Let us denote by $|F-G|_H$ the Hausdorff distance between compact sets $F$ and $G$ in the plane.
Is it possible to choose a point $p_F\in F$ in any non-empty compact convex figure $F\subset\mathbb{R}^2$ such that $$|p_F-p_G|\leqslant |F-G|_H?$$
Comments
The barycentre does not work.
The center of minimal ball containing the figure does not work. Look at the two triangles shown below (this example was suggested by Saúl RM).
Now we see that there is no such choice (thanks to Saúl RM and Fedja). Let me mention that it also implies that there is no short retraction $\mathrm{Haus}\,\mathbb{R^2}\to \mathbb{R^2}$. Here $\mathrm{Haus}\,\mathbb{R^2}$ denotes the set of all nonempty compact sets in the plane equipped with Hausdorff metric and $\mathbb{R^2}$ is considered as a subspace of $\mathrm{Haus}\,\mathbb{R^2}$ via the distance-preserving embedding that sens a point $x$ to the one-point set $\{x\}$.
It was proved that the best choice is the so-called Steiner center $s_F$ --- the center of mass of curvature of $\partial F$. Namely, we have $$|s_F-s_G|\leqslant \tfrac4\pi\cdot|F-G|_H.$$ This statement (plus the higher-dimensional version) was proved by E. D. Positzelskii in his "Lipschitz mappings..." (1971); it was rediscovered by Krzysztof Przesławski and David Yost in their "Continuity properties of selectors..." (1989) and it is a simple corollary of the results of Denis Rutovitz (1965) and Igor Daugavet (1968). It also appear as Proposition 2.21 in "Geometric nonlinear functional analysis. Vol. 1" by Yoav Benyamini and Joram Lindenstrauss.