Voting system for elections
Ian Jackson
ijackson at chiark.greenend.org.uk
Tue Aug 16 15:22:32 UTC 2016
Peter Eisentraut writes ("Re: Voting system for elections"):
> On 7/18/16 9:29 AM, Ian Jackson wrote:
> > As has been discussed here many times previously, Condorcet is a bad
> > system for multi-seat elections. Rather than electing a board whose
> > composition reflects, proportionately, the views of the electorate,
> > the majoritarian or consensus candidates (as applicable) will sweep
> > the board.
>
> I have a concern about this:
>
> If, for example, there were an issue that sharply divides the SPI
> membership say 66% to 33%, an STV election would elect 6 board members
> in favor of A and 3 in favor of B, whereas a Condorcet election might
> elect 9 in favor of A. The problem with the STV board would be that
> they would constantly disagree with each other instead of getting work done.
I hope we would only elect grown-ups to the board. 6 out of 9 is of
course still a majority.
> An analogy in "real" politics is: A parliament should generally reflect
> the population's wishes proportionally, but the executive is generally
> drawn only from one or a few aligned parties.
Most British membership-run NGOs elect their board by STV. It hasn't
led to this kind of disaster.
Also, and sorry to keep coming back to this, but it is a key point:
> > SPI should adopt a system widely used elsewhere.
AFAIAA no other organisation elects a multi-member board or committee
using repeated-Condorcet.
(Nor AFAIAA has this multi-winner repeated-Condorcet even ever been
proposed in the academic literature) We have invented it, and adopted
it, almost by accident - I think just by analogy with Debian's use of
Condorcet for single-winner elections.
> Maybe this isn't a problem in practice, or maybe you/some actually want
> to the board to work that way, but I think we should consider what the
> nature of the board is or should be, and which election method best
> realizes that.
It would be nice if we had a board election system which didn't
produce Debian Debian Debian Debian out of a mixed electorate.
Ian.
(in the context of SPI, clearly most closely associated with Debian)
--
Ian Jackson <ijackson at chiark.greenend.org.uk> These opinions are my own.
If I emailed you from an address @fyvzl.net or @evade.org.uk, that is
a private address which bypasses my fierce spamfilter.
More information about the Spi-general
mailing list