Parliamentary Voting Procedures: Agenda Control, Manipulation, and Uncertainty
Bredereck, Robert (TU Berlin) | Chen, Jiehua (TU Berlin) | Niedermeier, Rolf (TU Berlin ) | Walsh, Toby (NICTA and the University of New South Wales )
We study computational problems for two popular parliamentary voting procedures: the amendment procedure and the successive procedure. While finding successful manipulations or agenda controls is tractable for both procedures, our real-world experimental results indicate that most elections cannot be manipulated by a few voters and agenda control is typically impossible. If the voter preferences are incomplete, then finding possible winners is NP-hard for both procedures. Whereas finding necessary winners is coNP-hard for the amendment procedure, it is polynomial-time solvable for the successive one.
Jul-15-2015
- Country:
- Europe
- North America > United States
- Michigan (0.04)
- Oceania > Australia
- New South Wales (0.04)
- Industry:
- Government > Voting & Elections (0.68)
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