Comparing Voting Methods : 2016 US Presidential Election

Article dans une revue: This paper presents data from a survey leading up to the 2016 US presidential elections. Participants were asked their opinions about the candidates and were also asked to vote according to three alternative voting rules, in addition to plurality: approval voting, range voting, and instant runoff voting. The participants were split into two groups, one facing a set of four candidates (Clinton, Trump, Johnson, and Stein) and the other a set of nine candidates (the previous four plus Sanders, Cruz, McMullin, Bloomberg, and Castle). The paper studies three issues: (1) How do US voters use these alternative rules? (2) What kinds of candidates, in terms of individual preferences, are favored by which rule? (3) Which rules empirically satisfy the independence of eliminated alternatives? Our results provide evidence that, according to all standard criterion computed on individual preferences, be there utilitarian or of the Condorcet type, the same candidate (Sanders) wins, and that evaluative voting rules such as approval voting and range voting might lead to this outcome, contrary to direct plurality and instant runoff voting (that elects Clinton) and to the official voting rule (that elected Trump).

Auteur(s)

Herrade Igersheim, François Durand, Aaron Hamlin, Jean-François Laslier

Revue
  • European Journal of Political Economy
Date de publication
  • 2022
Mots-clés JEL
C93 D72
Mots-clés
  • US Presidential election
  • Approval voting
  • Range voting
  • Instant runoff
  • Strategic voting
Pages
  • 102057
Version
  • 2
Volume
  • 71