Greg Dennis

1.7K posts

Greg Dennis

Greg Dennis

@VotingNerd

Software Engineer, MIT PhD, Electoral Reform Enthusiast

Arlington, MA Se unió Haziran 2009
1.5K Siguiendo747 Seguidores
Greg Dennis retuiteado
Arlington Town Mtg
Arlington Town Mtg@ArlTownMeeting·
The recommended vote on Article 18, HOME RULE LEGISLATION / RANKED CHOICE VOTING, passes 189-29-2.
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@cdory28167 @alexjago51 Those 2-winner elections are to boards with an odd number of seats, so in a three year cycle, the majority would still retain majority control.
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Neil Gordon
Neil Gordon@cdory28167·
@alexjago51 We have locals with one winner, two, three, four and five, and every ten years, fifteen. All non-partisan, so there is no particular majority/minority. The voters can be divided all sorts of ways by issues, demographics, etc.
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Neil Gordon
Neil Gordon@cdory28167·
With 3 candidates and 2 winners, if 66% of voters want A and B, and 34% want C, C wins 1/2 the seats.
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd

@cdory28167 That isn't true. Multi-winner elections decided by RCV are proportional, so the will of the majority will capture a majority of seats and maintain majority control.

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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@cdory28167 That isn't true. Multi-winner elections decided by RCV are proportional, so the will of the majority will capture a majority of seats and maintain majority control.
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@hapi_phace @GBHNews Eric Adams won a plurality, so he would have won under the prior system as well. Has the current system only produced good candidates?
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GBH News
GBH News@GBHNews·
Ranked Choice Boston is looking to get enough support to reinstate ranked choice voting in Boston on a municipal level. wgbh.org/news/local/202…
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Anthony Amore
Anthony Amore@anthonymamore·
@GBHNews The people have already voted and clearly stated they don't want it.
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@newrepublic How many columns has David Masciotra written calling for Ranked Choice Voting for presidential elections? As far as I can tell, zero. All this energy expended to blame candidates and not an ounce for fixing the system.
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The New Republic
The New Republic@newrepublic·
Cornel West has the potential to seriously damage, perhaps even doom, the campaign of the sole candidate in the race who generally shares his politics and has a chance to win. trib.al/UZsWvH6
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@Nahanni_ @ParnurChris @DrJillStein @CommunityNotes Again, please read the thread above. Wikipedia is imprecise there or at least highly debatable. The first mathematical formulation of "vote-splitting" was Independence of Clones (IC). IC violations are a subset of IIA violations, a subset that RCV prevents.
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@GameTheoryGuys @damnitruben @Annie_Kallen @DrJillStein It should be a controversial axiom, in my opinion. As Tideman argues in his book, the addition of a new candidate elicits new information about voter preferences. To say we shouldn't derive a new "best winner" in light of that new information is suspect.
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The Game Theory Guys
The Game Theory Guys@GameTheoryGuys·
@VotingNerd @damnitruben @Annie_Kallen @DrJillStein Interesting how Nash uses IIA in his cooperative game bargaining solution (The Bargaining Problem, 1950). IIA was his most controversial axiom, but he related it to the Pareto boundary, with symmetry and scale invariance as idealisations also. Is #Bitcoin designed on these?
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@damnitruben @DrJillStein IIA implies IC, but not the inverse. That is, it is possible to satisfy IC without satisfying IIA, as Ranked Pairs, IRV, & other methods do. These methods eliminate "vote-splitting" but not necessarily all other "spoiler" scenarios (again, accepting your formulation of "spoiler")
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@damnitruben @DrJillStein You continue to confuse 2 concepts. (1) IIA, which you claim is a mathematical formulation of the "spoiler effect." That's debatable but for the sake of argument let's accept it here. (2) Independence of Clones (IC), which Tideman offers as a formulation of "vote-splitting." ...
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@damnitruben @DrJillStein Well, you could have just found it on Wikipedia among other places: #Compliant_methods" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independe… But at your request, here is the relevant section of the Tideman paper:
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Ruben M. Montejano
Ruben M. Montejano@damnitruben·
@VotingNerd @DrJillStein I can’t access the paper due to paywall. Screenshot and highlight the part that says “Ranked Choice Voting ie the Alternative Vote eliminates vote splitting.” The abstract talks about Ranked pairs. Not Ranked Choice Voting ie the Alternative Vote.
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Greg Dennis
Greg Dennis@VotingNerd·
@damnitruben @Annie_Kallen @DrJillStein You are trying to define all failures of IIA as "vote-splitting." That dog won't hunt. Vote-splitting cases are violations of Independence of Clones, and these comprise a proper _subset_ of IIA violations.
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Ruben M. Montejano
Ruben M. Montejano@damnitruben·
@VotingNerd @Annie_Kallen @DrJillStein Instant Runoff Voting ie Ranked Choice Voting fails Independence of Irrelevant Alternatives means it’s susceptible to vote splitting like the spoiler effect regardless if it passes Independence of clones criterion. Also if RCV/IRV doesn’t allow you to rank all candidates it fails
Ruben M. Montejano tweet mediaRuben M. Montejano tweet media
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