Distance rationalization of anonymous and homogeneous voting rules
Benjamin Hadjibeyli, Mark C. Wilson

TL;DR
This paper connects distance rationalizability of anonymous and homogeneous voting rules to geometric concepts in the voting simplex, using Kantorovich distances, and explores implications for rule decisiveness.
Contribution
It develops a geometric framework linking distance rationalizability to the voting simplex for anonymous and homogeneous rules, especially with votewise distances.
Findings
Established a connection between distance rationalizability and geometry in the voting simplex.
Proved positive results on the decisiveness of certain distance rationalizable rules.
Identified limitations and negative results related to non-metric distances and convexity issues.
Abstract
The concept of distance rationalizability of voting rules has been explored in recent years by several authors. Roughly speaking, we first choose a consensus set of elections (defined via preferences of voters over candidates) for which the result is specified a priori (intuitively, these are elections on which all voters can easily agree on the result). We also choose a measure of distance between elections. The result of an election outside the consensus set is defined to be the result of the closest consensual election under the distance measure. Most previous work has dealt with a definition in terms of preference profiles. However, most voting rules in common use are anonymous and homogeneous. In this case there is a much more succinct representation (using the voting simplex) of the inputs to the rule. This representation has been widely used in the voting literature, but rarely…
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