The highest median voting rules are a class of
graded voting
Rated, evaluative, graded, or cardinal voting rules are a class of voting methods that allow voters to state how strongly they support a candidate, by giving each one a grade on a separate scale.
The distribution of ratings for each candidate� ...
rules where the candidate with the highest
median
The median of a set of numbers is the value separating the higher half from the lower half of a Sample (statistics), data sample, a statistical population, population, or a probability distribution. For a data set, it may be thought of as the “ ...
rating is elected.
The various highest median rules differ in their treatment of ties, i.e., the method of ranking the candidates with the same median rating.
Proponents of highest median rules argue that they provide the most faithful reflection of the voters' opinion. They note that as with other
cardinal voting
Rated, evaluative, graded, or cardinal voting rules are a class of voting methods that allow voters to state how strongly they support a candidate, by giving each one a grade on a separate scale.
The distribution of ratings for each candidate� ...
rules, highest medians are not subject to
Arrow's impossibility theorem
Arrow's impossibility theorem is a key result in social choice theory showing that no ranked-choice procedure for group decision-making can satisfy the requirements of rational choice. Specifically, Arrow showed no such rule can satisfy the ind ...
.
However, critics note that highest median rules violate
participation and the
Archimedean property
In abstract algebra and mathematical analysis, analysis, the Archimedean property, named after the ancient Greek mathematician Archimedes of Syracuse, Italy, Syracuse, is a property held by some algebraic structures, such as ordered or normed g ...
; highest median rules can fail to elect a candidate almost-unanimously preferred over all other candidates.
Example
As in
score voting
Score voting, sometimes called range voting, is an electoral system for single-seat elections. Voters give each candidate a numerical score, and the candidate with the highest average score is elected. Score voting includes the well-known approva ...
, voters rate candidates along a common scale, e.g.:
An elector can give the same appreciation to several different candidates. A candidate not evaluated automatically receives the mention "Bad".
Then, for each candidate, we calculate what percentage of voters assigned them each grade, e.g.:
This is presented graphically in the form of a cumulative histogram whose total corresponds to 100% of the votes cast:

For each candidate, we then determine the majority (or median) grade (shown here in bold). This rule means that an absolute majority (more than 50%) of voters judge that a candidate deserves at least its majority grade, and that half or more (50% or more) of the electors judges that he deserves at the most its majority grade. Thus, the majority grade looks like a median.
If only one candidate has the highest median score, they are elected. Otherwise, highest median rules must invoke a tiebreaking procedure to choose between the candidates with the highest median grade.
Tiebreaking procedures
When different candidates share the same median rating, a tie-breaking rule is required, analogous to interpolation. For discrete grading scales, the median is insensitive to changes in the data and highly sensitive to the choice of scale (as there are large "gaps" between ratings).
Most tie-breaking rules choose between tied candidates by comparing their relative shares of proponents (above-median grades) and opponents (below-median grades).
The share of proponents and opponents are represented by
and
respectively, while their share of median grades is written as
.
*
Bucklin's rule orders candidates by (one minus) the number of opponents. Anti-Bucklin reverses this (choosing the candidate with the highest share of proponents).
* The
majority judgment
Majority judgment (MJ) is a single-winner voting system proposed in 2010 by Michel Balinski and Rida Laraki. It is a kind of highest median rule, a cardinal voting system that elects the candidate with the highest median rating.
Voting proce ...
considers the candidate who is closest to having a rating other than its median and breaks the tie based on that rating.
* The typical judgment ranks candidates by the number of proponents minus the number of opponents,
i.e.
.
* The central judgment divides the typical judgment by the total number of proponents and opponents.
* Continuous Bucklin voting or
Graduated Majority Judgment
Graduated majority judgment (GMJ), sometimes called the usual judgment or continuous Bucklin voting, is a single-winner rated voting rule that selects the candidate with the highest median score. It was first suggested as an improvement on major ...
(GMJ), also called the usual judgment,
ranks candidates by the share of their median grades needed to reach 50% support.
** This is equivalent to using a
linear interpolation
In mathematics, linear interpolation is a method of curve fitting using linear polynomials to construct new data points within the range of a discrete set of known data points.
Linear interpolation between two known points
If the two known po ...
between the current score and the next-highest score.
** Compared to typical judgment, this leads to a more prominent score difference when the median share is low; in other words, candidates who are more "polarizing" receive more extreme evaluations.
Example

The example in the following table shows a six-way tied rating, where each alternative wins under one of the rules mentioned above. (All scores apart from Bucklin/anti-Bucklin are scaled to fall in