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The Core of Approval-Based Committee Elections with Few Seats

International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence (IJCAI), 2025
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Abstract

In an approval-based committee election, the goal is to select a committee consisting of kk out of mm candidates, based on nn voters who each approve an arbitrary number of the candidates. The core of such an election consists of all committees that satisfy a certain stability property which implies proportional representation. In particular, committees in the core cannot be "objected to" by a coalition of voters who is underrepresented. The notion of the core was proposed in 2016, but it has remained an open problem whether it is always non-empty. We prove that core committees always exist when k8k \le 8, for any number of candidates mm and any number of voters nn, by showing that the Proportional Approval Voting (PAV) rule due to Thiele [1895] always satisfies the core when k7k \le 7 and always selects at least one committee in the core when k=8k = 8. We also develop an artificial rule based on recursive application of PAV, and use it to show that the core is non-empty whenever there are m15m \le 15 candidates, for any committee size kmk \le m and any number of voters nn. These results are obtained with the help of computer search using linear programs.

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