Dave K wrote: > On Mon, 23 Aug 2004 11:29:48 -0700 Steve Eppley wrote: -snip- > > Another positive argument for Condorcet-consistency > > uses the single-elimination pairwise voting procedure > > recommended by Robert's Rules, -snip- > > Most of the people reading this, I assume, are aware that > > under the Robert's Rules procedure, the Condorcet winner > > (when there is one) will be chosen, assuming either > > that every voter votes sincerely or that every voter is > > strategically sophisticated and knows the preferences > > of all the voters. > > HUH??? The Robert's example is IRV. -snip-
No, I wasn't referring to the Robert's Rules IRV example of "preferential voting" that they reluctantly recommend when the members are scattered, as in a mail-in vote (when better methods are impractical, or so they thought when that section was written long ago). I was referring to their main method, recommended for use when the members are assembled together and hence it's practical to use a method that requires multiple rounds of voting. This method is sometimes called "agenda voting" and sometimes called "sequential pairwise voting." It doesn't ask the voters to express orders of preference. And it's like a single-elimination tournament, not a round-robin tournament. Here's a simple example: Someone proposes a bill and someone else proposes an amended version of the bill. In the first round of voting, those two alternatives would be pitted against each other. The loser of that vote would be eliminated. The winner of that vote would go on to the next round of voting, a vote between it and the status quo. --Steve ---- Election-methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info