Later-no-harm criterion


NameComply?
PluralityYes
Two-round systemYes
Partisan primaryYes
Instant-runoff votingYes
Minimax OppositionYes
DSCYes
Anti-pluralityNo
ApprovalN/A
BordaNo
DodgsonNo
CopelandNo
KemenyNo
Ranked PairsNo
SchulzeNo
ScoreNo
Majority judgmentNo

Later-no-harm is a property of voting systems first described by Douglas Woodall. In later-no-harm systems, increasing the rating or rank of a candidate ranked below the winner of an election cannot cause a higher-ranked candidate to lose. It is a common property in the plurality-rule family of voting systems.
For example, say a group of voters ranks Alice 2nd and Bob 6th, and Alice wins the election. In the next election, Bob focuses on expanding his appeal with this group of voters, but does not manage to defeat Alice—Bob's rating increases from 6th-place to 3rd. Later-no-harm says that this increased support from Alice's voters should not allow Bob to win.
Later-no-harm may be confused as implying center squeeze, since later-no-harm is a defining characteristic of first-preference plurality (FPP) and instant-runoff voting (IRV), and descending solid coalitions, systems that have similar mechanics that are based on first preference counting. These systems pass later-no-harm compliance by making sure the results either do not depend on lower preferences at all or only depend on them if all higher preferences have been eliminated, and thus exhibit a center squeeze effect. However, this does not mean that methods that pass later-no-harm must be vulnerable to center squeezes. The properties are distinct, as Minimax opposition also passes later-no-harm.
Later-no-harm is also often confused with immunity to a kind of strategic voting called strategic truncation or bullet voting. Satisfying later-no-harm does not provide immunity to such strategies. Systems like instant runoff that pass later-no-harm but fail monotonicity still incentivize truncation or bullet voting in some situations.

Later-no-harm methods

The plurality vote, two-round system, instant-runoff voting, and descending solid coalitions satisfy the later-no-harm criterion. First-preference plurality satisfies later-no-harm trivially, by ignoring every preference after the first.

Non-LNH methods

Nearly all voting methods not discussed above fail LNH, including score voting, highest medians, Borda count, and all Condorcet methods. The Condorcet criterion is incompatible with later-no-harm.
Bloc voting, which allows a voter to select multiple candidates, does not satisfy later-no-harm when used to fill two or more seats in a single district, although the single non-transferable vote does.

Examples

Anti-plurality

Anti-plurality elects the candidate the fewest voters rank last when submitting a complete ranking of the candidates.
Later-No-Harm can be considered not applicable to Anti-Plurality if the method is assumed to not accept truncated preference listings from the voter. On the other hand, Later-No-Harm can be applied to Anti-Plurality if the method is assumed to apportion the last place vote among unlisted candidates equally, as shown in the example below.
Examples--

; Truncated Ballot Profile
Assume four voters submit a truncated preference listing A > B = C by apportioning the possible orderings for B and C equally. Each vote is counted A > B > C, and A > C > B:

Borda count

Examples--

This example shows that the Borda count violates the Later-no-harm criterion. Assume three candidates A, B and C and 5 voters with the following preferences:

Copeland

Examples--

This example shows that Copeland's method violates the Later-no-harm criterion. Assume four candidates A, B, C and D with 4 potential voters and the following preferences:

Schulze method

Examples--

This example shows that the Schulze method doesn't satisfy the Later-no-harm criterion. Assume three candidates A, B and C and 16 voters with the following preferences:

Hide later preferences

Assume now that the three voters supporting A would not express their later preferences on the ballots:
# of votersPreferences
3A
1A = B > C
2A = C > B
3B > A > C
1B > A = C
1B > C > A
4C > A = B
1C > B > A

The pairwise preferences would be tabulated as follows:
ddd
d57
d66
d67

Now, the strongest paths have to be identified, e.g. the path A > C > B is stronger than the direct path A > B.
ppp
p77
p66
p67

Result: The full ranking is A > C > B. Thus, A is elected Schulze winner.
; Conclusion
By hiding their later preferences about B and C, the three voters could change their first preference A from loser to winner. Thus, the Schulze method doesn't satisfy the Later-no-harm criterion.

Criticism

Douglas Woodall writes: