better proportionality and makes it easier for smaller parties to get
seats.



--

Kathy Dopp

Town of Colonie, NY 12304
phone 518-952-4030
cell 518-505-0220

http://utahcountvotes.org
http://electionmathematics.org
http://kathydopp.com/serendipity/

Realities Mar Instant Runoff Voting - 18 Flaws and 4 Benefits

Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Jonathan Lundell

On Oct 31, 2009, at 10:25 AM, Juho wrote:

(PR makes sense in general but I wouldn't deny people the right to  
achieve the political balance using two-party systems if they so  
want.)


How would this decision be made? Majority rule?

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Juho
Yes, majority rule is the default mechanism (sometimes complemented  
with super-majority requirements in key decisions like this).


Are there alternatives to this? In principle also ratings could be  
used somewhere to make the decision (if they would just work in  
practice), and other methods that are able to elect some consensus  
alternative even when there is a majority favouring some other  
alternative (tricky). In practice, majority rules.


In addition to this people in good positions in the existing system  
typically fight against (or don't eagerly promote) any change that  
might change their status to something worse. Election methods are in  
the very core of this process from the point of view of parties and  
representatives. That is why improvements, even clear and sensible  
ones, are seldom effectively promoted and reach majority support.


I tend to trust in open discussions and especially clear formulation  
of the alternative options for the future (e.g. by the EM people if  
not others). Also activism and movements outside the official  
political structure may impact the process. In principle the jointly  
agreed political structure should be enough to make things happen, but  
sometimes they need some help to proceed. (Also media, the  
scientific process and books and opinions of respected citizens may be  
considered to be parts of the established process.)


Juho



On Oct 31, 2009, at 7:26 PM, Jonathan Lundell wrote:


On Oct 31, 2009, at 10:25 AM, Juho wrote:

(PR makes sense in general but I wouldn't deny people the right to  
achieve the political balance using two-party systems if they so  
want.)


How would this decision be made? Majority rule?



Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info


Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Kevin Venzke
Hello,

--- En date de : Sam 31.10.09, Jonathan Lundell jlund...@pobox.com a écrit :
 De: Jonathan Lundell jlund...@pobox.com
 Objet: Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential  
 round elimination is not
 À: Juho juho4...@yahoo.co.uk
 Cc: kathy.d...@gmail.com, Election Methods 
 election-methods@lists.electorama.com
 Date: Samedi 31 Octobre 2009, 12h26
 On Oct 31, 2009, at 10:25 AM, Juho
 wrote:
 
  (PR makes sense in general but I wouldn't deny people
 the right to achieve the political balance using two-party
 systems if they so want.)
 
 How would this decision be made? Majority rule?

It's not hard to imagine a referendum with that kind of effect. I
don't see how you can get away from majority rule; even if we elect
a body using PR-STV to vote on the party system, that's still majority
rule (or a super-majority rule with a possibility of no outcome), it's
just different people voting in the end.

Kevin Venzke


  

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Jonathan Lundell

On Oct 31, 2009, at 11:08 AM, Kevin Venzke wrote:


(PR makes sense in general but I wouldn't deny people

the right to achieve the political balance using two-party
systems if they so want.)

How would this decision be made? Majority rule?


It's not hard to imagine a referendum with that kind of effect. I
don't see how you can get away from majority rule; even if we elect
a body using PR-STV to vote on the party system, that's still majority
rule (or a super-majority rule with a possibility of no outcome), it's
just different people voting in the end.


I don't have a counter-suggestion, but there does seem to be a  
practical problem here.


PR-STV was used in quite a few US cities in the first half of the 20C.  
Mostly, it got repealed when the local majority party realized that  
they could benefit from majority-take-all voting, and could avoid  
sharing power by repealing PR.


One can imagine establishing a culture of PR where even members of  
the majority support the idea that others should be represented; this  
seems to be the case in various places outside the US, and for  
whatever reason in Cambridge MA. But this has certainly not been the  
rule in the US.




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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread James Gilmour
  (PR makes sense in general but I wouldn't deny people
  the right to achieve the political balance using two-party systems if 
  they so want.)
 
  How would this decision be made? Majority rule?
 
  It's not hard to imagine a referendum with that kind of effect. I 
  don't see how you can get away from majority rule; even if we elect a 
  body using PR-STV to vote on the party system, that's still  majority 
  rule (or a super-majority rule with a possibility of no outcome), it's 
  just different people voting in the end.

If you genuinely have a two party system, you have no problem.  The problems 
arise when significant numbers of voters do not vote
for either of the two largest parties, but the politicians of the two largest 
parties want the political system to function as if
there were only two parties and a guaranteed single-party majority after every 
election.

If you believe in representative democracy and believe that the representative 
assemblies in such a democracy (city councils,
state legislatures) should be fairly representative of those who vote, then you 
must be prepared to accept the representation the
voters say they want.  If the voters fall into two main categories, so be it.  
But if the voters are divided among three, four or
five significant groups, so be it, too  -  that's what the voters say they want.

One of the advantages of STV-PR is that it is party-neutral and it allows the 
voters to have a direct influence on party behaviour.
For example, for the first 40 years of STV-PR in Malta the voters elected 
members of 3, 4 or 5 parties to their parliament.  But for
the past 40 years of STV-PR all the members of the Maltese parliament have 
elected from only two parties.  That change was brought
about by the voters because more than two parties still contest the elections.  
So the representation in the parliament could be
different IF the voters wanted that.


 PR-STV was used in quite a few US cities in the first half of the 20C.  
 Mostly, it got repealed when the local majority party realized that  
 they could benefit from majority-take-all voting, and could avoid  
 sharing power by repealing PR.

Big party politics, big business and big media combined in some VERY dirty 
campaigns to dump fair representation of ordinary voters!


 One can imagine establishing a culture of PR where even members of  
 the majority support the idea that others should be represented; this  
 seems to be the case in various places outside the US, and for  
 whatever reason in Cambridge MA. But this has certainly not been the  
 rule in the US.

It may come as shock to many in the USA, but most countries in Europe elect 
their national, regional and local assemblies by some
system of proportional representation.  Rarely are the voters divided into only 
two blocks, so single-party majorities are rare.  In
Europe, it is the UK that is the exception, where despite having a genuine 
multi-party system political system we cling to the
discredited FPTP voting system with single-member districts that artificially 
(and wrongly) manufactures single-party majority
government against the voters' wishes.  Sometimes our governments have 
obscenely large majorities despite having only minority
support among these who voted  -  currently a majority of 66 seats (out of 646) 
with only 35% of the votes.  But that's party
politics!

James Gilmour







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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-31 Thread Abd ul-Rahman Lomax
The basic idea of PR methods is to create an assembly that represents 
the voters. While voters don't neatly fall into categories, we can 
measure the performance of the systems as if they did. In the end, 
the only category that matters is who the voter trusts most to represent them.


So if there is an assembly with N seats, and V voters, and there are 
V/N voters who prefer, out of all possibilities, a candidate, we can 
define a Proportionality Criterion. That candidate must be elected if 
the voters express this preference on the ballot.


Asset Voting satisfies this, so does Candidate Proxy. Both are simple 
methods; Candidate Proxy (which has been used to refer to a method 
where candidates state a preference order, before the election, and 
this order is used with the counting system to apply to the voter's 
ballot, it essentially substitutes for the voter's ballot. Asset 
Voting is more flexible and could theoretically allow for a candidate 
to be chosen who wasn't on the ballot and received no votes in the 
election at all.


Win must be interpreted as has the right to unconditionally 
declare a person elected, which could be the candidate himself or 
herself, or anyone else eligible for the office.


And then more detailed criteria could be defined, like the 
Distributed Proportionality Criterion. If there is a set of M 
candidates who received together a sum of V/N votes as 
most-preferred, those candidates, by cooperating, could 
unconditionally elect a winner. This, to my mind, satisfies the 
intention of proportional representation even where no candidates, by 
themselves, gain a quota.


To try to simulate this with a single-ballot method can get tricky, 
but it could be done.


However, I'll suggest this simple method:

Bucklin ballot. For simplicity, I'm not going to allow multiple votes 
in each rank, but it would be improved if multiple votes are allowed, 
it simply complicates the counting and calculations.


First rank choices are counted. If any candidate gains a quota (for a 
single-ballot method, it must be a Droop quota, not the Hare quota 
that makes more sense with pure Asset Voting), that candidate is 
elected. This is done for all candidates who are direclty elected 
with a quota in the first round. The ballots with that candidate in 
first preference position are segregated. By the condition, the total 
vote count, T(C1), is at or over the quota. If only one seat were 
elected with these votes, it would be disproportionate, the voters 
would be underrepresented. So there must still be effective votes 
left to be exercised of T(C1) - Q. So each ballot is devalued by the 
ratio of (T(C1 - Q)) / T(C1). These ballots are then counted 
separately to examine the next rank listed, and those votes are 
multiplied by the devaluation factor and added in to the totals, and 
this is repeated as needed until no more ranks are available. At each 
point, the number of remaining votes to be distributed are V minus Q 
times the number of candidates elected thus far. It may be easier to 
understand than to describe!


If a ballot has a candidate in first position who is not elected, 
when all candidates which can be elected as described are elected, 
the ballot is opened to the next rank, and those votes are added in 
(from all ballots except those that are completely exhausted -- which 
is unlikely, for it to happen an candidate would have to be elected 
by an exact quota of votes.)


While your second rank choice may harm your first rank choice, it 
never actually reduces the chance of that candidate being elected 
unless the candidate wasn't going to gain a quorum of votes. The 
possibility that your ballot might elect your lower-ranked choice is 
balanced by the fact that your favored candidate might be elected by 
a lower-ranked choice of another. And because there are no 
eliminations, except of elected candidates, the harm would only 
occur at the very end of the process, and with one seat at stake, 
and, yes, Virginia, if you want to be represented by the best 
possible representative, you must be willing to make compromises. 
Hopefully, they are not large ones.


If voters voted in blocks, and each block wanted their favorite to be 
elected, and the block was Q in size or larger, all preferring the 
same candidate, the candidate would be elected provided they vote 
their sincere preference. As well, if a block places two candidates 
at the top of their preference lists, and votes the preference, and 
is 2 * Q in size, both candidates would be elected. If two blocks 
exist, one voting ABall others, and one voting BAall others, and 
the two blocks together are 2 * Q in size, then both A and B will be elected.


Has this method been described by anyone? If forget how Proportional 
Approval Voting is run, but I'd guess it would look like this, with 
just one Approval stage, i.e., as if all ballots in the Bucklin 
system I described were collapsed at once.


I described a method that 

Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-30 Thread Raph Frank
On Fri, Oct 30, 2009 at 4:44 PM, Kathy Dopp kathy.d...@gmail.com wrote:
 In other words, for a multi-seat election where we want proportional
 representation, limit voters' choices to a 1st and 2nd choice and
 count all voters' 1st choices and transfer excess votes to the voters'
 2nd choices and you're done - no rounds and no transfers of already
 transferred votes.

That is technically 2 rounds.

This would increase the number of voters who end up wasting their
vote.  Voting for a no-hope candidate first choice would be throwing
your vote away.

PR-STV maintains proportionality no matter what order candidates are
eliminated (assuming you don't eliminate candidates who have achieved
the quota).

I don't think this could be used to create a monotonic method though.

 Any method of proportional representation must be precinct-summable in
 a reasonable fashion

The certainly isn't a required condition for it to be a PR method.

 The party list system works much better for achieving proportional
 representation as long as there is a party representing your
 interests.  It doesn't have to be a party, but could just be that
 each candidate chooses his own list of candidates below him/her to
 pass excess votes down to.

If each candidate was allowed to submit a list and candidates were
allowed to be listed on more than 1 list, then you could have precinct
summability while having (a weak form of) PR-STV.

Each voter would vote for 1 candidate's list, rather than providing a
full ranking and PR-STV could be used to combine all the votes.

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Re: [EM] STV - the transferrable part is OK (fair), the sequential round elimination is not

2009-10-30 Thread James Gilmour
Kathy Dopp   Sent: Friday, October 30, 2009 4:45 PM
 
 talking out loud...

You were indeed talking out loud.

From you posts over several years it would APPEAR that you have no real 
appreciation of the purpose of a proportional representation
voting system.  If you have such an appreciation, it is not apparent from your 
posts.

Nor do you show any appreciation of the existence of two fundamentally 
different approaches to proportional representation.  These
give very different answers to the question: Proportional representation of 
what?


 A fair proportional multiseat STV representation system could be made
 by eliminating STV's elimination rounds but using the rank choices to
 transfer partial votes to a 2nd choice candidate in cases where more
 voters than needed for the threshold for each candidate voted for the
 same 1st choice candidate.

If the rankings were limited in this artificial way, the proportionality 
obtained would be poor, and very poor in some
circumstances.


 If the rank choices were limited to a 1st choice and a 2nd choice
 candidate only, unlike Fairytale Vote's IRV/STV method this method
 would would be monotonic and precinct-summable (and so be OK to
 manually audit and countable in the precincts) using an n x n matrix
 where n is the number of candidates running for office.

As has been explained many times, it is not possible to devise a voting system 
that simultaneously meets all the desirable
criteria. Voting systems that comply with 'monotonicity' fail 'later no harm'. 
 As has also been explained, monotonicity is of no
importance whatsoever in public elections because it cannot be exploited either 
by the candidates or by the voters.  In contrast,
failure to comply with 'later no harm' opens the way for undesirable strategic 
and tactical voting.  Also, compliance with 'later no
harm' does seem to be important to real voters.


 In other words, for a multi-seat election where we want proportional
 representation, limit voters' choices to a 1st and 2nd choice and
 count all voters' 1st choices and transfer excess votes to the voters'
 2nd choices and you're done - no rounds and no transfers of already
 transferred votes.

If you cannot eliminate candidates and transfer their votes in accordance with 
the voters' instructions, you cannot obtain
proportional representation (or only very poor PR).


 However, just like with Fairytale Vote's STV system whether or not
 this system actually results in proportional representation still
 depends on how much vote-splitting results when more or fewer
 candidates run for office in proportion to the total number of
 candidates running for office, as compared to the proportion of voters
 whose interests they represent. I.e. too many candidates running who
 represent your interests, or too few and proportional representation
 is not achieved using either the Fairytale Vote's STV method or my
 (maybe someone else thought of it before) new improved monotonic,
 fairer STV method sans any elimination rounds.

The whole purpose of the 'transferable vote' is obtain proportional 
representation from among a diversity of views.  There should
be, and need be, no artificial restriction on the diversity represented by the 
candidates who offer themselves for election.


 Therefore, a better alternative proportional representation system is
 the party list system where as many candidates on each party list
 take office in proportion to the number of voters who vote for that
 party, 

The purposes of party-list PR voting systems and STV-PR are fundamentally 
different.  The objective of ALL party-list PR voting
systems is to obtain PR of the registered political parties.  In contrast, the 
objective of STV-PR is to obtain PR of whatever the
voters want, as expressed by their responses to the candidates who have offered 
themselves for election.

IF the voters in an STV-PR election vote for the candidates strictly by party, 
then party PR will result.  But with this very
important difference  -  the voters will have determined which of each party's 
candidates are elected.  In a closed-list party-list
PR voting system, the voters have no say at all  -  that gives more power to 
the party machines.  In a typical open-list party-list
PR voting system, the voters have some say, but such voting systems do not give 
proportionality WITHIN the various parties  -  and
that can sometimes be as important as PR among the parties.  There are a few 
open-list party-list PR voting systems that approach
STV-PR in the flexibility they give the voters, but they are so complicated you 
may as well go all the way and give the voters the
full freedom of STV-PR.


 but this new version of STV I figured out this a.m. (maybe
 someone else has thought of it before) would work fine as well as long
 as the voters were restricted to ranking only a 1st and 2nd choice
 candidate.

As explained, above, this will not give PR, or at best, only very poor PR.


 Any method of