Method Of Smallest Divisors
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The highest averages, divisor, or divide-and-round methods are a family of apportionment rules, i.e. algorithms for
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of seats in a legislature between several groups (like
political parties A political party is an organization that coordinates candidates to compete in a particular area's elections. It is common for the members of a party to hold similar ideas about politics, and parties may promote specific ideological or p ...
or
states State most commonly refers to: * State (polity), a centralized political organization that regulates law and society within a territory **Sovereign state, a sovereign polity in international law, commonly referred to as a country **Nation state, a ...
). More generally, divisor methods are used to round shares of a total to a
fraction A fraction (from , "broken") represents a part of a whole or, more generally, any number of equal parts. When spoken in everyday English, a fraction describes how many parts of a certain size there are, for example, one-half, eight-fifths, thre ...
with a fixed
denominator A fraction (from , "broken") represents a part of a whole or, more generally, any number of equal parts. When spoken in everyday English, a fraction describes how many parts of a certain size there are, for example, one-half, eight-fifths, thre ...
(e.g. percentage points, which must add up to 100). The methods aim to treat voters equally by ensuring legislators represent an equal number of voters by ensuring every party has the same seats-to-votes ratio (or ''divisor''). Such methods divide the number of votes by the number of votes needed to win a seat. The final apportionment. In doing so, the method approximately maintains
proportional representation Proportional representation (PR) refers to any electoral system under which subgroups of an electorate are reflected proportionately in the elected body. The concept applies mainly to political divisions (Political party, political parties) amon ...
, meaning that a party with e.g. twice as many votes will win about twice as many seats. The divisor methods are generally preferred by social choice theorists and mathematicians to the
largest remainder method Party-list proportional representation Apportionment methods The quota or divide-and-rank methods make up a category of apportionment rules, i.e. algorithms for allocating seats in a legislative body among multiple groups (e.g. parties or f ...
s, as they produce more-proportional results by most metrics and are less susceptible to apportionment paradoxes. In particular, divisor methods avoid the population paradox and
spoiler effect In social choice theory and politics, a spoiler effect happens when a losing candidate affects the results of an election simply by participating. Voting rules that are not affected by spoilers are said to be spoilerproof. The frequency and se ...
s, unlike the largest remainder methods.


History

Divisor methods were first invented by
Thomas Jefferson Thomas Jefferson (, 1743July 4, 1826) was an American Founding Fathers of the United States, Founding Father and the third president of the United States from 1801 to 1809. He was the primary author of the United States Declaration of Indepe ...
to comply with a
constitutional A constitution is the aggregate of fundamental principles or established precedents that constitute the legal basis of a polity, organization or other type of entity, and commonly determines how that entity is to be governed. When these princ ...
requirement, that states have at most one representative per 30,000 people. His solution was to divide each state's population by 30,000 before rounding down. Apportionment would become a major topic of debate in Congress, especially after the discovery of pathologies in many superficially-reasonable rounding rules. Similar debates would appear in Europe after the adoption of
proportional representation Proportional representation (PR) refers to any electoral system under which subgroups of an electorate are reflected proportionately in the elected body. The concept applies mainly to political divisions (Political party, political parties) amon ...
, typically as a result of large parties attempting to introduce thresholds and other
barriers to entry In theories of Competition (economics), competition in economics, a barrier to entry, or an economic barrier to entry, is a fixed cost that must be incurred by a new entrant, regardless of production or sales activities, into a Market (economics) ...
for small parties. Such apportionments often have substantial consequences, as in the 1870 reapportionment, when Congress used an ad-hoc apportionment to favor Republican states. Had each state's electoral vote total been exactly equal to its entitlement, or had Congress used Webster's method or a
largest remainders method Party-list proportional representation Apportionment methods The quota or divide-and-rank methods make up a category of apportionment rules, i.e. algorithms for allocating seats in a legislative body among multiple groups (e.g. parties or f ...
(as it had since 1840), the 1876 election would have gone to Tilden instead of Hayes.


Definitions

The two names for these methods—highest averages and divisors—reflect two different ways of thinking about them, and their two independent inventions. However, both procedures are equivalent and give the same answer. Divisor methods are based on
rounding Rounding or rounding off is the process of adjusting a number to an approximate, more convenient value, often with a shorter or simpler representation. For example, replacing $ with $, the fraction 312/937 with 1/3, or the expression √2 with ...
rules, defined using a '' signpost sequence'' '','' where ''.'' Each signpost marks the boundary between natural numbers, with numbers being rounded down if and only if they are less than the signpost.


Divisor procedure

The divisor procedure apportions seats by searching for a ''divisor'' or ''
electoral quota In proportional representation systems, an electoral quota is the number of votes a candidate needs to be guaranteed election. They are used in some systems where a formula other than plurality is used to allocate seats. Generally quotas are set ...
''. This divisor can be thought of as the number of votes a party needs to earn one additional seat in the legislature, the ideal population of a
congressional district Congressional districts, also known as electoral districts in other nations, are divisions of a larger administrative region that represent the population of a region in the larger congressional body. Countries with congressional districts includ ...
, or the number of voters represented by each legislator. If each legislator represented an equal number of voters, the number of seats for each state could be found by dividing the population by the divisor. However, seat allocations must be whole numbers, so to find the apportionment for a given state we must round (using the signpost sequence) after dividing. Thus, each party's apportionment is given by: \text = \operatorname\left(\frac\right) Usually, the divisor is initially set to equal the
Hare quota The Hare quota (sometimes called the simple, ideal, or Hamilton quota) is the number of voters represented by each legislator in an idealized system of proportional representation where every vote is used to elect someone. The Hare quota is eq ...
. However, this procedure may assign too many or too few seats. In this case the apportionments for each state will not add up to the total legislature size. A feasible divisor can be found by
trial and error Trial and error is a fundamental method of problem-solving characterized by repeated, varied attempts which are continued until success, or until the practicer stops trying. According to W.H. Thorpe, the term was devised by C. Lloyd Morgan ( ...
.


Highest averages procedure

With the highest averages algorithm, every party begins with 0 seats. Then, at each iteration, we allocate a seat to the party with the ''highest vote average,'' i.e. the party with the most votes per seat''.'' This method proceeds until all seats are allocated. However, it is unclear whether it is better to look at the vote average ''before'' assigning the seat, what the average will be ''after'' assigning the seat, or if we should compromise with a continuity correction. These approaches each give slightly different apportionments. In general, we can define the averages using the signpost sequence: \text := \frac With the highest averages procedure, every party begins with 0 seats. Then, at each iteration, we allocate a seat to the party with the ''highest vote average,'' i.e. the party with the most votes per seat''.'' This method proceeds until all seats are allocated.


Specific methods

While all divisor methods share the same general procedure, they differ in the choice of signpost sequence and therefore rounding rule. Note that for methods where the first signpost is zero, every party with at least one vote will receive a seat before any party receives a second seat; in practice, this typically means that every party must receive at least one seat, unless disqualified by some
electoral threshold The electoral threshold, or election threshold, is the minimum share of votes that a candidate or political party requires before they become entitled to representation or additional seats in a legislature. This limit can operate in various ...
.


Jefferson (D'Hondt) method

Thomas Jefferson Thomas Jefferson (, 1743July 4, 1826) was an American Founding Fathers of the United States, Founding Father and the third president of the United States from 1801 to 1809. He was the primary author of the United States Declaration of Indepe ...
was the first to propose a divisor method, in 1792; it was later independently developed by Belgian political scientist Victor d'Hondt in 1878. It assigns the representative to the list that would be most underrepresented at the end of the round. It remains the most-common method for
proportional representation Proportional representation (PR) refers to any electoral system under which subgroups of an electorate are reflected proportionately in the elected body. The concept applies mainly to political divisions (Political party, political parties) amon ...
to this day. Jefferson's method uses the sequence \operatorname(k) = k+1, i.e. (1, 2, 3, ...), which means it will always round a party's apportionment down. Jefferson's apportionment never falls below the lower end of the ideal frame, and it minimizes the worst-case overrepresentation in the legislature. However, it performs poorly when judged by most other metrics of proportionality. The rule typically gives large parties an excessive number of seats, with their seat share often exceeding their entitlement rounded up. This
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led to widespread mockery of Jefferson's method when it was learned Jefferson's method could "round" New York's apportionment of 40.5 up to 42, with Senator Mahlon Dickerson saying the extra seat must come from the " ghosts of departed representatives".


Adams' method

Adams' method was conceived of by
John Quincy Adams John Quincy Adams (; July 11, 1767 – February 23, 1848) was the sixth president of the United States, serving from 1825 to 1829. He previously served as the eighth United States secretary of state from 1817 to 1825. During his long diploma ...
after noticing Jefferson's method allocated too few seats to smaller states. It can be described as the inverse of Jefferson's method; it awards a seat to the party that has the most votes per seat ''before'' the new seat is added. The divisor function is , which is equivalent to always rounding up. Adams' apportionment never exceeds the upper end of the ideal frame, and minimizes the worst-case underrepresentation. However, like Jefferson's method, Adams' method performs poorly according to most metrics of proportionality. It also often violates the lower seat quota. Adams' method was suggested as part of the Cambridge compromise for apportionment of
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seats to member states, with the aim of satisfying degressive proportionality.


Webster (Sainte-Laguë) method

The Sainte-Laguë or Webster method, first described in 1832 by American statesman and senator
Daniel Webster Daniel Webster (January 18, 1782 – October 24, 1852) was an American lawyer and statesman who represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts in the U.S. Congress and served as the 14th and 19th United States Secretary of State, U.S. secretary o ...
and later independently in 1910 by the French mathematician André Sainte-Lague, uses the fencepost sequence (i.e. 0.5, 1.5, 2.5); this corresponds to the standard rounding rule. Equivalently, the odd integers (1, 3, 5...) can be used to calculate the averages instead. The Webster method produces more proportional apportionments than Jefferson's by almost every metric of misrepresentation. As such, it is typically preferred to D'Hondt by political scientists and mathematicians, at least in situations where manipulation is difficult or unlikely (as in large parliaments). It is also notable for minimizing
seat bias Seat bias is a property describing methods of apportionment. These are methods used to allocate seats in a parliament among federal states or among political parties. A method is ''biased'' if it systematically favors small parties over large par ...
even when dealing with parties that win very small numbers of seats. The Webster method can theoretically violate the ideal frame, although this is extremely rare for even moderately-large parliaments; it has never been observed to violate quota in any
United States congressional apportionment United States congressional apportionment is the process by which seats in the United States House of Representatives are distributed among the 50 states according to the most recent decennial census mandated by the United States Constitution. ...
. In small districts with no threshold, parties can manipulate Webster by splitting into many lists, each of which wins a full seat with less than a
Hare quota The Hare quota (sometimes called the simple, ideal, or Hamilton quota) is the number of voters represented by each legislator in an idealized system of proportional representation where every vote is used to elect someone. The Hare quota is eq ...
's worth of votes. This is often addressed by modifying the first divisor to be slightly larger (often a value of 0.7 or 1), which creates an implicit threshold.


Huntington–Hill method

In the Huntington–Hill method, the signpost sequence is , the
geometric mean In mathematics, the geometric mean is a mean or average which indicates a central tendency of a finite collection of positive real numbers by using the product of their values (as opposed to the arithmetic mean which uses their sum). The geometri ...
of the neighboring numbers. Conceptually, this method rounds to the integer that has the smallest relative (percent) difference. For example, the difference between 2.47 and 3 is about 19%, while the difference from 2 is about 21%, so 2.47 is rounded up. This method is used for allotting seats in the US House of Representatives among the states. The Huntington-Hill method tends to produce very similar results to the Webster method, except that it guarantees every state or party at least one seat (see ). When first used to assign seats in the
House A house is a single-unit residential building. It may range in complexity from a rudimentary hut to a complex structure of wood, masonry, concrete or other material, outfitted with plumbing, electrical, and heating, ventilation, and air c ...
, the two methods produced identical results; in their second use, they differed only in assigning a single seat to
Michigan Michigan ( ) is a peninsular U.S. state, state in the Great Lakes region, Great Lakes region of the Upper Midwest, Upper Midwestern United States. It shares water and land boundaries with Minnesota to the northwest, Wisconsin to the west, ...
or
Arkansas Arkansas ( ) is a landlocked state in the West South Central region of the Southern United States. It borders Missouri to the north, Tennessee and Mississippi to the east, Louisiana to the south, Texas to the southwest, and Oklahoma ...
.


Comparison of properties


Zero-seat apportionments

Huntington-Hill, Dean, and Adams' method all have a value of 0 for the first fencepost, giving an average of ∞. Thus, without a threshold, all parties that have received at least one vote will also receive at least one seat. This property can be desirable (as when apportioning seats to
states State most commonly refers to: * State (polity), a centralized political organization that regulates law and society within a territory **Sovereign state, a sovereign polity in international law, commonly referred to as a country **Nation state, a ...
) or undesirable (as when apportioning seats to party lists in an election), in which case the first divisor may be adjusted to create a natural threshold.


Bias

There are many metrics of
seat bias Seat bias is a property describing methods of apportionment. These are methods used to allocate seats in a parliament among federal states or among political parties. A method is ''biased'' if it systematically favors small parties over large par ...
. While the Webster method is sometimes described as "uniquely" unbiased, this uniqueness property relies on a technical definition of bias, which is defined as the
average In colloquial, ordinary language, an average is a single number or value that best represents a set of data. The type of average taken as most typically representative of a list of numbers is the arithmetic mean the sum of the numbers divided by ...
difference between a state's number of seats and its seat entitlement. In other words, a method is called unbiased if the number of seats a state receives is, on average across many elections, equal to its seat entitlement. By this definition, the Webster method is the least-biased apportionment method, while Huntington-Hill exhibits a mild bias towards smaller parties. However, other researchers have noted that slightly different definitions of bias, generally based on ''percent'' errors, find the opposite result (The Huntington-Hill method is unbiased, while the Webster method is slightly biased towards large parties). In practice, the difference between these definitions is small when handling parties or states with more than one seat. Thus, both the Huntington-Hill and Webster methods can be considered unbiased or low-bias methods (unlike the Jefferson or Adams methods). A 1929 report to Congress by the
National Academy of Sciences The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) is a United States nonprofit, NGO, non-governmental organization. NAS is part of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, along with the National Academy of Engineering (NAE) and the ...
recommended the Huntington-Hill method, while the
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has ruled the choice to be a matter of opinion.


Comparison and examples


Example: Jefferson

The following example shows how Jefferson's method can differ substantially from less-biased methods such as Webster. In this election, the largest party wins 46% of the vote, but takes 52.5% of the seats, enough to win a majority outright against a coalition of all other parties (which together reach 54% of the vote). Moreover, it does this in violation of quota: the largest party is entitled only to 9.7 seats, but it wins 11 regardless. The largest congressional district is nearly twice the size of the smallest district. The Webster method shows none of these properties, with a maximum error of 22.6%.


Example: Adams

The following example shows a case where Adams' method fails to give a majority to a party winning 55% of the vote, again in violation of their quota entitlement.


Example: All systems

The following shows a worked-out example for all voting systems. Notice how Huntington-Hill and Adams' methods give every party one seat before assigning any more, unlike Webster or Jefferson.


Stationary calculator

The following table calculates the apportionment for any stationary signpost function. In other words, it rounds an apportionment if the vote average is above the selected bar.


Properties


Monotonicity

Divisor methods are generally preferred by mathematicians to
largest remainder method Party-list proportional representation Apportionment methods The quota or divide-and-rank methods make up a category of apportionment rules, i.e. algorithms for allocating seats in a legislative body among multiple groups (e.g. parties or f ...
s because they are less susceptible to apportionment paradoxes. In particular, divisor methods satisfy population monotonicity, i.e. voting ''for'' a party can never cause it to ''lose'' seats. Such population paradoxes occur by increasing the
electoral quota In proportional representation systems, an electoral quota is the number of votes a candidate needs to be guaranteed election. They are used in some systems where a formula other than plurality is used to allocate seats. Generally quotas are set ...
, which can cause different states' remainders to respond erratically. Divisor methods also satisfy
resource ''Resource'' refers to all the materials available in our environment which are Technology, technologically accessible, Economics, economically feasible and Culture, culturally Sustainability, sustainable and help us to satisfy our needs and want ...
or house monotonicity, which says that increasing the number of seats in a legislature should not cause a state to lose a seat.


Min-Max inequality

Every divisor method can be defined using the min-max inequality. Letting brackets denote array indexing, an allocation is valid if-and-only-if:
In other words, it is impossible to lower the highest vote average by reassigning a seat from one party to another. Every number in this range is a possible divisor. If the inequality is strict, the solution is unique; otherwise, there is an exactly tied vote in the final apportionment stage.


Method families

The divisor methods described above can be generalized into families.


Generalized average

In general, it is possible to construct an apportionment method from any generalized
average In colloquial, ordinary language, an average is a single number or value that best represents a set of data. The type of average taken as most typically representative of a list of numbers is the arithmetic mean the sum of the numbers divided by ...
function, by defining the signpost function as .


Stationary family

A divisor method is called stationary if for some real number r\in ,1/math>, its signposts are of the form d(k) = k+r. The Adams, Webster, and d'Hondt methods are stationary, while Dean and Huntington-Hill are not. A stationary method corresponds to rounding numbers up if they exceed the
weighted arithmetic mean The weighted arithmetic mean is similar to an ordinary arithmetic mean (the most common type of average), except that instead of each of the data points contributing equally to the final average, some data points contribute more than others. Th ...
of and . Smaller values of are friendlier to smaller parties. Danish elections allocate leveling seats at the province level using-member constituencies. It divides the number of votes received by a party in a multi-member constituency by 0.33, 1.33, 2.33, 3.33 etc. The fencepost sequence is given by ; this aims to allocate seats closer to equally, rather than exactly proportionally.


Power mean family

The power mean family of divisor methods includes the Adams, Huntington-Hill, Webster, Dean, and Jefferson methods (either directly or as limits). For a given constant , the power mean method has signpost function . The Huntington-Hill method corresponds to the limit as tends to 0, while Adams and Jefferson represent the limits as tends to negative or positive infinity. The family also includes the less-common Dean's method for , which corresponds to the
harmonic mean In mathematics, the harmonic mean is a kind of average, one of the Pythagorean means. It is the most appropriate average for ratios and rate (mathematics), rates such as speeds, and is normally only used for positive arguments. The harmonic mean ...
. Dean's method is equivalent to ''rounding to the nearest average''—every state has its seat count rounded in a way that minimizes the difference between the average district size and the ideal district size. For example:
The 1830 representative population of Massachusetts was 610,408: if it received 12 seats its average constituency size would be 50,867; if it received 13 it would be 46,954. So, if the divisor were 47,700 as Polk proposed, Massachusetts should receive 13 seats because 46,954 is closer to 47,700 than is 50,867.
Rounding to the vote average with the smallest relative error once again yields the Huntington-Hill method because , i.e. relative differences are reversible. This fact was central to Edward V. Huntington's use of relative (instead of absolute) errors in measuring misrepresentation, and to his advocacy for Hill's rule: Huntington argued the choice of apportionment method should not depend on how the equation for equal representation is rearranged, and only the relative error (minimized by Hill's rule) satisfies this property.


Stolarsky mean family

Similarly, the Stolarsky mean can be used to define a family of divisor methods that minimizes the
generalized entropy index The generalized entropy index has been proposed as a measure of income inequality in a population. It is derived from information theory as a measure of redundancy in data. In information theory a measure of redundancy can be interpreted as no ...
of misrepresentation. This family includes the logarithmic mean, the
geometric mean In mathematics, the geometric mean is a mean or average which indicates a central tendency of a finite collection of positive real numbers by using the product of their values (as opposed to the arithmetic mean which uses their sum). The geometri ...
, the identric mean and the
arithmetic mean In mathematics and statistics, the arithmetic mean ( ), arithmetic average, or just the ''mean'' or ''average'' is the sum of a collection of numbers divided by the count of numbers in the collection. The collection is often a set of results fr ...
. The Stolarsky means can be justified as minimizing these misrepresentation metrics, which are of major importance in the study of
information theory Information theory is the mathematical study of the quantification (science), quantification, Data storage, storage, and telecommunications, communication of information. The field was established and formalized by Claude Shannon in the 1940s, ...
.


Modifications


Thresholds

Many countries have electoral thresholds for representation, where parties must win a specified fraction of the vote in order to be represented; parties with fewer votes than the threshold requires for representation are eliminated. Other countries modify the first divisor to introduce a ''natural threshold''; when using the Webster method, the first divisor is often set to 0.7 or 1.0 (the latter being called the ''full-seat modification'').


Majority-preservation clause

A majority-preservation clause guarantees any party winning a majority of the vote will receive at least half the seats in a legislature. Without such a clause, it is possible for a party with slightly more than half the vote to receive just barely less than half the seats (if using a method other than D'Hondt). This is typically accomplished by adding seats to the legislature until an apportionment that preserves the majority for a parliament is found.


Quota-capped divisor method

A ''quota-capped divisor method'' is an apportionment method where we begin by assigning every state its lower quota of seats. Then, we add seats one-by-one to the state with the highest votes-per-seat average, so long as adding an additional seat does not result in the state exceeding its upper quota. However, quota-capped divisor methods violate the
participation criterion The participation criterion is a voting system criterion that says candidates should never lose an election as a result of receiving too many votes in support. More formally, it says that adding more voters who prefer ''Alice'' to ''Bob'' should ...
(also called population monotonicity)—it is possible for a party to ''lose'' a seat as a result of winning ''more'' votes.


References

{{voting systems Party-list proportional representation Apportionment methods