Greetings- It occurred to me this morning that a lot of Saari's mathematical critique of Approval voting may be beside the point. What is AV INTENDED to do? It (attempts to) pick the candidate that the greatest number of people regard as not unacceptable.

Contrast this with Plurality, which (attempts to) pick the candidate that the greatest number of people regard as the "best" candidate. Or Borda Count, which (attempts to) pick the candidate who beats the greatest number of other candidates in voters' individual rankings. (Borda count assigns a number to each candidate equal to the number of other candidates THAT candidate beats in THAT voter's ranking. These numbers are then summed for each candidate across all voters.) Or Condorcet-variation-x, which (attempts to) pick the candidate, if there is one, that would beat each of the others in a two-person contest.

Saari is making the point that a profile of voter's preferences, described in terms of ordinal rankings of the candidates, will usually not determine a unique winner under AV. Indeed in a wide variety of such profiles, AV could generate ANY POSSIBLE result, within the rules of AV, because AV gives the voters discretion to mark their ballots in several equally-legitimate ways. This may be true and may give you valuable insights into other properties of AV, but the profiles of voter's preferences, expressed as ordinal rankings, are strictly-speaking irrelevant to AV. To judge AV, you need voter's sets of "acceptable" and "unacceptable" candidates. This is not the same as their ordinal rankings, and cannot be derived from them.

There are several relevant questions in judging these assorted voting methods. (1) What are they TRYING to accomplish, and IS that what YOU want to accomplish in the first place? (2) Do they succeed in what they are trying to accomplish? (3) What other effects and characteristics do they have, that might be relevant to your decision of which method to use?

A voting method may fail in its purpose because of "insincere" voting, by people trying to "game the system". It may fail due to voter confusion, or by just plain bad design. But, answering question 2 should come after answering question 1. Is this method trying to do something that you want to do?

So, for example, The Approval-voting "nightmare" I quoted from Saari yesterday: 9,999 voters rank the candidates ABC, 1 ranks them CBA, all vote for their top two. B wins with 10,000 votes to A's 9,999. AV is here doing exactly what it set out to do; this is not a malfunction. I doubt any other voting method would do the same, but that is not surprising, because they are trying to do other things.
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John B. Hodges, jbhodges@ @usit.net
The two-party system is obsolete and dysfunctional.
Better forms of democracy: www.fairvote.org
REAL CHOICES, NEW VOICES, by Douglas J. Amy
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