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Plurality voting
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== Voting system attributes and comparison to non-plurality systems == === Attributes and criteria === '''Majority criterion:''' Will a candidate always win who is ranked as the unique favorite by a majority of voters? ; <dfn>[[Independence of clones criterion|Independence of clone alternatives]] (cloneproof)</dfn> : Does the outcome never change if non-winning candidates similar to an existing candidate are added? There are three different phenomena which could cause a method to fail this criterion: :; [[Vote-splitting|Spoilers]] :: Candidates which decrease the chance of any of the similar or clone candidates winning, also known as a [[spoiler effect]]. :; Teams :: Sets of similar candidates whose mere presence helps the chances of any of them winning. :; Crowds :: Additional candidates who affect the outcome of an election without either helping or harming the chances of their factional group, but instead affecting another group. '''No favorite betrayal:''' Can voters be sure that they do not need to rank any other candidate above their favorite in order to obtain a result they prefer? {| class="wikitable" |+ !Number of winners !System !Candidate/list !Ballot type (number of votes) !Representation ![[Majority favorite criterion|Majority criterion]] ![[Independence of clones criterion|Independence of clones]] !No favorite betrayal |- | rowspan="2" |'''Single-winner''' |[[First-past-the-post voting|'''First-past-the-post''']] |Candidate |'''mark 1''' |[[Majoritarian representation|'''Majoritarian''']] |'''Yes''' |'''No (spoilers)''' |'''No''' |- |[[Approval voting]] |Candidate |mark any number |[[Majoritarian representation|Majoritarian]] |Yes |Yes |No |- | rowspan="5" |'''Multi-winner''' |'''[[Plurality block voting]]''' |Candidate |'''mark at most as many as seats''' |[[Majoritarian representation|'''Majoritarian''']] |'''Yes''' |'''No (spoilers, crowds)''' |'''No''' |- |'''[[Limited voting]]''' |Candidate |'''mark k''' |[[Semi-proportional representation|'''Semi-proportional''']] |'''Yes''' |'''No (spoilers, crowds)''' |'''No''' |- |'''[[Single non-transferable vote]]''' |Candidate |'''mark 1''' |[[Semi-proportional representation|'''Semi-proportional''']] |'''Yes''' |'''No (spoilers, crowds)''' |'''No''' |- |[[General ticket|'''Party block voting/General ticket (plurality)''']] |List |'''mark 1''' |[[Majoritarian representation|'''Majoritarian''']] |'''Yes''' |'''No (spoilers)''' |'''No''' |- |[[Cumulative voting]] |Candidate |distribute fixed number of votes |[[Semi-proportional representation|Semi-proportional]] | |'''No (spoilers, crowds)''' | |} === Comparison to non-plurality systems === Plurality voting is often contrasted with (absolute) majority voting<ref>{{Cite web |title=Election - Plurality, Majority, Systems {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/election-political-science/Plurality-and-majority-systems |access-date=2024-05-14 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> where variant of runoff voting (multi-round voting) are also classified. However, in formal social choice theory, the term majority voting has a different definition, and runoff voting methods could also be classified under plurality{{Citation needed|date=May 2024}}. {| class="wikitable" !Number of winners !Plurality-based systems !Non-plurality systems !Explanation (what makes non-plurality system fundamentally different) |- | rowspan="6" |'''Single-winner''' | rowspan="6" |[[First-past-the-post voting|'''First-past-the-post''']] |[[Anti-plurality voting|Anti-plurality]] |Voters mark one candidate they do not want elected, the candidate with least votes wins |- |[[Runoff voting (disambiguation)|Multi-round voting]] |Usually majority rule in first round (candidate wins only if they have more than half of the votes), typically plurality voting (technically: SNTV) determines which candidates compete in second round, majority rule for second round (with only two candidates). |- |[[Ranked voting|Ranked systems]] |Voters may rank candidates. Some ranked systems simulate multi-round voting. Some ranked systems use plurality rule with weighted (positional) inputs ([[Borda count]]), but are not considered plurality voting. |- |[[Score voting]] |Voters score candidates on a scale. |- |[[Random ballot]] |Winner gets sorted randomly from ballots |- |[[Sortition]] |Does not use ballots |- | rowspan="9" |'''Multi-winner''' | rowspan="6" |Candidate-based plurality voting: '''[[Plurality block voting]]''', '''[[limited voting]]''', '''[[single non-transferable vote]]''' |[[Single transferable vote|Single-transferable vote]] |Voters may rank candidates. Quota determines who gets elected (and which votes get transferred), not plurality rule (except last seats). |- |[[Score voting]] |Voters may score candidates on a scale. [[Multiwinner approval voting|Approval block voting]], while using the plurality rule is also technically a score voting system. |- |[[Proportional approval voting]] | |- |Multiple random ballots |Winners get sorted randomly from ballots |- |[[Sortition]] |Does not use ballots |- | rowspan="2" |Panachage | rowspan="2" |While voters vote only for candidates (and may vote across party lines), the seat allocation is primarily based on list-PR, in an open list-system. |- | rowspan="3" |List-based plurality voting: [[General ticket|'''Party block voting/General ticket (plurality)''']] |- |[[Open list]] proportional representation ([[Party-list proportional representation|list-PR]]) |While voters may vote only for candidates (or lists) within lists, the seat allocation is primarily based on [[Party-list proportional representation|list-PR]]. The candidate votes change ranking within list (usually with plurality rule). |- |[[Closed list]] proportional representation ([[Party-list proportional representation|list-PR]]) |Voters usually can vote for just one party, but seat allocation is proportional, not by plurality rule. |}
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