Computing Equilibrium Nominations in Presidential Elections
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i20.38732Abstract
We study strategic candidate nomination by parties in elections decided by Plurality voting. Each party selects a nominee before the election, and the winner is chosen from the nominated candidates based on the voters' preferences. We introduce a new restriction on these preferences, which we call party-aligned single-peakedness: all voters agree on a common ordering of the parties along an ideological axis, but may differ in their perceptions of the positions of individual candidates within each party. The preferences of each voter are single-peaked with respect to their own axis over the candidates, which is consistent with the global ordering of the parties. We present a polynomial-time algorithm for recognizing whether a preference profile satisfies party-aligned single-peakedness. In this domain, we give polynomial-time algorithms for deciding whether a given party can become the winner under some (or all) nominations, and whether this can occur in some pure Nash equilibrium. We also prove a tight result about the guaranteed existence of pure strategy Nash equilibria for elections with up to three parties for single-peaked and party-aligned single-peaked preference profiles.Downloads
Published
2026-03-14
How to Cite
Faliszewski, P., Kaźmierowski, S., Lisowski, G., Schlotter, I., & Turrini, P. (2026). Computing Equilibrium Nominations in Presidential Elections. Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 40(20), 16871–16879. https://doi.org/10.1609/aaai.v40i20.38732
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Section
AAAI Technical Track on Game Theory and Economic Paradigms