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Lesson Plan For ll Practical Purposes Voting and Social hoice Majority Rule and ondorcet s Method Mathematical Literacy in Today s World, 7th ed. Other Voting Systems for Three or More andidates Plurality Voting orda ount Sequential Pairwise Voting Hare System Insurmountable Difficulties: rrow s Impossibility Theorem etter pproach? pproval Voting 2006, W.H. Freeman and ompany 1

Voting and Social hoice Social hoice Theory Social choice deals with how groups can best arrive at decisions. The problem with social choice is finding good procedures that will turn individual preferences for different candidates into a single choice by the whole group. Example: Selecting a winner of an election using a good procedure that will result in an outcome that reflects the will of the people Preference List allot preference list ballot consists of a rank ordering of candidates showing the preferences of one of the individuals who is voting. vertical list is used with the most preferred candidate on top and the least preferred on the bottom. Throughout the chapter, we assume the number of voters is odd (to help simplify and focus on the theory). Furthermore, in the real world, the number of voters is often so large that ties seldom occur. 2

Majority Rule and ondorcet s Method Majority Rule Majority rule for elections with only two candidates (and an odd number of voters) is a voting system in which the candidate preferred by more than half the voters is the winner. Three Desirable Properties of Majority Rule ll voters are treated equally. oth candidates are treated equally. It is monotone. Monotone means that if a new election were held and a single voter were to change his or her ballot from voting for the losing candidate to voting for the winning candidate (and everyone else voted the same), the outcome would be the same. May s Theorem mong all two-candidate voting systems that never result in a tie, majority rule is the only one that treats all voters and both candidates equally and is monotone. 3

Majority Rule and ondorcet s Method ondorcet s Method This method requires that each candidate go head to head with each of the other candidates. For the two candidates in each contest, record who would win (using majority rule) from each ballot cast. To satisfy ondorcet, the winning candidate must defeat every other candidate one on one. The Marquis de ondorcet (1743 1794) was the first to realize the voting paradox: If is better than, and is better than, then must be better than. Sometimes is better than not logical! ondorcet s Voting Paradox With three or more candidates, there are elections in which ondorcet s method yields no winners. beats, 2 out of 3; and beats, 2 out of 3; and beats, 2 out of 3 No winner! Rank Number of Voters (3) First Second Third 4

Other Voting Systems for Three or More andidates Voting Systems for Three or More andidates When there are three or more candidates, it is more unlikely to have a candidate win with a majority vote. Many other voting methods exist, consisting of reasonable ways to choose a winner; however, they all have shortcomings. We will examine four more popular voting systems for three or more candidates: Four voting systems, along with their shortcomings: 1. Plurality Voting and the ondorcet Winning riterion 2. The orda ount and Independence of Irrelevant lternatives 3. Sequential Pairwise Voting and the Pareto ondition 4. The Hare System and Monotonicity 5

Plurality Voting and the ondorcet Winning riterion Plurality Voting Only first place votes are considered. Even if a preference list ballot is submitted, only the voters first choice will be counted it could have just been a single vote cast. The candidate with the most votes wins. The winner does not need a majority of votes, but simply have more votes than the other candidates. Example: Find the plurality vote of the 3 candidates and 13 voters. Rank First Second Third Number of Voters (13) 5 4 3 1 The candidate with the most first place votes wins. ount each candidate s first place votes only. ( has the most.) = 5, = 4, = 4 wins. 6

Plurality Voting and the ondorcet Winning riterion Example: 2000 Presidential Election (Plurality fails W.) ondorcet Winner riterion (W) is satisfied if either is true: 1. If there is no ondorcet winner (often the case) or 2. If the winner of the election is also the ondorcet winner This election came down to which of ush or Gore would carry Florida. Result: George W. ush won by a few hundred votes. Gore, however, was considered the ondorcet winner: It is assumed if l Gore was pitted against any one of the other three candidates, (ush, uchanan, Nader), Gore would have won. Manipulability occurs when voters misrepresents their preference rather than throw away their vote. 7

orda ount and Independence of Irrelevant lternatives The orda ount orda ount is a rank method of voting that assigns points in a nonincreasing manner to the ordered candidates on each voter s preference list ballot and then add these points to arrive at a group s final ranking. For n candidates, assign points as follows: First place vote is worth n 1 points, second place vote is worth n 2 points, and so on down to Last place vote is worth n n = 0, zero points. The candidate s total points are referred to as his/her orda score. Example: Total the orda score of each candidate. = 2 + 2 + 2 + 0 + 0 = 6 = 1 + 1 + 1 + 2 + 2 = 7 = 0 + 0 + 0 + 1 + 1 = 2 has the most, wins. Rank First Second Third Number of Voters (5) Points nother way: ount the occurrences of letters below the candidate for example, there are 7 boxes below 2 1 0 8

orda ount and Independence of Irrelevant lternatives Independence of Irrelevant lternatives (orda fails II.) voting system is said to satisfy independence of irrelevant alternatives (II) if it is impossible for candidate to move from nonwinner status to winner status unless at least one voter reverses the order in which he or she had and the winning candidate ranked. If was a loser, should never become a winner, unless he moves ahead of the winner (reverses order) in a voter s preference list. Example showing that orda count fails to satisfy II: went from loser to winner and did not switch with! Original orda Score: =6, =5, =4 Suppose the last New orda Score: = 6, =7, =2 two voters change Rank Number of Voters (5) Rank Number of Voters (5) their ballots First (reverse the order First Second of just the losers). Second This should not Third change the winner. Third 9

Sequential Pairwise Voting and the Pareto ondition Sequential Pairwise Voting Sequential pairwise voting starts with an agenda and pits the first candidate against the second in a one on one contest. The losers are deleted and the winner then moves on to confront the third candidate in the list, one on one. This process continues throughout the entire agenda, and the one remaining at the end wins. Example: Who would be the winner using the agenda,,, D for the following preference list ballots of three voters? Rank First Second Third Fourth Number of Voters (3) D D D Using the agenda,,, D, start with vs. and record (with tally marks) who is preferred for each ballot list (column). vs. II I wins; is deleted. vs. I II wins; is deleted. vs. D I II D wins; is deleted. andidate D wins for this agenda. 10

Sequential Pairwise Voting and the Pareto ondition Pareto ondition (Sequential Pairwise fails Pareto.) Pareto condition states that if everyone prefers one candidate (in this case, ) to another candidate (D), then this latter candidate (D) should not be among the winners of the election. Pareto condition is named after Vilfredo Pareto (1848 1923), Italian economist. From the last example: D was the winner for the agenda,,, D. However, each voter (each of the three preference lists columns) preferred over D. If everyone preferred to D, then D should not have been the winner! Not fair! Rank First Second Third Fourth Number of Voters (3) D Different agenda orders can change the outcomes. For example, agenda D,,, D results in as the winner. D 11

The Hare System and Monotonicity The Hare System The Hare system proceeds to arrive at a winner by repeatedly deleting candidates that are least preferred (meaning at the top of the fewest ballots). If a single candidate remains after all others have been eliminated, he/she alone is the winner. If two or more candidates remain and they all would be eliminated in the next round, then these candidates would tie. Rank First Second Third Number of Voters (13) 5 4 3 1 For the Hare system, delete the candidate with the least first place votes: = 5, = 4, and = 4 Since and are tied for the least first place votes, they are both deleted and wins. 12

The Hare System and Monotonicity Monotonicity (The Hare system fails monotonicity.) Monotonicity says that if a candidate is a winner and a new election is held in which the only ballot change made is for some voter to move the former winning candidate higher on his or her ballot, then the original winner should remain a winner. In a new election, if a voter moves a winner higher up on his preference list, the outcome should still have the same winner. Rank First Second Third Number of Voters (13) 5 4 3 1 In the previous example, won. For the last voter, move up higher on the list ( and switch places). Round 1: is deleted. Round 2: moves up to replace on the third column. However, wins this is a glaring defect! The Hare system, introduced by Thomas Hare in 1861, was known by names such as the single transferable vote system. In 1962, John Stuart Mill described the Hare system as being among the greatest improvements yet made in the theory and practice of government. 13

Insurmountable Difficulties: rrow s Impossibility Theorem rrow s Impossibility Theorem Kenneth rrow, an economist in 1951, proved that finding an absolutely fair and decisive voting system is impossible. With three or more candidates and any number of voters, there does not exist and there never will exist a voting system that always produces a winner, satisfies the Pareto condition and independence of irrelevant alternatives (II), and is not a dictatorship. If you had an odd number of voters, there does not exist and there never will exist a voting system that satisfies both the W and II and that always produces at least one winner in every election. Kenneth rrow 14

etter pproach? pproval Voting pproval Voting Under approval voting, each voter is allowed to give one vote to as many of the candidates as he or she finds acceptable. No limit is set on the number of candidates for whom an individual can vote; however, preferences cannot be expressed. Voters show disapproval of other candidates simply by not voting for them. The winner under approval voting is the candidate who receives the largest number of approval votes. This approach is also appropriate in situations where more than one candidate can win, for example, in electing new members to an exclusive society such as the National cademy of Sciences or the aseball Hall of Fame. pproval voting is also used to elect the secretary general of the United Nations. pproval voting was proposed independently by several analysts in 1970s. 15