Largest Remainders System
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The largest remainder methods or quota methods are methods of allocating seats proportionally that are based on calculating a ''quota'', i.e. a certain number of votes needed to be guaranteed a seat in parliament. Then, any leftover seats are handed over to "plurality" winners (the parties with the largest remainders, i.e. the most "leftover" votes). They are typically contrasted with the more popular
highest averages method A highest-averages method, also called a divisor method, is a class of methods for allocating seats in a parliament among agents such as political parties or federal states. A divisor method is an iterative method: at each iteration, the number ...
s (also called divisor methods). Divisor methods are generally preferred by social choice theorists to the largest remainder methods because they are less susceptible to apportionment paradoxes. In particular, divisor methods satisfy
population monotonicity Population monotonicity (PM) is a principle of consistency in allocation problems. It says that, when the set of agents participating in the allocation changes, the utility of all agents should change in the same direction. For example, if the resou ...
, i.e. voting ''for'' a party can never cause it to ''lose'' seats. Such population paradoxes occur by increasing the electoral quota, 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 technologically accessible, economically feasible and culturally sustainable and help us to satisfy our needs and wants. Resources can broadly be classified upon their ...
or
house monotonicity House monotonicity (also called house-size monotonicity) is a property of apportionment methods and multiwinner voting systems. These are methods for allocating seats in a parliament among federal states (or among political party). The property say ...
, which says that increasing the number of seats in a legislature should not cause a state to lose a seat (a situation known as an
Alabama paradox An apportionment paradox exists when the rules for apportionment in a political system produce results which are unexpected or seem to violate common sense. To apportion is to divide into parts according to some rule, the rule typically being one ...
). When using the Hare quota, the method is known as the Thomas Hare (political scientist), Hare–Niemeyer or Alexander Hamilton, Hamilton method.


Method

The ''largest remainder methods'' require the numbers of votes for each party to be divided by a quota representing the number of votes required to win a seat. Usually, this is given by the total number of votes cast, divided by the number of seats. The result for each party will consist of an integer part plus a fraction (mathematics), fractional remainder. Each party is first allocated a number of seats equal to their integer. This will generally leave some remainder seats unallocated. To apportion these seats, the parties are then ranked on the basis of their fractional remainders, and the parties with the largest remainders are each allocated one additional seat until all seats have been allocated. This gives the method its name. Largest remainder methods can also be used to apportion votes among Solid coalition, solid coalitions, as in the case of the single transferable vote, which becomes the largest-remainders method when voters are all partisans (i.e. only rank candidates of their own party).


Quotas

There are several possible choices for the electoral quota; the choice of quota affects the properties of the corresponding largest remainder method, with smaller quotas leaving fewer seats left over for small parties to pick up, and larger quotas leaving more seats. As a result, a larger quota is, somewhat counterintuitively, always more favorable to ''smaller'' parties. The two most common quotas are the Hare quota and the Droop quota. The use of a particular quota with one of the largest remainder methods is often abbreviated as "LR-[quota name]", such as "LR-Droop". The Hare (or simple) quota is defined as follows: :\frac It is used for legislative elections in Elections in Russia, Russia (with a 5% exclusion threshold since 2016), Elections in Ukraine, Ukraine (5% threshold), Elections in Bulgaria, Bulgaria (4% threshold), Elections in Lithuania, Lithuania (5% threshold for party and 7% threshold for coalition), Elections in Tunisia, Tunisia, Legislative elections in Taiwan, Taiwan (5% threshold), Elections in Namibia, Namibia and District Council (Second), Hong Kong. LR-Hare is sometimes called Hamilton's method, named after Alexander Hamilton, who devised the method in 1792. The Droop quota is given by: :\frac and is applied to elections in South Africa. The Hare quota is more generous to less popular parties and the Droop quota to more popular parties. Specifically, the Hare quota is Unbiased estimate, ''unbiased'' in the number of seats it hands out, and so is more proportional than the Droop quota (which tends to be biased towards larger parties).


Examples

These examples take an election to allocate 10 seats where there are 100,000 votes.


Hare quota


Droop quota


Pros and cons

It is easy for a voter to understand how the largest remainder method allocates seats. The Hare quota gives no advantage to larger or smaller parties, while the Droop quota is biased in favor of larger parties. However, in small legislatures with no threshold, the Hare quota can be manipulated by running candidates on many small lists, allowing each list to pick up a single remainder seat. However, whether a list gets an extra seat or not may well depend on how the remaining votes are distributed among other parties: it is quite possible for a party to make a slight percentage gain yet lose a seat if the votes for other parties also change. A related feature is that increasing the number of seats may cause a party to lose a seat (the
Alabama paradox An apportionment paradox exists when the rules for apportionment in a political system produce results which are unexpected or seem to violate common sense. To apportion is to divide into parts according to some rule, the rule typically being one ...
). The
highest averages method A highest-averages method, also called a divisor method, is a class of methods for allocating seats in a parliament among agents such as political parties or federal states. A divisor method is an iterative method: at each iteration, the number ...
s avoid this latter paradox, though at the cost of very rare quota violations.


Technical evaluation and paradoxes

The largest remainder method satisfies the quota rule (each party's seats amount to its ideal share of seats, either rounded up or rounded down) and was designed to satisfy that criterion. However, this comes at the cost of Apportionment paradox, paradoxical behavior. The
Alabama paradox An apportionment paradox exists when the rules for apportionment in a political system produce results which are unexpected or seem to violate common sense. To apportion is to divide into parts according to some rule, the rule typically being one ...
is when an ''increase'' in the total number of seats leads to a ''decrease'' in the number of seats allocated to a certain party. In the example below, when the number of seats to be allocated is increased from 25 to 26 (with the number of votes held constant), parties D and E counterintuitively end up with fewer seats. With 25 seats, the results are: With 26 seats, the results are:


References


External links


Hamilton method experimentation applet
at cut-the-knot {{voting systems Party-list proportional representation Apportionment methods