Aggregation of Votes with Multiple Positions on Each Issue

Abstract

We consider the problem of aggregating votes cast by a society on a fixed set of issues, where each member of the society may vote for one of several positions on each issue, but the combination of votes on the various issues is restricted to a set of feasible voting patterns. We require the aggregation to be supportive, i.e. for every issue j the corresponding component fj of every aggregator on every issue should satisfy fj(x1, ,…, xn) ∈ \x1, ,…, xn\. We prove that, in such a set-up, non-dictatorial aggregation of votes in a society of some size is possible if and only if either non-dictatorial aggregation is possible in a society of only two members or a ternary aggregator exists that either on every issue j is a majority operation, i.e. the corresponding component satisfies fj(x,x,y) = fj(x,y,x) = fj(y,x,x) =x, ∀ x,y, or on every issue is a minority operation, i.e. the corresponding component satisfies fj(x,x,y) = fj(x,y,x) = fj(y,x,x) =y, ∀ x,y. We then introduce a notion of uniformly non-dictatorial aggregator, which is defined to be an aggregator that on every issue, and when restricted to an arbitrary two-element subset of the votes for that issue, differs from all projection functions. We first give a characterization of sets of feasible voting patterns that admit a uniformly non-dictatorial aggregator. Then making use of Bulatov's dichotomy theorem for conservative constraint satisfaction problems, we connect social choice theory with combinatorial complexity by proving that if a set of feasible voting patterns X has a uniformly non-dictatorial aggregator of some arity then the multi-sorted conservative constraint satisfaction problem on X, in the sense introduced by Bulatov and Jeavons, with each issue representing a sort, is tractable; otherwise it is NP-complete.

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