Binary Self-Selective Voting Rules
Abstract
This paper introduces a novel binary stability property for voting rules-called binary self-selectivity-by which a society considering whether to replace its voting rule using itself in pairwise elections will choose not to do so. In Theorem 1, we show that a neutral voting rule is binary self-selective if and only if it is universally self-selective. We then use this equivalence to show, in Corollary 1, that under the unrestricted strict preference domain, a unanimous and neutral voting rule is binary self-selective if and only if it is dictatorial. In Theorem 2 and Corollary 2, we show that whenever there is a strong Condorcet winner; a unanimous, neutral and anonymous voting rule is binary self-selective (or universally self-selective) if and only if it is the Condorcet voting rule.
Cite
@article{arxiv.2506.15265,
title = {Binary Self-Selective Voting Rules},
author = {Héctor Hermida-Rivera and Toygar T. Kerman},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2506.15265},
year = {2025}
}