Week 15-16 Apportionment and Voting PDF-1
Week 15-16 Apportionment and Voting PDF-1
Week 15-16 Apportionment and Voting PDF-1
VOTING
Apportionment
A method of dividing a whole into various parts
Has its roots in the US Constitution.
Main question: How many voters must be
represented by each member of the house of
Representative?
Equivalently, how many representatives must each
state send to the house based on its population?
Two Competing Plans (1790)
The Hamilton Plan (Alexander Hamilton)
The Jefferson Plan (Thomas Jefferson)
Number of Number of
teachers students
First Grade 512 12317
Second Grade 551 15439
Huntington-Hill Apportionment Method
It is the current method of apportionment being applied by
House(US Congress).
It is the method that makes use of Equal Proportions.
When there is a choice of adding one representative to a
number of sub-group, the representative should be added to
the sub-group with the greatest HUNTINGTON NUMBER.
Easy to do.
It can be used in many subjects/subgroups
It better to use over Relative Unfairness
Apportionment.
Example:
The table shows the number of computers that are assigned to
four different schools and the number of students in those
schools. Using the huntington-hill apportionment principle to
determine to which school a new computer should be assigned.
Preference schedule:
Voting Methods
Methods of Voting
1. Plurality Method of Voting
2. Borda Count Method
3. Plurality by Elimination
4. Pairwise comparison Voting Method
5. Majority Voting
Plurality Method
Each voter votes for one candidates, and the
candidate with the most votes wins. The winning
candidate does not have to have a majority of the
votes.
Plurality Method
Each voter votes for one candidates, and the
candidate with the most votes wins. The winning
candidate does not have to have a majority of the
votes.
Majority Vote: over 50 % of the people voting must
vote for the candidate
Plurality Method
Each voter votes for one candidates, and the
candidate with the most votes wins. The winning
candidate does not have to have a majority of the
votes.
Majority Vote: over 50 % of the people voting must
vote for the candidate
Limitation of Plurality Method: Alternative choices
are not considered.
In-case of ties, voting should be done using the run-
off election.
Example:
Fifty People were asked to rank their preferences of five
varieties of chocolate candy, using 1 for their favorite and 5
for their least. Using the Plurality method which variety of
candy would win the taste of the 50 people.
Variety RANKINGS
CARAMEL 5 4 4 4 2 4
VANILLA 1 5 5 5 5 5
ALMOND 2 3 2 1 3 3
TOFFEE 4 1 1 3 4 2
SOLID 3 2 3 2 1 1
NUMBER 17 11 9 8 3 2
OF VOTERS
Answer:
TOFFE is the most preferred candy
Solution:
Caramel = not included because it does not received
the least any highest preference rating.
Vanilla = 17 highest preference votes
Almond = 8 highest preference votes
Toffe = 20 highest preference votes
Solid = 5 highest preference votes
Borda Count Method of Voting
If there are n candidates or issues in an election,
each voter ranks the candidates or issues by giving
n points to the voter’s first choice, n-1 points to the
voter’s second choice and so on, with the voter’s
least favorite choice receiving 1 points. The
candidate or issue that receives the most total points
is the winner.
Example:
Fifty People were asked to rank their preferences of five
varieties of chocolate candy, using 1 for their favorite and 5
for their least. Using the Plurality method which variety of
candy would win the taste of the 50 people.
Variety RANKINGS
CARAMEL 5 4 4 4 2 4
VANILLA 1 5 5 5 5 5
ALMOND 2 3 2 1 3 3
TOFFEE 4 1 1 3 4 2
SOLID 3 2 3 2 1 1
NUMBER 17 11 9 8 3 2
OF VOTERS
Answer:
Almond is the most preferred candy by Borda Count ( 196 scores of
votes)
Plurality with Elimination Method
First, eliminate the candidate with the fewest
number of first-place votes
If two or more of these alternative have the same
number of first-place votes, all are eliminated unless
that would eliminate all alternatives. In that case, a
different method of voting will be used.
Adjust the voter’s ranking at the remaining
candidates.
Repeat the same process of elimination and
adjustment until two candidates are left.
Example:
Fifty People were asked to rank their preferences of five
varieties of chocolate candy, using 1 for their favorite and 5
for their least. Using the Plurality method which variety of
candy would win the taste of the 50 people.
Variety RANKINGS
CARAMEL 5 4 4 4 2 4
VANILLA 1 5 5 5 5 5
ALMOND 2 3 2 1 3 3
TOFFEE 4 1 1 3 4 2
SOLID 3 2 3 2 1 1
NUMBER 17 11 9 8 3 2
OF VOTERS
Pairwise Comparison Voting Method