About us

The de Borda Institute

aims to promote the use of inclusive, multi-optional and preferential voting procedures, both in parliaments/congresses and in referendums, on all contentious questions of social choice.

This applies specifically to decision-making, be it for the electorate in regional/national polls, for their elected representatives in councils and parliaments, for members of a local community group, a company board, a co-operative, and so on.  But we also cover elections.

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The Institute is named after Jean-Charles de Borda, and hence the well-known voting procedure, the Borda Count BC; but Jean-Charles actually invented what is now called the Modified Borda Count, MBC - the difference is subtle:

In a vote on n options, the voter may cast m preferences; and, of course, m < n.

In a BC, points are awarded to (1st, 2nd ... last) preferences cast according to the rule (n, n-1 ... 1) {or (n-1, n-2 ... 0)} whereas,

in an MBC, points are awarded to (1st, 2nd ... lastpreferences cast according to the rule (m, m-1 ... 1).

The difference can be huge, especially when the topic is controversial: the BC benefits those who cast only a 1st preference; the MBC encourages the consensual, those who submit not only a 1st preference but also their 2nd (and subsequent) compromise option(s) And if (nearly) every voter states their compromise option(s), an MBC can identify the collective compromise.

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DECISION-MAKER
Inclusive voting app 

https://debordavote.com

THE APP TO BEAT ALL APPS, APPSOLUTELY!

(The latest in a long-line of electronic voting for decision-making; our first was in 1991.)

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FINANCES

The Institute was estabished in 1997 with a cash grant of £3,000 from the Joseph Rowntree Charitabe Trust, and has received the occasional sum from Northern Ireland's Community Relations Council and others.  Today it relies on voluntary donations and the voluntary work of its board, while most running expenses are paid by the director. 

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A BLOG 

"De Borda abroad." From Belfast to Beijing and beyond... and back. Starting in Vienna with the Sept 2017 TEDx talk, I give lectures in Belgrade, Sarajevo, Istanbul, Tbilisi, Yerevan, Tehran, Beijing, Tianjin, Xuzhou, Hong Kong and Taiwan... but not in Pyongyang. Then back via Mongolia (where I had been an election observer in June 2017) and Moscow (where I'd worked in the '80s).

I have my little fold-up Brompton with me - surely the best way of exploring any new city! So I prefer to go by train, boat or bus, and then cycle wherever in each new venue; and all with just one plastic water bottle... or that was the intention!

The story is here.

In Sept 2019, I set off again, to promote the book of the journey.  After the ninth book launch in Taipei University, I went to stay with friends in a little village in Gansu for the Chinese New Year.  The rat.  Then came the virus, lockdown... and I was stuck.

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The Hospital for Incurable Protestants

The Mémoire of a Collapsed Catholic

 This is the story of a pacifist in a conflict zone, in Northern Ireland and the Balkans.  Only in e-format, but only £5.15.  Available from Amazon.

 

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The director alongside the statue of Jean-Charles de Borda, capitaine et savant, in l’École Navale in Brest, 24.9.2010. Photo by Gwenaelle Bichelot. 

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WELCOME

Welcome to the home page of the de Borda Institute, a Northern Ireland-based international organisation (an NGO) which aims to promote the use of inclusive voting procedures on all contentious questions of social choice. For more information use the menu options above or feel free to contact the organisation's headquarters. If you want to check the meaning of any of the terms used, then by all means have a look at this glossary.

As shown in these attachments, there are many voting procedures for use in decision-making and even more electoral systems.  This is because, in decision-making, there is usually only one outcome - a singe decision or a shopping ist, a prioritisation; but with some electoral systems, and definitely in any proportional ones, there can be several winners.  Sometimes, for any one voters' profile - that is, the set of all their preferences - the outcome of any count may well depend on the voting procedure used.  In this very simple example of a few voters voting on just four options, and in these two hypothetical examples on five, (word document) or (Power-point) in which a few cast their preferences on five options, the profiles are analysed according to different methodologies, and the winner could be any one of all the options.  Yet all of these methodologies are called democratic!  Extraordinary!

« 2023-21/24 La méthode Borda, in English | Main | 2023-19 The Netherlands »
Monday
Sep042023

2023-20 Presidents Gorbachev and Macron

In 1990, just after Moscow News published my article on consensus, Mikhail Gorbachev used this word, консенсус, for the first time.  And now another president is following my lead: Emmanuel Macron has just started to use the word préférendum

I hope it will be an MBC.

https://www.lemonde.fr/politique/article/2023/08/29/qu-est-ce-que-le-preferendum-nouvel-outil-democratique-envisage-par-le-gouvernement_6186971_823448.html

 

The following is now being translated into French...

A REFERENDUM…. OR A PREFERENDUM

 

 

 

A referendum is always binary,         

a majority vote,                                   either, “Option X, yes or no?” or a pairing “Option X or option Y?”

and the winner is usually the one with the most votes, 50% + 1, but sometimes it’s weighted.

 

A multi-option and therefore non-binary referendum may be analysed in a number of ways:  

a plurality vote                                  the winner is the option with the most votes… which might not be a majority but only the largest minority…

the two-round system, TRS             so the ballot could be followed by either a second-round majority vote between the two leading contenders, so that the winner does have majority support…

or the alternative vote, AV               a knock-out system: the least popular option is eliminated and its votes transferred until one option gets a majority; (the trouble is, a TRS majority winner may not be the same as an AV majority winner);

approval voting                                 is non-preferential.  Voters ‘approve’ of one or more options, and the winner is the option with the most ‘approvals’ – counting all the 1st and 2nd ‘preferences’, or maybe the 3rd ones as well, or maybe also the 4th ones too… which makes life confusing;

the Borda Count, BC                        is preferential.  Voters list (one, some or ideally) all the options in their order of preference, and at best, the winner is the option with the highest average preference.

The Condorcet rule                          is also preferential.  In a three-option ballot on options X, Y and Z, it considers all the pairings: X and Y, X and Z, and Y and Z, and the option which wins two pairings is the Condorcet winner.

 

So, by way of an example, consider 15 voters expressing their preferences as shown:

 

Preferences

NUMBER OF VOTERS

5

4

3

2

1

1st

V

Z

W

X

Y

2nd

X

Y

X

Y

W

3rd

Y

X

Y

W

X

4th

W

W

Z

V

Z

5th

Z

V

V

Z

V

 

The outcomes are as shown in this next table:

 

Methodology

Social

Choice

Social Ranking

Plurality voting

V

V-5 

Z-4

W-3

X-2

Y-1

TRS

Z

Z-8

V-7

 

 

 

AV

W

W-10

V-5

 

 

 

Approval

voting

1st & 2nd

X

X-10

Y-7

V-5

V/Z-4

1st – 3rd

X/Y

X/Y-15

W-6

V-5

Z-4

BC

X

X-57

Y-53

W-43

V-37

Z-35

Condorcet

X

X-4

Y-3

W-2

Z-1

V-0

 

In effect, the result could be anything!  So just because a ballot is multi-optional does not necessarily mean that the outcome is accurate.  Indeed, as in this example and many other instances, the result depends not just on the voters’ preferences, but in some instances, on the voting system.  As Josef Stalin once said, “It’s not the people who vote that count, it’s the people who count the votes.”

 

Just looking at the first table, it is pretty obvious that options V and Z, are seen to be very divisive.

In contrast, some of the other options, like X and Y are both fairly acceptable, for neither of them gets any 3rd or 4th preferences. 

 

Of the voting procedures listed, only the BC and Condorcet take all the preferences cast by all voters into account, always.  They are the most accurate methodologies.  Little wonder then that they produce almost identical outcomes, with both X and Y getting very good scores.  {In a similar way, in a sports league, the champion, the team which wins the most matches (pairings) – the Condorcet winner –is usually the team which also scores the most goals (points) and the best goal difference – the BC social choice.} 

 

The BC is the more nuanced, and it’s non-majoritarian.  It is also robust, completely colour-blind, and extremely accurate.

 

 

Peter Emerson

Director, the de Borda Institute

34-6 Ballysillan Road

Belfast BT14 7QQ

+44-7837717979

www.deborda.org

pemerson@deborda.org

 

 

A Short Bio: 

Peter Emerson is the child of an English Catholic mum from Cheshire and an Irish Protestant dad from Cork.  He moved to Belfast in 1975 (from Africa) and was often asked binary questions: “Are you Protestant or Catholic?”  ‘Neither.’  “Are you British or Irish?”  ‘Both.’

In 1985, the two governments signed the Anglo-Irish Agreement.  The extreme Protestants met in Belfast and shouted, “Ulster says ‘NO’!”  So one week later six of us stood at the same venue, in silence, with a banner: “We have got to say ‘yes’ to something.”  Next we held a cross-community public meeting; over 200 came; anyone could make a proposal (if it complied with the UN Charter); then, on a ballot of ten options, they cast one or more preferences, saying ‘yes’ to something or somethings… but no-one voted ‘no’.  

The Cold War was another binary conflict, so in 1988 he went to Moscow as a translator and two years later wrote on consensus politics in Moscow News and Novy Mir (New World).  Back in Belfast in 1991, he organised another consensus conference using electronic voting.  The main guest was from Sarajevo, and six months before their war, he tried to say, please, not a binary referendum, not in Bosnia!

Having realised that this preferential points voting is a Borda Count, he now runs the l’Institut de Borda, promoting consensus voting at home and abroad, most recently in China.  His latest volume is The Punters’ Guide to Democracy, 2022, (Springer, Heidelberg).

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