Copeland Voting Fully Resists Constructive Control

Abstract

Control and bribery are settings in which an external agent seeks to influence the outcome of an election. Faliszewski et al. [FHHR07] proved that Llull voting (which is here denoted by Copeland1) and a variant (here denoted by Copeland0) of Copeland voting are computationally resistant to many, yet not all, types of constructive control and that they also provide broad resistance to bribery. We study a parameterized version of Copeland voting, denoted by Copelandalpha where the parameter alpha is a rational number between 0 and 1 that specifies how ties are valued in the pairwise comparisons of candidates in Copeland elections. We establish resistance or vulnerability results, in every previously studied control scenario, for Copelandalpha, for each rational alpha, 0 <alpha < 1. In particular, we prove that Copeland0.5, the system commonly referred to as ``Copeland voting,'' provides full resistance to constructive control. Among the systems with a polynomial-time winner problem, this is the first natural election system proven to have full resistance to constructive control. Results on bribery and fixed-parameter tractability of bounded-case control proven for Copeland0 and Copeland1 in [FHHR07] are extended to Copelandalpha for each rational alpha, 0 < alpha < 1; we also give results in more flexible models such as microbribery and extended control.

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