DeCondorcet is a name that may be used for any voting system satisfying Condorcet'''''''s Criterion: : Any candidate who is preferred by a majority of voters to each other candidate should win. I am not aware of anywhere in the world where such a system is in use. ''DebianGnuLinux uses DeCondorcet voting for their project leader and general resolution process.'' For example, suppose *40 people vote ABC (i.e. they put A as their first choice, B as second, C as third) *10 vote BCA *10 vote BAC *40 vote CBA Then B is preferred to A by a majority of 60 to 40, and to C by 60 to 40 as well. B was last on first preferences and would not win under InstantRunoffVoting. The big problem is that a candidate meeting the condition need not always exist. (If one always did, ArrowsTheorem would be contradicted.) For example, suppose *40 people vote ABC *30 vote BCA *30 vote CAB This would suggest that a majority of 40 (70-30) prefer B to C, a majority of 20 prefer C to A and a majority of 40 prefer A to B. This situation is called a cycle. Cycles are rare in practice, and can be resolved in a number of ways, suggesting that DeCondorcet could be used for public elections. However opponents argue that TacticalVoting can be used so as to create cycles and benefit from the cycle-breaker. -- JoeOtten Thanks a lot for the info. This does seem like a good VotingMethodCriterion; surprising to me that InstantRunoffVoting doesn't satisfy! -- BayleShanks ---- CategoryVoting