by Warren D. Smith, Sept. 2007. (Conclusions 1 2 3 4 have pink background.)
1990 Presidential Election - 7th November 1990 | |||||||
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Electorate: | 2,471,303 | Turnout: | 64.10% | Total #Voters: | 1,584,095 | Quota: | 787,326 |
Candidate | Party | 1st Preference | % | Transfer of
Currie's vote | % | Final Result | % |
Mary Robinson | Labour | 612,265 | 38.89 | +205,565 | 76.73 | 817,830 | 52.79 wins | Brian Lenihan | Fianna Fail | 694,484 | 44.10 | +36,789 | 13.73 | 731,273 | 47.21 |
Austin Currie | Fine Gael | 267,902 | 17.01 | –267,902 | ------- | ||
Non-transferable votes | 25,548 | 9.54 | |||||
Totals | 1,574,651 | 100.00 | 1,549,103 | 100.00 | |||
This election is often cited by IRV proponents as an example of a great success for IRV. But let us examine it. It turns out that despite the very-partial report above from the Irish Election authority, we still can discern pathologies.
Suppose we magically added a new "Currie County" to Ireland comprising 344,364 new identical voters, each voting Currie>Robinson>Lenihan. [This is fairly realistic, since Currie-top voters did in fact prefer Robinson over Lenihan by a 6:1 ratio; the Currie votes split (77%, 14%, 9%) for (R, L, untransferable).]
Then Robinson would have been eliminated in round 1.
Let us assume that the Robinson votes would have transferred
Irish politics interlude [from Irishman Ivan Ryan]:
Lenihan was the subject of a controversy, so it is reasonable to assume that his support was substantially party based (core FF voters are probably in the region of 35-40%... perhaps less so now). An FF-core voter would likely vote against an FG candidate. The flip side of this was seen when the FG candidate (Currie) was eliminated; 77% voted 2nd choice against FF.
However, FG/Labour have closer ties than FF/Labour as FG has no hope of forming a government without Labour. FF on the other hand has a realistic chance of forming a government with the support of either smaller parties (or Labour). So there probably would be at least a 2-1 split in FG second-place votes in favour of Robinson. [End of Ryan quote]
Finally, Lenihan was considerably more popular than Currie as we see from both the vote and a poll in the 10 October Irish Times indicating FF-over-FG support by about 49% to 24%. Hence the majority of Robinson's 2nd-preference votes probably would have gone to Lenihan.
So this (≤52, ≥39, 9) assumption seems quite plausibly realistic. It is actually probable Lenihan would get considerably more than 39% of Robinson transfers, so our assumption seems quite comfortably satisfied.
OK. Under this assumption, the first round totals
Currie 612266 would have become after Currie ≤930644 Lenihan 694484 the Robinson-transfers Lenihan≥933267 (wins) untransferable=dumped=61227.
Consider the 694,484 Lenihan voters. Some voted Lenihan>Robinson>Currie; others voted Lenihan>Currie>Robinson. Suppose that 344,364 (i.e. 49.6%) of them had voted the latter way.
Warning: This is not a very realistic assumption. As we said, most FF voters would be inclined against FG, so assuming this many Lenihan voters chose FG second, is unlikely. Nevertheless, let us explore the consequences of this assumption, then only later re-examine the assumption itself.
Then those 344,364 voters would have been foolish to have thus-voted honestly since (as the official election results show) that caused the hated Robinson to win. If they had instead strategically betrayed their favorite Lenihan to instead vote Currie top, then
So this election is an example of favorite-betrayal failure: under our assumption about the composition of Lenihan voters, the act of honestly voting for their favorite (Lenihan) was a stupid mistake that caused their most-hated candidate (Robinson) to win. Smarter was to dishonestly vote Currie.
But it gets crazier, as we hinted at above in point (3). The altered-version of this election with 612264 Currie voters (the extras added from "Currie County") would have been an example of monotonicity-failure:
Re-examination: Note in the altered election it doesn't matter whether our 49.6%-assumption was unrealistic. The fact is, whether or not it was valid, 12% of Lenihan's supporters still could have made Lenihan win by instead voting for Currie. They would have been strategically stupid to all vote for Lenihan. That's just a fact.
It seems clearest to regard this election as suffering from a hybrid form of the "non-monotonicity" (type-II) and "no-show" paradoxes. Specifically, if
(a) 344362 new "Currie>Robinson>Lenihan" voters had appeared and
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The (a) part is the no-show component of the paradox, and the (b) part is the non-monotonicity.
We therefore are certain that either this election yielded the wrong winner (Robinson) or that the thus-modified election would have yielded the wrong winner (Lenihan) or both.
In the whole of (central govt, i.e. not counting lower level such as county and town, elections) Irish history so far (up to 2007) there has only been a single IRV election in which the winner differed from the plain-plurality winner, i.e. in which the Irish use of IRV vote-transfers actually directly mattered.
This (1990) was it. (And actually, Irish mayors are not directly elected and nor are county heads, so it may be that the President is the only IRV-elected post in the country at any level of government, in which case this is the only IRV election where IRV made a difference in all of Irish history.)
In this single example of Irish IRV success, the election exhibited several pathologies. Lenihan could quite justifiably have complained (if he had realized this!) that he deserved to win:
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Mind you, we aren't complaining that Robinson won. That worked out well for Ireland. We are complaining that IRV malfunctioned, or at least, that its legitimacy was dubious in this case. If approval or range voting had been used, there would have been no such dubiousness; we believe Robinson would have clearly won (or perhaps Lenihan?), and definitely, none of these three pathologies are even possible with approval and range.
January 2008: I thank Phil McKenna for pointing out an error in an earlier version of this page. It has now, hopefully, been corrected.
Analogous look at Australia's 2007 election cycle
Puzzle 55d: the presumed underlying theoretical reason this pathology is so common