Raph Frank wrote:
On Tue, Nov 10, 2009 at 8:11 PM, Jobst Heitzig <heitzi...@web.de> wrote:
Hello Kristofer,
Assume (for the sake of simplicity) that we can get ranked information
from the voters. What difference would a SEC with Random Pair make, with
respect to Random Ballot?
This sounds interesting, but what exactly do you mean by Random Pair?
Pick a randomly chosen pair of candidates and elect the pairwise winner
of them? I will think about this...

Presumably, it means that the voter submits 2 ballots, a ranking and a
nomination for the 2nd round?

In the context of SEC, it would be:

Voter submits two ballots - one is ranked and the other is a Plurality ballot. Call the first the fallback ballot, and the second the consensus ballot.

If everybody (or some very high percentage, e.g. 99%) votes for the same consensus ballot, it wins. Otherwise, construct a Condorcet matrix based on the fallback ballots. Pick two candidates at random and the one that pairwise beats the other, wins.

To my knowledge, Random Pair is strategy-free. It might also be proportional, but I'm not sure about that (partly because I'm not sure how you'd define "proportional" for ranked ballots).

You seem to be suggesting a more Condorcet way of doing the consensus balloting. A possible option would be to look at how e.g. Debian handles supermajority issues. On the other hand, grafting Condorcet onto the consensus option would make the actual consensus more opaque, and one may in any case argue: "if you have a consensus, there's an agreement and so you don't need a complex method to determine what the consensus actually is".
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