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Title: Chapter 10: The Manipulability of Voting Systems Chapter 11: Weighted Voting Systems


1
Chapter 10 The Manipulability of Voting
SystemsChapter 11 Weighted Voting Systems
  • Presented by Katherine Goulde

2
Chapter 10 Outline
  • Introduction and example
  • Majority Rule and Condorcets Method
  • Voting Systems for 3 or more candidates
  • Borda Count
  • Sequential Pairwise Voting
  • Plurality Voting
  • Impossibility- The Gibbard- Satterthwaite Theorem
  • The Chairs Paradox

3
Manipulability the Borda Count
  • The Borda count assigns point values to the
    candidates and the winner is the candidate with
    the most points
  • Voter 1 Voter 2
  • A B
  • B C
  • C A
  • D D
  • Candidate A has a score of 4
  • Candidate B has a score of 5
  • Candidate C has a score of 3
  • Candidate D has a score of 0
  • Therefore B wins!

4
What if Voter 1 wants to manipulate the
election???
  • Voter 1 Voter 2
  • A B
  • B C
  • C A
  • D D
  • Voter 1 Voter 2
  • A B
  • D C
  • C A
  • B D
  • Original Ballot where B wins the election
  • However, Voter 1 wants A to win. How can Voter 1
    ensure that A wins?
  • In this second ballot, A has a Borda count of 4,
    B has 3, C has 3, and D has 2. Therefore A is the
    winner.
  • Is there any other way to obtain this result?

5
  • Unilateral Change- A change (in ballot) by a
    voter while every other voter keeps his or her
    ballot exactly as it was
  • - single-voter manipulation
  • A voting system is manipulable if
  • there are two sequences of preference list
    ballots and a Voter so that
  • Neither election results in a tie
  • The only ballot change is by the Voter
  • The Voter prefers the outcome of the second
    election to that of the first election.
  • Take the two-candidate case with majority rule,
    and recall that it is monotone
  • In this instance, nonmanipulability is the same
    thing as monotonicity

6
Majority Rule and Condorcets Method
  • Mays Theorem for Manipulability
  • Among all two-candidate voting systems that never
    result in a tie, majority rule is the only one
    that treats all voters equally, treats both
    candidates equally, and is nonmanipulable
  • The Nonmanipulability of Condorcets Method
  • Condorcets method is nonmanipulable in the sense
    that a voter can never unilaterally change an
    election result from one candidate to another
    candidate that her or she prefers

7
Cordorcets Voting Paradox and Manipulability
  • Election 1
  • In this example, C is the Condorcet winner
  • Election 2
  • In this example, there is no Condorcet winner at
    all

Voter 1 Voter 2 Voter 3 A B
C C C A
B A B
Voter 1 Voter 2 Voter 3 A B
C B C A
C A B
8
Back to the Borda Count
  • The Nonmanipulability of the Borda Count with
    exactly 3 candidates
  • With exactly 3 candidates, the Borda count cannot
    be manipulated in the sense of a voter
    unilaterally changing an election outcome from
    one single winner to another single winner that
    he prefers
  • Why?
  • Imagine B is the Borda winner, but you prefer A.
    Consider 3 cases
  • A gt B gt C
  • C gt A gt B
  • A gt C gt B

9
  • The Manipulability of the Borda Count with Four
    or More Candidates
  • With four or more candidates and two or more
    voters, the Borda count can be manipulated in the
    sense that there exists an election in which a
    voter can unilaterally change the election
    outcome from one single winner to another single
    winner that he prefers
  • Weve covered the example of 4 candidates and 2
    voters.
  • 1) Any candidates in addition to the 4 can be
    placed below those on every ballot
  • 2) The rest of the voters can be paired off with
    the members of each pair holding ballots that
    rank the candidates in exactly opposite orders

10
Sequential Pairwise Voting
  • Assume we are able to set the order.
  • Choose the winner, and place the candidate last
  • Look for the others that would beat that
    candidate one on one.
  • Using this, we can arrange for any of the
    candidates to be the winner.

Voter 1 Voter 2 Voter 3 A C
B B A D D
B C C D A
11
Plurality Voting and Group Manipulability
  • Plurality voting cannot be manipulated by a
    single individual. However, it is group
    manipulable in the sense that there are elections
    in which a group of voters can change their
    ballots so that the new winner is preferred to
    the old winner by everyone in the group
  • Real-world election third party candidate acts
    as a spoiler

12
Impossibility the G-S Theorem
  • Cordorcets theorm
  • 1) Elections never result in ties
  • 2) Satisfies the Pareto condition
  • 3) Is nonmanipulable
  • 4) Isnt a dictatorship
  • Can we extend this so that there is always a
    winner??
  • The Gibbard- Satterthwaite Theorem With three or
    more candidates and any number of voters, there
    doesnt exist a voting system that always
    produces a winner, never has ties, satisfies the
    Pareto condition, is nonmanipulable, and is not a
    dictatorship.
  • for proof click here
  • Weaker extension Any voting system for 3
    candidates that agrees with Condorcets Method
    whenever there is a winner is manipulable.

13
The Chairs Paradox
  • The fact that with three voters and three
    candidates, the voter with tie-breaking power
    (the chair) can, if all 3 voters act rationally
    in their own self-interest, end up with her or
    his least-preferred candidate as the election
    winner
  • Each voter gets to vote for one of the
    candidates. If a candidate gets 2 or more, he or
    she wins. If each candidate receives one vote,
    then whichever person the chair voted for wins.
  • Each voter will choose the best strategy given
    what the others might do.

Chair You Me A B
C B C A C A
B
14
The Chairs Paradox
Chair You Me A B
C B C A C A
B
  • The chair will vote for A. Me will vote for C.
    You will also vote for C.

15
Chapter 11 Outline
  • Introduction and definitions
  • The Shapley- Shubik Power Index
  • 3 voters, 4 voters, a committee
  • The Banzhaf Power Index
  • Critical voters, winning blocking, combinations
  • Comparing Voting Systems
  • 3 voters, using minimal winning coalitions

16
Introduction and Definitions
  • Weighted voting system a voting system in which
    each participant is assigned a voting weight . A
    quota is specified, and if the sum of the voting
    weights of the voters supporting a motion is at
    least the quota, the motion is approved
  • Weight the number of votes assigned to a voter
  • Quota the minimum number of votes necessary to
    pass a measure in a weighted voting system
  • Notation for Weighted voting systems
  • q W1, W2, , Wn where there are n voters, q
    quota, and voting weights W1, W2, , Wn

17
Introduction and Definitions
  • Dictator a participant who can pass or block any
    issue even if all other voters oppose it
  • 10 7, 13
  • Dummy Voter a participant who has no power, is
    never critical, and is never the pivotal voter
  • 8 5, 3, 1
  • Veto power had by a voter if no issue can pass
    without his vote. (a voter with veto power is a
    one-person blocking coalition)
  • 6 5, 3, 1 or 8 5, 3, 1
  • Power index a numerical measure of an individual
    voters ability to influence a decision the
    individuals voting power

18
The Shapley-Shubik Power Index
  • 1954- Lloyd Shapley and Martin Shubik
  • This index is defined in terms of permutations (a
    permutation of voters in an ordering of all of
    the voters in a voting system)
  • 1) Voters are ordered in accordance with their
    commitment to an issue (from most favorable to
    those most against)
  • 2)The first voter in a permutation who, when
    joined by those coming before her, would have
    enough voting weight to win is the pivotal voter
    in that particular permutation.
  • Examples animal rights, environmentalism

19
The Shapley-Shubik Power Index
  • This power index is computed by
  • 1) counting the number of permutations in which
    that voter is pivotal
  • 2) divide this number by the total number of
    possible permutations
  • If there are n voters, the total number of
    possible permutations is n!
  • Example 6 5, 3, 1.
  • Result A 4/6, B,C 1/6

20
How to compute the S-S Power Index
  • If all the voters have the same voting weight,
    then each has the same share of power.
  • If all but one of two voters have equal power, we
    can still easily calculate the S-S power index
  • Example 7-person committee with the voting
    system 5 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1
  • CMMMMMM
  • MCMMMMM
  • MMCMMMM
  • MMMCMMM
  • MMMMCMM
  • MMMMMCM
  • MMMMMMC

21
How to compute the S-S Power Index
  • The chair is the pivotal voter 3 of the 7 times,
    so his S-S power index is 3/7.
  • The remaining 4/7 is split among the six other
    voters (since all have the same weight), so each
    has (4/7)/6 2/21 as their S-S power index.

22
The Banzhaf Power Index
  • Based on the count of coalitions in which a voter
    is critical
  • Coalition a set of voters who are prepared to
    vote for, or to oppose, a motion.
  • Winning coalition favors the motion has enough
    votes to pass it
  • Blocking coalition opposes the motion has
    enough votes to block it
  • Losing coalition set of voters that does not
    have the votes to have its way
  • Critical voter a member of the winning (or
    blocking) coalition whose vote is essential for
    the coalition to win (or block) a measure

23
The Banzhaf Power Index
  • To determine the B. Power index of voter A, count
    all the possible winning and blocking coalitions
    of which A is a member and casts a critical vote
  • The weight of a winning coalition must be great
    than or equal to q (where q is the quota)
  • The weight of a blocking coalition must be big
    enough to block the yes voters the q votes they
    need to win. So it must be at least n-q1 (where
    n is number of voters)
  • Extra Votes Principle
  • A winning coalition with total weight w has w-q
    extra votes. A blocking coalition with weight w
    has w-(n-q 1) extra votes. The critical voters
    are those whose weight is more than the
    coalitions extra votes. These are the voters the
    coalition cant afford to lose.

24
Calculating the Banzhaf Index
Win. Coalit. Weight Extra votes A (c.v) B (c.v.) C (c.v)
A,B 3 0 1 1 0
A,C 3 0 1 0 1
A,B,C 4 1 1 0 0
Totals 3 1 1
  • Take the voting system 32,1,1
  • Winning coalition- have a weight of
  • 3 or 4
  • A has 3 critical votes,
  • B and C both have1

25
Calculating the Banzhaf Index
Block. Weight Extra A (c.v) B (c.v) C (c.v)
A 2 0 1 0 0
B,C 2 0 0 1 1
A,B 3 1 1 0 0
A,C 3 1 1 0 0
A,B,C 4 2 0 0 0
Totals 3 1 1
26
Calculating the Banzhaf Index
  • In the blocking coalitions, A is critical in 3
    and B and C are both critical in 1 each
  • So, taking the blocking coalitions and winning
    coalitions together,
  • A has an index of 6
  • B has an index of 2
  • C has an index of 2

27
Comparing Voting Systems
  • Two voting systems are equivalent if there is a
    way for all of the voters of the first system to
    exchange places with the voters of the second
    system and preserve all winning coalitions.
  • 50 49, 1 and 4 3, 3 - unanimous support
  • 2 2, 1 and 5 3, 6 dictator
  • Every 2-voter system is equivalent to a system
    with a dictator or one that needs consensus
  • Minimal winning coalition a winning coalition in
    which each voter is a critical voter

28
Minimal Winning Coalitions
  • Take the voting system 6 5, 3, 1 where the
    respective voters are A, B, C.
  • The 3 winning coalitions are A,B, A,C and
    A,B,C.
  • Which coalitions are minimal?
  • Only A,B and A,C, but not A,B,C since only
    A is critical

29
Minimal Winning Coalitions
  • Instead of using weights and quotas to describe a
    voting system, one can describe it by using its
    minimal winning coalitions.
  • The following conditions must be satisfied
  • 1) The list cant be empty (otherwise there is no
    way to approve a motion)
  • 2) There cant be one minimal coalition that
    contains another one
  • 3)Every pair of coalitions in the list must
    overlap- otherwise two opposing motions could
    pass.

30
3-Voter Systems Minimal Winning Coalitions
  • Make a list of all voting systems with 3 voters
  • The 3 voters are A, B, C
  • 1) Suppose the M.W.C is A
  • Dictatorship
  • 2) Suppose the M.W.C is A,B,C
  • Consensus rule
  • 3) Suppose the M.W.C. is A,B
  • A clique where C is the dummy voter
  • 4) Suppose the M.W.C. are A,B and A,C
  • A has veto power- the chair veto
  • All 2-member coalitions are M.W.C
  • Majority rule

31
3-Voter Systems Minimal Winning Coalitions
System Min. W. Coaltions Weights Banzhaf Index
Dictator A 3 3, 1, 1 (8, 0, 0)
Clique A, B 4 2, 2, 1 (4, 4, 0)
Majority A,B A,C, B,C 2 1, 1, 1 (4, 4, 4)
Chair Veto A,B A, C 3 2, 1, 1 (6, 2, 2)
Consensus A, B, C 3 1, 1, 1 (2, 2, 2)
32
Discussion
  • Chapter 10
  • Where do we see manipulation of voting systems?
  • Are there any political elections that stand out
    in your mind?
  • Chapter 11
  • What are some applications of weighted voting
    systems?
  • How would you describe a jury as a weighted
    voting system?
  • What might advantages/disadvantages of certain
    types of weighted voting systems?
  • Homework
  • Chapter 10 pg 387 9
  • Chapter 11 pg 425 7
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