Majority winner criterion
The majority criterion is a voting system criterion applicable to voting rules over ordinal preferences required that if only one candidate is ranked first by over 50% of voters, that candidate must win.
Some methods that comply with this criterion include any Condorcet method, instant-runoff voting, Bucklin voting, plurality voting, and approval voting.
The mutual majority criterion is a generalized form of the criterion meant to account for when the majority prefers multiple candidates above all others; voting methods which pass majority but fail mutual majority can encourage all but one of the majority's preferred candidates to drop out in order to ensure one of the majority-preferred candidates wins, creating a spoiler effect.
Difference from the Condorcet criterion
By the majority criterion, a candidate C should win if a majority of voters answers affirmatively to the question "Do you prefer C to every other candidate?"The Condorcet criterion gives a stronger and more intuitive notion of majoritarianism. According to it, a candidate C should win if for every other candidate Y there is a majority of voters that answers affirmatively to the question "Do you prefer C to Y?" A Condorcet system necessarily satisfies the majority criterion, but not vice versa.
A Condorcet winner C only has to defeat every other candidate "one-on-one"—in other words, when comparing C to any specific alternative. To be the majority choice of the electorate, a candidate C must be able to defeat every other candidate simultaneously—i.e. voters who are asked to choose between C and "anyone else" must pick "C" instead of any other candidate.
Equivalently, a Condorcet winner can have several different majority coalitions supporting them in each one-on-one matchup. A majority winner must instead have a single majority that supports them across all one-on-one matchups.
Application to cardinal voting methods
In systems with absolute rating categories such as score and highest median methods, it is not clear how the majority criterion should be defined. There are three notable definitions of for a candidate A:- If a majority of voters have A receiving a higher score than any other candidate, this candidate will be elected.
- If A receives a perfect score from more than half of all voters, this candidate will be elected.
- If a majority of voters prefer A to any other candidate, they can choose to elect candidate A by strategizing.
Examples
Approval voting
Approval voting non trivially satisfies the ranked majority criterion, because it satisfies IIA.Plurality voting
Any candidate receiving more than 50% of the vote will be elected by plurality.Instant runoff
Instant-runoff voting satisfies majority--if a candidate is rated first by 50% of the electorate, they will win in the first round.Borda count
For example 100 voters cast the following votes:A has 110 Borda points. B has 135 Borda points. C has 55 Borda points.
Candidate A is the first choice of a majority of voters but candidate B wins the election.
Condorcet methods
Any Condorcet method will automatically satisfy the majority criterion.Cardinal methods
Score voting
For example 100 voters cast the following votes:Candidate B would win with a total of 80 × 9 + 20 × 10 = 720 + 200 = 920 rating points, versus 800 for candidate A.
Because candidate A is rated higher than candidate B by a majority of the voters, but B is declared winner, this voting system fails to satisfy the criterion due to using additional information about the voters' opinion. Conversely, if the bloc of voters who rate A highest know they are in the majority, such as from pre-election polls, they can strategically give a maximal rating to A, a minimal rating to all others, and thereby guarantee the election of their favorite candidate. In this regard, if there exists a majority coalition, the coalition will have the ability to coordinate and elect their favorite candidate.
STAR voting
STAR voting fails majority, but satisfies the majority loser criterion.Highest medians
It is controversial how to interpret the term "prefer" in the definition of the criterion. If majority support is interpreted in a relative sense, with a majority rating a preferred candidate above any other, the method does not pass, even with only two candidates. If the word "prefer" is interpreted in an absolute sense, as rating the preferred candidate with the highest available rating, then it does.Criterion 1
If "A is preferred" means that the voter gives a better grade to A than to every other candidate, majority judgment can fail catastrophically. Consider the case below when is large:| # ballots | A's score | B's score |
| 100/100 | 52/100 | |
| 1 | 50/100 | 51/100 |
| 49/100 | 0/100 |
A is preferred by a majority, but Bs median is Good and As median is only Fair, so B would win. In fact, A can be preferred by up to 100% of all voters, an exceptionally severe violation of the criterion.