User:BetterVotingAdvocacy/Big page of ideas: Difference between revisions

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Negative counting approaches can be applied to various voting methods. For example, it's possible to reserve a special mark in Score voting that indicates that a voter have every non-write-in candidate the max score, and then count negative scores for the voter in such a way as to reproduce their actual scores. The practicality of this would likely be limited to ballots that max-score nearly all of the candidates, though.
 
A basic reason to prefer [[:Category:Condorcet-cardinal hybrid methods|Category:Condorcet-cardinal hybrid methods]] over most other Condorcet methods (or at least, over the [[:Category:Defeat-dropping Condorcet methods|Category:Defeat-dropping Condorcet methods]]) is that they allow the voters who prefer a CW to defend that candidate without needing to do Favorite Betrayal as much (though there may be errors with this analysis). As a general example, suppose there are two main candidates, with one being the CW, and there are some 3rd parties without about half as many pairwise votes in favor of them as the main candidates. The voters who prefer the losing main candidate can bury the CW under the minor candidates, and in the ensuing cycle, the non-CW main faction will win. There isn't anything that voters who prefer the CW as 1st choice can do to fix this, but the voters who rank a 3rd party 1st and the CW above the non-CW main candidate can do FB to prevent their favorite candidate from pairwise beating the CW. This ends the cycle and allows the CW's pairwise victory over the other main candidate to take precedence again. In rated Condorcet methods, however, FB isn't quite as necessary if the CW [[majority-beat]]<nowiki/>s the non-CW main candidate; this is because those who prefer the CW can do [[Min-max voting]] to give the CW maximal points by the majority and the non-CW no support by a majority; this will guaranteeably give CW enough points to win. More specific example of this at <ref>https://www.rangevoting.org/CondStratProb.html</ref> and some explanation of how majorities can force their preference in rated methods in the [[Approval voting]] article.