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== Original contents ==
{{WikiProject Elections and Referendums}}
can someone change http://en.wikipedia.org/Image:Onevoteballotname.gif to have the candidates name look hand written instead of looking typed?
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{{Archives}}{{dashboard.wikiedu.org assignment | course = Misplaced Pages:Wiki_Ed/University_of_Ottawa/CMN2160C_(Winter) | assignments = ], ], ] | start_date = 2022-01-13 | end_date = 2022-04-16 }}


== Isn't "two-round voting" much more common? ==
I made some changes that I think improve this article, but there's some major reconstruction that's going to be necessary. Someone should take a swipe at making sense of this. I'm not sure exactly where to start -- ]


E.g., mayoral elections in Germany use it ... --] 10:16, 18 September 2020 (UTC)
----
'''First Past the Post''' is the electoral system used in the ] and in some other countries. In such a system the country (or political subdivision) is divided into constituencies, most commonly with approximately equal populations. In each such constituency when there is an election, the person with the largest number (plurality) of votes is declared the winner to represent '''all''' residents of that constituency.


:I don't think either one is much more common than the other. –] (]) 00:58, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
Its '''opponents''' say its principal deficiencies are


== No mentioning of "election inversion" - why? ==
* disproportional election results that may mean parties may have a different percentage of seats in parliament to their percentage votes in the general election


Similar question to ]:
* its discouragement of local small parties and independents, most of whom cannot win local electoral battles, with the dominance of major parties
Election inversion is a standard term; and a phenomenon mainly occurring with FPTP (albeit not only: Rounding procedures can produce them also in proportional systems). Why isn't this even mentioned here, let alone discussed - see of course 2000 and 2016 in the US (, ). It would nicely fit into the "wasted votes" section, because different amounts of "waste" for each selection directly imply the possibility of election inversion. --] 08:20, 18 September 2020 (UTC)


:It's not included because nobody's added it. Feel free to add it! ] (]) 00:57, 22 February 2024 (UTC)
* Its use of ''Single Member'' constituencies (ie, only one MP elected)


== Similar articles ==
Its '''supporters''' say its principal benefits are:


] and this article seem to have same topic. Suggest merge. ] (]) 19:36, 12 October 2022 (UTC)
* stable single party government


== Merge proposal ==
* an absence of small parties that can force minority policies on governing parties, as happens in countries with regular coalition governments


I am proposing ] be merged into ]. The articles have overlapping information and are about the same subject. Plurality voting is the longer article, is slightly higher quality, and receives more monthly pageviews ( versus ). -- <small>''']''' (])</small> 17:45, 13 January 2024 (UTC)
* a clear choice between two alternative governments (Labour or the Conservatives) with the electorate knowing exactly what they are voting on, rather than post-general election negotiations that might produce governments the electorate neither expected nor wanted. (eg. In Ireland in 1992, two parties, ] and ], having fought the election bitterly opposing each other, then entered into government together to the surprise and bewilderment of voters.)


:{{ping|HudecEmil}} Previously brought this up. -- <small>''']''' (])</small> 17:50, 13 January 2024 (UTC)
* maintaining a direct link between the Member of Parliament and his or her constituency. (''Most'' proportional systems do not elect on MP from each constituency and often don't use territorial constituencies at all.)
:@] the two topics are different, but the article you've linked is badly-named; I think we definitely don't want an article called "Plurality (voting)" that's different from "Plurality voting".
:Plurality just means "the biggest share" (in British English, this is called a ''relative'' majority). It contrasts with a majority (in British English, an ''absolute majority''), whch is a fraction bigger than 50%. ] could either be kept, turned into a Wiktionary entry, or merged into the ] page.
:On the other hand, I just found out the page on ] exists. That page is 100% a duplicate, since these are two names for the exact same system, and they need a merge. ] (]) 02:32, 7 February 2024 (UTC)
::Happy with a merge, but I think it should be to ] (or simply ]), which is the ]. ] ]] 16:11, 24 February 2024 (UTC)
::: seems to suggest plurality is slightly more popular but I have no strong opinion on this. ] (]) 03:15, 12 March 2024 (UTC)


::Technically, there is a slight difference; first-past-the-post is the single-member version of plurality voting, which also includes multi-member versions. So merging into First-past-the-post doesn't make sense. Either merge into ] or shrink Plurality voting down to an overview of the different types of plurality voting, with a referral to First-past-the-post for a more detailed article on single-member plurality.] (]) 22:53, 9 March 2024 (UTC)
* a simple voting mechanism, ie indicating a vote by means of an 'X' beside a person's name. (Other alternative systems may require numbers, etc)
:*'''Oppose'''
:Just, I oppose it. It's just obvious why
:Cheers, ] (]) 15:53, 28 February 2024 (UTC)
: '''Oppose''' for reasons stated above: it is a distinct concept, and in particularly common use among political-science discussion in the USA (it's far more common of a term). A merge would add confusion, not remove it. ] (]) 14:51, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
::Oh, I also oppose it but I didn't have a concrete reason, so I guess I now have a solid reason, and it's interesting how it's a common term across the globe. ] (]) 15:38, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
: {{moved to|Talk:Plurality voting#Merge from FPTP}}
:*::Oops, the wrong section. Thank you. Will move. ] (]) 17:31, 13 April 2024 (UTC)


== Merge from FPTP ==
Its '''Opponents''' say its principal flaws are:


FPTP and Plurality are the same system. FPTP should be merged into this article with a redirect. ] (]) 17:21, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
* It produces majority governments ''even when the people have not voted for them''


:*'''Oppose''' FPTP is a particular case of plurality (and the most popular). What we need is to rewrite the lead to reflect this fact. --] (]) 06:18, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
* It creates 'false' election results, producing landslides (eg, 1987, 1997, 2002) that were the ''creation'' of the electoral system, not the choice of the people
:*:# This is asking about whether plurality (voting) should be merged with Plurality voting (which are two completely different things).
:*:# FPTP and plurality are synonyms.
:*:] (]) 17:23, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
:*::Many authors would disagree with your #2. Plurality voting, in many sources at least, includes such non-FPTP systems as ] and ]. ] (]) 17:41, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
:*:::I'd like to see a source for that, because I've never seen any of those systems called "plurality", but if correct, everything in this article would need to be merged into FPTP and this article rewritten from scratch (because it only talks about FPTP right now). –] 17:43, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
:*::::In general FPTP = SMP (single-member plurality a.k.a. simple plurality). I can point to ] of the ] fame. A brief summary of his beliefs can be found in not-very-authoritative source here: on p. 331 ("Plurality system with additional conditions"). Sorry, I do not have Duverger's book handy and cannot check his terminology immediately. This is not the only PoV; many authors use FPTP and plurality system synonymously and drop the single-member/simple qualifiers - but many retain them. ] (]) 18:25, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
:::::::{{blockquote|text=''A brief summary of his beliefs can be found in not-very-authoritative source here: </nowiki>] on p. 331 ("Plurality system with additional conditions"). Sorry, I do not have Duverger's book handy and cannot check his terminology immediately.''}}
::::::# The text doesn't seem to quote Duverger himself directly, it just talks about Duverger's law.
::::::# The text is, as mentioned, a not-very-authoritative source.
::::::# The text also seems to be confusing the use of a ] in the first round of a runoff (which can arguably be called "plurality voting") with the two-round runoff as a whole, which is ''not'' a kind of plurality voting.
:::::::{{blockquote|text=''This is not the only PoV; many authors use FPTP and plurality system synonymously and drop the single-member/simple qualifiers—but many retain them.''}}
:::::::The synonymous usage seems to be by far the more common use in social choice theory. With regards to the other two terms you mentioned:
:::::::*"Single-member" means the combination of plurality with single-member districts, i.e. local elections. The term "single-member" is used to distinguish plurality voting from its multi-member (multi-winner) variant, called ].
:::::::*"Simple plurality" has the same meaning as in "simple majority" (which means a majority, ignoring abstentions). In other words, it's a plurality of votes, ignoring abstentions: if the largest number of votes is for "abstain", this option is ignored, rather than leading to ]. –] 15:37, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
::::::::IMHO for authors that consider plurality synonymous with FPTP, the qualifiers "single-member", "simple" would be excessive and unnecessary, their very use underscores that differences do exist. SNTV seems to me like one more plurality system. ] (]) 19:09, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::SNTV is one of several minor variants of FPTP/Plurality, yes, which is why it has a separate article. But as the article itself says in the opening, SNTV is a kind of FPTP.
:::::::::: IMHO for authors that consider plurality synonymous with FPTP, the qualifiers "single-member", "simple" would be excessive and unnecessary,
:::::::::Yes, they would be, because this is how everyone understands the term "Plurality"! If the term was this ambiguous, nobody would use it; they'd just say FPTP. As mentioned, the current article says nothing about these other systems, because ''nobody'' uses the term plurality like this.
:::::::::In all my years reading the social choice literature I have ''never'' seen anyone use "plurality" to mean "instant-runoff voting", and the source you provided is at best ambiguous as to whether it's even doing that. –] 19:54, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::I can easily agree with you on instant runoff. For the purposes of this discussion, it is enough to establish that FPTP and "plurality" are not the same thing (SNTV does that), and I am <u>way</u> out of my depth to provide any suggestions on where the evolution of ] should go. ] (]) 19:58, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::: For the purposes of this discussion, it is enough to establish that FPTP and "plurality" are not the same thing (SNTV does that),
:::::::::::OK, so how about :
:::::::::::1. Redirecting "FPTP" to "Plurality" (which is the most common use), and then
:::::::::::2. Putting up a "For the multi-winner variant of plurality, see SNTV".
:::::::::::: I am way out of my depth to provide any suggestions on where the evolution of Plurality voting should go.
:::::::::::That's fair. –] 20:05, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::I am no expert on the issue. However, (1) FPTP is a colloquial, but very well-known - and easy to understand - term. Few people would understand the plurality correctly. Correspondingly, the sheer volume of information on FPTP is much larger than that on other forms of plurality combined. So, if redirecting, it would be expedient and historically correct, to go other way, explaining the non-FPTP plurality as a deviation from (or an improvement of) the simple one. (2) I do not think this would be the best approach. Instead, this article can become an overview of the voting systems that are rightly or wrongly described as plurality systems, with a list of actual use. (3) The main dichotomy, IMO, is between the proportional / plurality systems, and this might be a good place to expound on their differences. ] (]) 20:46, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::So, I checked on Google Scholar to be extremely sure. Of the first 20 hits for "plurality voting", 19 were about first-past-the-post in a single-winner context, and one was a false positive (it picked up "plural voting" instead of "plurality voting").
:::::::::::::To make sure this wasn't just a technical term, I googled "plurality voting". I took the first 5 reliable sources I came across. (I judged one source unreliable, but it agreed as well). Of those 5 pages, 4 defined plurality voting as a single-winner election method (i.e. defined it as FPTP), those being Britannica, Ballotpedia, and two pages from Moravian and Georgetown universities. The 5th was this page. –Sincerely, ] 21:58, 13 May 2024 (UTC)
:*:Agree, Oppose ] (]) 22:42, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
:'''Opppose'''
:Plurality voting is a broader concept, which includes:
:- SNTV - a multi winner system with very different results than FPTP
:- bloc voting, general ticket, the multi-winner version with similar effects. Because of it's widespread use, FPTP deserves a seperate article which doesn't include these
:- limited voting, approval voting (of course, not PAV, and of course, even single winner is not often called plurality voting since it would be confusing)
:it is important to contrast plurality voting to:
:-majority voting - usually IRV and TRS would be considered so as they have the principle of having next rounds if there is no majority. otherwise, majority and plurality are similar rules, so highlight that not everywhere they have the same linguistic usage - "relative/absolute/simple majority/plurality
:-proportional representation, completely different principle ] (]) 07:08, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
::That said, if you're right, we'll need to merge this page into FPTP instead of the other way around, and then turn this page into a disambiguation directing people to choose SNTV or FPTP. –] 16:39, 24 April 2024 (UTC)


@] the term "Majority voting" in social choice theory has a much more restrictive meaning (see ], often called majority-rule in the social choice/voting theory/welfare economics literature). IRV and two-round would be considered to fall under the sequential-loser or core support umbrella instead, alongside plurality.
* It damages democracy by producing inaccurate national results that so lack proportionality that voters cannot be guaranteed that their will will be reflected; 25% of voters, those who voted for the SDP-Liberal Alliance in 1987 in Britain, for example, had their voices ignored when the electoral system only 'gave' them 4% of the seats.


Approval voting would never be considered a variant on plurality voting. (On the other hand, TRS might actually be counted as a variant of FPP/Plurality.)
The ] has long campaigned for an end to the First Past the Post system. The ] support its retention. ], having indicated a willingness to consider change, now seems to be for maintaining the status quo.


"Plurality" without qualification excludes all the systems you mentioned. FPTP ''also'' includes SNTV (the proportional-representation form of FPTP). The phrases FPTP and Plurality voting are synonymous. –] 23:29, 23 April 2024 (UTC)
While First Past the Post is used universally in Great Britain and Nothern Ireland for parliamentary elections, an alternative system, ], which offers greater proportionality and also greater complexity, is used in local government elections in Northern Ireland.


:in addition to SNTV, there is also Misplaced Pages's "plurality block voting", the multi-winner plurality system known as block voting, as non-FPTP plurality election system.
This wrong, in the UK, local election do not use a STV system. It is multiple (3) votes for the same number of seats, these are not transferable.
:name of article should be changed to Plurality electing, covering both FPTP and Block voting.
:the single X voting is shared with FPTP and SNTV but effect is different due to way votes are counted and seats filled.
:FPTP is not voting system -- it is an election system.
:SNTV is not voting system -- it is an election system.
:for both, Single voting is the voting system.
:Single voting can be ranked vote or X vote.
:Ranked voting is not used in plurality election system.
:plurality implies taking votes as first placed, and just giving seat or seats to whoever is first whether with majority or not.
:ranked votes implies use of quota and electing on a scientific basis - under IRV, AV or STV.
:it is complicated but distinguishing between voting systems in the district contest, and the vote count (election system) -- how seats are filled -- is important to clear communication.
:a third level is the overall result - how the chamber is composed. (majoritarian IRV district contests may result in a minority government; proportional STV district results may result in a minority government overall even if a party has majority of the vote or visa versa, because districts vary in voter numbers and voter turnout rate.)
:actually there are two more levels -
:- whether or not votes are transferred in the district contest,
: and
:-whether or not top-up levelling seats are added after district seats are allocated. ] (]) 22:29, 12 December 2024 (UTC)


== Terminology sources ==
''Ultimately, the issue of whether or not to use the First Past the Post system boils down to a simple question: which of the following is the more important?''


Trying to list the works that can be used as references for terminology. Feel free to expand or object.
* stability
* {{cite book | last=Ross | first=James F. S. | title=Voting in Democracies. A Study of Majority and Proportional Electoral Systems | publisher=Faber & Faber | year=1955 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W3NEvwEACAAJ | access-date=2024-04-24 | chapter = Preface }} <small>Recommended in </small>
* accuracy
] (]) 01:54, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
* constituency link with an MP
* proportionality


:It looks like Rosen (1974) says:

:{{blockquote|Bloc voting and plurality voting are, respectively, the multi-member and single-member forms of the first-past-the-post class of systems.}}
==An Example of First Past the Post==
:Nice source, I like it :) –Sincerely, ] 21:45, 13 May 2024 (UTC)

::Good. I have no deep knowledge, so any agreement on the sources would work for me. It is clear to me by now that the terminology varies across the researchers; this is not an unusual situation for many fields of study. We can simply accept someone's terminology (with attribution), and mention other versions. Ideally, we should find a source that acknowledges the differences and attributes them to particular researchers. While writing ] (about an architectural style the very existence of which is debated), I was lucky to have such a source. Let's hope we can find one here, too. ] (]) 23:32, 13 May 2024 (UTC)
Take for example a mythical constituency, called ''Misplaced Pages North''. One Member of Parliament to be elected.
:That sounds like the other way way around. Plurality voting is the general type, bloc voting a multi-member version. I added sources in the article supporting that view. I am aware of the wide range of use for these terms and when it gets more rigorous, these have to be clarified, but first-past-the-post is same as SMP, and it would add additional confusion to say otherwise (it's in the name "first", at least that part makes sense, even if there is no post...). ] (]) 09:07, 14 May 2024 (UTC)

::As I have said, I am OK with any arrangement that would state something like "X defines PV as a subset of FPTP" (or the reverse). It seems to me that there is no consistency here, so we need to attribute the definitions. ] (]) 09:39, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
===Results===
::"First" can also just mean the beginning of a list, e.g. "the first 100 people to sign up will receive a discount".

::FWIW, I agree that I don't like the use of the term "FPTP" as including SNTV; if I wanted to say SNTV, I'd say SNTV. It seems like the vast majority of papers nowadays use "Plurality" and "FPTP" interchangeably, but some older sources try to maintain a distinction; but this is inconsistent. –Sincerely, ] 20:44, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
<table><table border="1">
:::If this is the case, we need to reflect it. It would be great to find a source that reflects this change. ] (]) 00:15, 15 May 2024 (UTC)
<tr>
::::A good example of people using "Plurality" quite differently from how most people use it today is Merrill and Nagel 1987, who use it to mean any voting rule that elects the candidate(s) with the highest score(s). (Which makes ~no sense to me, because every voting rule does that.) –Sincerely, ] 02:18, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
<th>Candidate</th>
:::::(From what I can tell everyone else agrees, because I was unable to find any other papers using this meaning.) –Sincerely, ] 02:19, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
<th>Votes</th>
:::::It makes perfect sense to me. The ] does not elect candidates with most of the votes, it elects a particular number of representatives from party lists, while parties decide themselves (ahead of the elections) who the representatives will be. Merrill and Nagel are not alone in the main (top-level) classification split being proportional vs. plurality. These researchers treat plurality a a generic case, with further details like FPTP vs. multi-candidate districts. ] (]) 03:36, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
</tr>
::::::Well, the thing is, you can define proportional representation as being plurality rules in that sense too... see ]: Seats are awarded to the candidate with the highest value of <math>\frac{\text{votes}}{\text{seats}}</math> (or a slightly different ratio for different divisor methods).
<tr>
::::::No matter what you do, it's still a "plurality" rule :)
<td>Nancy Ash, <br>
::::::I ''think'' it's supposed to contrast with a majority in the sense that, if no candidate wins a majority, there is no winner. Balloting continues until a candidate achieves a majority. Most parliamentary officers are elected this way (e.g. the ]). –Sincerely, ] 04:00, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
Anti-Radical Party</td>
:::::::All I am trying to say is that a significant number of researchers appear to split the voting methods into two broad groups: proportional vs. plurality, with further subdivision happening on the ''inside'' of these two classes. Whether they are right or wrong is immaterial, IMHO: we simply need to reflect this PoV (part of the mainstream) somewhere. To me, this article is a convenient place to do so: if some expert takes an opinion that "plurality" is a synonym of FPTP, we can mention their position here and write down the details in the FPTP article. If, however, an expert thinks that plurality is the opposite of proportionality, their opinion belongs here. ] (]) 04:56, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
<td>999</td>
::::::::Right, what I'm saying is I don't think any expert defines "plurality" as just meaning "not proportional".
</tr>
::::::::In any case I'd give this glossary as a decent citation (where it defines "plurality" to mean FPTP).
<tr>
::::::::http://ndl.ethernet.edu.et/bitstream/123456789/77460/1/21.pdf#page=138 –Sincerely, ] 16:51, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
<td>John Maurice,<br>
:::::::::(1) I am happy with this text. (2) However, it also says that the multiple-candidates election is also plurality, so plurality is not <u>equal</u> to FPTP. (3) There are plenty of sources that are published in peer-review journals and books from reputed publishers that contain very clear language of opposition between PR and PV, like "plurality vs proportional", etc. (4) Therefore, there is no single definition that we can present to the reader, IMHO. Ideally, it would be great to find a review of contradictions in definitions. ] (]) 18:12, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
Not So Radical Party</td>
:::::::::Here is one of these sources with very clear language: on page 3. ] (]) 18:14, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
<td>1000</td>
::::::::::Interesting, thanks. I'd never seen that before. I think this explains the disagreement and confusion:
</tr>
::::::::::1. Some (particularly older) sources, mostly in political science, define "plurality voting" to mean ].
<tr>
::::::::::2. Other (especially newer) sources, including most of social choice, define "plurality" as an abbreviation of the term ].
<td>Jean O'Leary, <br>
::::::::::In that case, is it reasonable to make "plurality voting" a disambiguation page that explains these two common meanings? cc @] ] (]) 18:43, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
Radical Party</td>
:::::::::::My goal here is twofold:
<td>1001</td>
:::::::::::# I am sure there is a conflict of definitions even in the expert literature. We need to reflect this conflict in our encyclopedia, so the readers can understand better both other articles in Misplaced Pages and the external literature
</tr>
:::::::::::# In order to achieve #1, we should not merge plurality and FPTP, IMHO
<tr>
:::::::::::] (]) 00:48, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
<td>Michael Yates, <br>
::::::::::::we should note that most accounts simply ignore block voting although it is and was common.
Independent</td>
::::::::::::so when they say plurality is FPTP, they do not mean to leave out block voting, they just do.
<td>1000</td>
::::::::::::candidate with most votes wins under any system
</table>
::::::::::::"plurality" means votes as first placed are not transferred, and no more rounds of voting take place - the one (or multiple candidates) with plurality wins.

::::::::::::in FPTP (1 winner) or Block voting (multiple winners) voters can cast as many votes as the number of seats to fill.

::::::::::::ranked votes imply transfers but only if necessary, in STV or IRV.
===Interpreting the Results===
::::::::::::two-round system implies an additional round of voting but only if necessary.

::::::::::::SNTV is form of single voting (one vote but multiple winners)
Under First Past the Post, ''Jean O'Leary'' would win the seat, having won more votes than each of her opponents. Her ''majority'' would be described as ''1''.
::::::::::::STV is form of single voting (one vote but multiple winners, and voter may or must mark back-up preferences) ] (]) 22:42, 12 December 2024 (UTC)

''Critics'' of the First Past the Post system would point out that of the 4000 votes cast, O'Leary only got 1001, whereas a total of 2999 were cast ''against'' her for other candidates. ''Supporters'' of the First Past the Post system would say she was the most popular candidate on offer. Having got more votes, she was entitled to win the seat.

==Why does First Past the Post produce Disproportional Results?==

The system's disproportionality is caused by the ability of ''one'' candidate to win a seat even though the majority of votes were cast against that candidate, with he or she in the above case being the choice of marginally over 25% of the electorate. In 1987 in Britain, for example, the opposition votes were split between two parties, ] and the ], allowing the ] to win seats even though the majority of voters in a particular constituency were opposed to the conservatives. If the split between ] and the ] allowed the ] to win more seats and so a landslide in 1987, the split between the Conservatives and the ] in 1997 and 2002 allowed Labour to win a landslide majority. In all three cases, 1987, 1997 and 2002, the winning party actually received a percentage of the popular vote that was less than 50%.


===A Practical Example===

In the mythical election result above for Misplaced Pages North, if the ''Anti-Radical Party'' and the ''Not So Radical Party'' had arranged for one of them not to contest the election but have their voters vote for the other party, the remaining candidate would have got 1999 and so easily won the seat. But by splitting the votes of those opposed to the Radical Party, they ''gave'' the seat to the Radical Party candidate. In theory, if this ''exact'' result was replicated in 100 constituencies, the result would be

* Radical Party '''100''' seats
**Total Vote: 100,100
* Anti-Radical Party '''0''' seats
**Total Vote: 99,900
* Not So Radical '''0''' seats
**Total Vote: 100,000
* Independents '''0''' seats
**Total Vote: 100,000

Yet, the ''Radical Party'' would only have approximately 25% of the vote, and would only have 100 votes more in total than the ''Not So Radical Party'', yet the latter would have one 0 seats to the Radical Party's 100. This is, of course, an ''extreme'' case. No election would produce such a dramatically disproportionate result. That First Past the Post produces disproportionality in some form is not in doubt. Its supporters argue that its benefits in terms of electoral stability and clear-cut results outweighs a degree of disproportionality.

==Alternative Electoral Systems==

<br> ]
<br>Voters vote for parties whose percentage support is then used to indicate how many of a list of candidates submitted by them are elected.
<br>
'''Strength''' Absolute Proportionality
<br>
'''Weakness''' Loss of local link with voters as not based on constituencies or personal votes
<br>] (PR.STV) <br>
Voters vote for candidates on ballot papers, marking '1', '2', '3' etc to indicate preferences. Those with lowest votes are eliminated and their votes re-distributed and counted. The process continues until one candidate reaches a 'quota'. This continues until all seats in a constituency are filled.
<br>
'''Strength''' - relative proportionality
<br>
'''Weakness''' - complicated. May involve multi-member constituencies.
<br> <br>
Electoral systems can also be constructed using parts of other systems. For example, the List System & PR.STV can be combined, with two-thirds of parliamentary seats elected by PR.STV via constituencies, and the remainder filled from a List, to produce absolute or near to absolute proportionality.

----
First Past the Post is ALWAYS capitalised, never written in lower case. (It is so basic students lose marks in exams if they put it in the lower case.) ] 23:21 Feb 13, 2003 (UTC)

*There are two grammatical issues regarding this expression: hyphens and capitals.
**According to ''The Random House Handbook'' hyphens are used in compound modifiers when they precede the modified term and the first element of the term is itself a modifier.
**I can find no grammatical justification for generally capitalizing each element in "first-past-the-post". I have seen it both with and without capital letters, but in this regard I would prefer the authority of the BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/vote2001/hi/english/voting_system/newsid_1173000/1173697.stm to that of professorial idiosyncrasy. In the case of article titles Misplaced Pages policy here would overide standard rules as they relate to titles. ] 01:48 Feb 14, 2003 (UTC)

So in other words you want students who use Wiki when learning about FPtP not to understand that it is the ''formal name'' of a system but simply to think it is merely a ''description'' of a system. If it is used as the name, it is regularly capitalised. Only if it is decribing a system is it in lower case. That's no personal idiosyncrasy, its basic english. In this case, you are not describing a system, you are ''naming'' it in the name of an article. As such, it is supposed to be in capitals, a basic grammatical rule. When it is used as the name not the description it is generally capitalised. The context decides the form in which it is used. In this context, capitalisation is a basic elementary grammatical requirement. ] 02:00 Feb 14, 2003 (UTC)
:It isn't the "formal name" of a system at all. It is a term drawn from horse racing to describe that kind of system by analogy with a horse race. As far as I know no legislature in any country with such a system has ever passed the likes of an act intituled "An Act To Establish a First Past the Post Electoral System". I agree that in a paper based publication these words would be capitalixed, but so would "Electoral" and "System" (which for some unknown reason JTD has chosen not to capitalize). For technical reasons, related to the linking of articles, Misplaced Pages has consciously chosen to overide that usual English language rule so that all words in a title except the first are begun with lower case letter unless the word would otherwise be written with a capital as with a personal name.
:As far as students are concerned Misplaced Pages is not a term or examination paper. Students adopt the Misplaced Pages conventions at their own risk. In taking my position I am not necessarily addressing students as that term is usually understood. Nevertheless it strikes me as remarkably petty that your professorial colleagues would reduce marks on this basis, when the issue would really be about understanding such a political system. ] 06:49 Feb 14, 2003 (UTC)
We don't "name" articles in all caps unless they're the names of people, places or such. This is not an official name. Let's PLEASE quit changing it back and forth. -- ]

Yep - there is no reason to have this article title in caps. It simply ain't a proper noun so it is not capitalized. Please refer to ] for the rationale. --]

First Past the Post ''is'' a proper noun. It is the formal name of a voting system. When used simply as a reference to methodology it is not capitalised. When used as a name of a voting system it is. Hence you get references to FPTP not fptb in academic texts. It is the same as Proportional System using the Single Transferable Vote (PR.STV, never pr.stv) which is capitalised when using the formal name of the system, not capitalised when describing the methodology. Electoral system in this instance is not capitalised because it is simply in this instance a descriptive phrase contextualising the name of the voting system. ]

----

"In the UK, there were only two majority governments in the 20th century."

This certainly wrong, the last five governments have been majority governments. It should probably state that there have been only two hung governments in the UK in the 20th century.

:It could either be a garbled reference to the existence of two occasions when the monarch in special circumstances asked the PM to form a govt with a parliamentary majority rather than the usual request to form a govt capable of surviving in the House of Commons. The former is used when in a time of national emergency a broadbased govt is needed but the PM's own party lacked a parliamentary majority or had a tiny one. When the former is asked, it is usually a cue to form a coalition. David Lloyd George was asked to do so in 1916, hence the formation of a Liberal-Conservative coalition. Winston Churchill received a similar request in 1940, hence the formation of the Conservative-Labour coalition. Except in those war-time cases, a PM is simply asked to form a govt capable of surviving in the HofC, which can mean a minority government. ]

::I suspect it means that there were only two elections where the resulting government received over 50% of the vote. I don't know if this is correct but this is what I think is ''meant''. (From a glance around the internet 1900 and 1931 saw single parties achieving over 50% while the 1935 coalition together got over 50%, but no individual party did so.) ] 21:54, 8 Jun 2005 (UTC)

'''Please''' stop screwing around with this name and making wikipedia looking like a home for illiterates. First Past the Post is the formal name of a voting system and is treated like a proper name in titles, just like President of the United States, Proportional Representation using the Single Transferable Vote, President of Ireland, etc. It is not treated as such if talking generically, just as single transferable vote if discussing the methodology of electoral systems generically is written in lower case, just as you use '''P'''ope and '''p'''ope, '''P'''rime '''M'''inister and '''p'''rime '''m'''inister, '''P'''resident and '''p'''resident, etc, in different contexts. This is a clear definition of a clear explicit voting method, not a generic talk about voting. Students would be docked marks if they did not know when to capitalise and when to use in lower case, why can't some people on wikipedia understand the difference? ] 01:28 May 14, 2003 (UTC)~

:FYI, in case it happens again :), these pages redirect to this article: ], ], ], ], ] and ] -- ]

I know, Jim. I'm the one always setting up redirects all over the place (though I forget if I did any here). It would be nice however if students checking the information actually found that the text on the correctly named page, not the wrongly named redirect. It does not do much for the reputation of wiki if, having been told by their lecturers of the importance of capitalising the name when writing about the actual system, a student finds a supposedly credible encyclopædia then puts in the text in a form that the student has been told is wrong, and indeed worse than that, in a form that they were told if ''they'' used they would have marked docked over, because of ''how'' wrong it is. ] 02:03 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

:Yeah, you did a couple. BTW, what electoral system do we have? I didn't find it on ]. ] 02:56 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

] (PR.STV). Unfortunately it keeps being moved to the wrong name, using the wrong capitalisation, etc. I don't what it is about wiki and electoral systems but people keep getting the capitalisation wrong, merging electoral systems that are somewhat different, getting details of them wrong. This one is at Single Transferable Vote (via a redirect at 'single transferable vote' (aaagh!)). Everytime anyone fixes it, someone screws it up again. Even getting the correct capitalisation for STV was a struggle. At this stage I have abandoned trying to fix the electoral system texts. Simply getting the titles right is frustration enough. :-) ] 04:11 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

:Aha. My Dad's a great fan of that system, it nearly got him elected to the local council :) (His main deal was litter policy, so he refused to do flyers or posters, and he's always hated canvasers. He got votes mostly by people ticking his name in case it was him :) -- ] 04:28 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

----

] says that "First Past the Post is the formal name of a voting system and is treated like a proper name in titles", and is mystified that anybody might think otherwise. Well, I've read a lot of books and spent way too many years in school, and I've never ever heard of a voting system's name being capitalized, formal name or no. I'm in a hotel room right now, so printed MoS is not handy, but instead of saying "every student knows this" over and over, I think we need to see some authoritative citations (never got any for ], sigh, but hope springs eternal). If this naming convention is something important that wikipedians don't know but should, I don't think it's asking too much that it be documented at least as carefully as, say, ]. (It's also more efficient to point to an MoS page than to fill up talk page after talk page with repetitious verbiage. :-) ) ] 05:26 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

I've taught the flaming thing to third level student for eight years. IF the thing is being named, it ''is'' treated as . . . a name. (surprise, surprise). If it is being talked about generically, it isn't. Learn the difference people definition and methodology, or try looking at a grammar book for how you treat formal unique names. If you talk about people generically you don't capitalise. If you talk about Stan or Jim you do because guess what? It is a unique specific reference. A name. First Past the Post ''is'' a unique reference to a unique name of a unique clearly defined system. So is Proportional Representation using the Single Transferable Vote (or PR.STV as most people call it). If you are generically talking about using ''a'' single transferable vote, it isn't capitalised. If you are talking about ''the'' Single Transferable Vote ''system'' (a specific system) you capitalise. The inability of some people to understand ''basic'' elementary rules of capitalisation is mind blowing. Is the standard of english language teaching so bad that people don't know what a capital letter is and where you use it? From some of the nutty namings on wiki it must be. No wonder Sian left wiki, saying that the standard of english appalled her! ] 06:21 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

:The capitalization situation in English is just not as simple as you're making out. For instance, there was a recent debate over capitalization of bird species names, and sensitized by that, I've been paying attention to capitalization in the information about types of fish I've been adding. Guess what? The most authoritative sources online, such as fishbase.org, as well as the published papers, don't tend to capitalize, even for the proper name of a single species of fish. So either we have lots of research icthyologists that are not as well-educated as your third level students, which I grant is a possibility :-), or else they - and the editors of their journals - don't agree that every name-like term has to be capitalized. Another hint is that when I saw "First Past the Post", my instantaneous reaction was "title of a book" not "name of an electoral system". Language is what its speakers make of it, not what the pedants say it is, and if you're familiar with the history of English, you know that the rules of capitalization have changed drastically over the years, and are continuing to change. In this case, I suspect that ] is clinging to an old rule that's already been abandoned in the US; here I think the preferred form would be '"first past the post" electoral system'. But now that my curiosity has been piqued, I must wait on tenterhooks until I can get to an MoS. ] 08:59 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

::It seems to me that the only authority that ÉÍREman has for his position is himself, ''ad hominem'' arguments, and analogies. At least I earlier tried reference to the ''Random House Hanbook'' and the BBC to established the contrary view. I pity the students that have been misled for the past eight years. Simply "naming" something is not a sufficient criterion for capitalizing what it is called. Lower case is the general rule in all cases unless there is a specific contrary rule. Even as I disagreed with him (and continue to disagree) about capitalizing bird names, I found his argument there stronger than it is here. There are in fact numerous bird books that do capitalize. Using capital letters in referring to a system solely by its initials does justify a back process of applying that rule when the name is given in full. A first past the post system is "de facto" in many countries, but none of them has arrived at that by passing "An Act to Implement a First Past the Post Electoral System". There is no organized First Past the Post Party in any country. Had they done so I would have viewed the matter quite differently. This is not a question of the "''basic'' elementary rules"; elementary rules are the ones that are clear and consistent across style and grammar manuals. When most authorities don't mention the specific issue, it is hardly elementary. If ÉÍREman's students could see their professor's behaviour here on this matter they would do well to appeal the way he has marked their papers. ] 09:05 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

:Mail the students a link to this discussion? Oh that would be cruel... Anyway, I foolishly drank Thai iced tea at dinner, no chance of sleep :-), so I poked around a bit more. The online style guides generally summed up with "Capitalization rules are quirky" without addressing this one directly (closest might be "cold war", which Chicago says to do in lowercase). Empirical usage according to Google is comically random; people will say "first past the post (FPTP)", the urge to capitalize the acronym being strong apparently (but there was one pedant who wrote it "FPtP"). Hyphens are extremely popular too, even the Beeb delivered "first-past-the-post (FPTP)" in http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/208611.stm. Also amusingly, the Google search for "fptp uk bbc" delivered this very talk page in the 10th position from the top, so at least the rest of the net gets to see that we're having an earnest discussion on this important topic. :-) ] 10:01 May 14, 2003 (UTC)

----

With regards to the US, FPtP is common, but not universal. ] is used in quite a few local elections, and is even used in a few federal elections (I believe Louisiana elects its Senators by runoff voting, and there may be other examples). --] 19:32 8 Jul 2003 (UTC)
Never run into it myself. I see in Louisiana it is normal . ] 19:51 8 Jul 2003 (UTC)

----
I deleted the "What the critics say" stuff, because we basically already had the facts in other places in the article, and we don't need the advocacy here.

Re: Duverger's law: does Duverger's law make a prediction about a particular constituency, or about the whole country? In Canada, how many parties are typically competitive in a given riding? ]

:Duverger's law seems to deal with primarily with particular constituencies. The Riker paper referenced in the ] article discusses current-day Canada and Civil War Era U.S. politics in some detail, pointing out that these are cases where multiple parties can emerge (I'd say more about this, but I can't track down my copy of the paper) -- ] 02:42 16 Jul 2003 (UTC)

::I'd feel a lot more comfortable if the bit about multiple-party systems in single-winner districts were first fleshed out on ], with references, then brought back here. In Gary Cox's ''Making Votes Count'', he argues for an extended Duverger's Law, saying that there will be no more than ''n+1'' competitive parties in an ''n''-sized district, unless: it is a highly fractured electorate (say, votes are on a linguistic or tribal basis with no distinguishable second choice), or a few other condiditions I don't remember (and I don't have a copy of it on me either). ]
::Also, am I moving in circles here, or do you think WikiProject Voting Systems is actually improving? ]

---

I removed this nonsense.

: ''One of the disadvantages of FPTP voting is also one of its advantages. Because each electoral district votes for its own representative, the elected candidate is held accountable by the voters. One argument is that such accountability helps to prevent fraudulent or corrupt behaviours by elected candidates. If one is perceived as incompetent, the people in the electoral district can easily replace him. In other words, the voters in each electoral district have full power over who they want to represent them.''

This has got ''nothing whatever'' to do with first past the post voting: it might be an argument for single-member electorates (which in turn may or may not use FPTP), but in this article it's plain silly.

] 16:37, 1 Jul 2004 (UTC)

:Although I agree that it doesn't serve much of a useful purpose, and that it is probably better removed, this argument is regularly used by supporters and beneficiaries of FPTP. The politically naïve tend to believe it. ] 00:20, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)

Then perhaps we should mention it in something like the terms you used above. A tricky one to word correctly - do you want to take a stab at it? (I have never heard this one used, but then no-one in this part uses FPTP: it's a non-issue.) ] 12:57, 2 Jul 2004 (UTC)

:As suggested I've revised the paragraph. I didn't want to go too far in destroying the argument, because it is, after all, a section on "advantages". We still have the FPTP in Canada, but it has recently received more scrutiny. The established parties have done very well, thank you, with it. They are very fond of majority governments which allow them to put through any policies they wish without effective opposition. Public reaction, especially from young voters, has been to not bother to vote since they feel that their vote does not matter. ] 04:48, 3 Jul 2004 (UTC)

== Reader confused ==

I'm commenting as a pure reader, as I don't have any experience about this type of electoral system nor I would know how to add to the matter.

Anyways, I think this page is totally incomprehensible. I don't have a clue about how the FPTP system works. Sorry if this sounds trollish but I'm sincere and willing to interact...

I haven't understood anything, and the example (choice of a capital city? WTF?) is very badly laid out. Please, could someone review/rewrite the example of FPTP election?

] 11:43, 2 Oct 2004 (UTC)

:I think the problem is that the example not only illustrates the procedure (which is so simple you may even have missed it); it tries to introduce immediately an illustration of what is wrong with it. There probably needs to be an immediate example. I too found the example confusing at first, and think it could be improved. The fact is that most elections are not to choose a place but a candidate, and I think it would make more immediate sense if the election was for people. Also, the sample election (and any real parliamentary election) has big numbers, which obscure meaning. I have created a much simpler example. ] 20:59, 18 Nov 2004 (UTC)

== Elections in Ancient Greece ==

Elections in Ancient Greece resembled First Post The Post elections in that there were only two candidates (Yes and No) and the candidate with the greatest number won.

] 10:20, 2004 Oct 4 (UTC)

:But didn't that automatically result in a majority every time? ] 06:55, 19 Apr 2005 (UTC)

== Unbelievable result in Manitoba. ==

In 1926, in Manitoba, the Conservatives got 42.2% of the vote and won no seats at all.

In 2004, after yet another loss to the Liberals, the Conservative are unconvinced about the need to replace First Past The Post.

The Conservatives should have their heads examined!

] 12:46, 2004 Oct 5 (UTC)

== Strong vs. weak government ==

A recent edit introduced this sentence:

:Because first-past-the-post is held to produce strong government (see below), it follows that those who prefer weak government (government unable to effectively introduce social change or legislative progress) might support first-past-the-post.

This doesn't make sense to me at all, but I don't know enough to correct it. Should it say that those who prefer weak government might ''not'' support first-past-the-post? Or that first-past-the-post is ''not'' held to produce strong government? Or is the sentence correct for reasons I don't understand&mdash;and if so, can someone knowledgeable explain it more clearly for the benefit of readers like me? Thanks]&mdash;] 19:02, 18 Nov 2004 (UTC)

I wrote the sentence, but managed to invert the intended meaning somehow. I have tried to reword it. ] 20:35, 18 Nov 2004 (UTC)

== Clean sweep in New Brunswick 1987. ==

The election result in New Brunswick, Canada, for 1987 was 55-0 a ].

This is surely not a guarantee of "strong government", but "over-strong" and potentially uncountable goverment.

By all means, have a voting system that rewards the winner with some extra seats, to give them a workable but not a huge lazy majority.

At the same time, ensure that some loyal opposition is represented in parliament too. That is the corollary of the desire for strong government.

The clean sweep 55-0 result in NB, if repeated, is liable to bring the institution of parliament into disrepute.

Some suggestions include:

* introduce IRV (preferential voting) which may change the result in a handful of those 55 goverment seats.

* elect some seats, say 20%( or 11 seats) by some kind of PR.

* adjust the proportion of PR seats in light of experience to get the right balance of strong government and strong opposition.

] 02:08, 2004 Nov 22 (UTC)

== Better terminology for FPTP ==

To clarify the distinction between Plurality and Majority, consider the following.

* Majority - more than 50% - First past the (winning) post.
* Plurality - more than any other - Leading at the turn.

] 10:30, 2004 Nov 24 (UTC)

== FPTP may be simplest system ==


Surely FPTP '''IS''' the simplest system.

But that does not mean that it is best.

Model T Fords are simple, but how many are made or seen today?

Simple, which may mean fewer moving parts, is often associated with low performanace. A jet engine in principle requires only one moving part, but a high performance jet engine has thousands of parts.

FPTP fails in a number of ways.
* does not ensure that the winning post is 51%
* fails voters who happen to be spread too thinly amongst districts.
* benefits voters who happen to be nicely concentrated amonst the districts.
* may tend to ensure strong governments, but may fail to ensure the equally important strong oppositions.

As for costs of elections, many costs are fixed costs, and vary according to the voting system chosen, for example the cost voter registration, printing ballot papers or arranging for postal votes.

] 03:08, 2004 Nov 27 (UTC)

] 03:08, 2004 Nov 27 (UTC)

:I take it this is a response to my addition of "Simplicity" to Advantages. These points don't seem to relate to the content of that section though. However, if there is a view that simplicity is a disadvantage *in itself* (rather than the cause of other, already cited disadvantages), then there should probably be an entry in Disadvantages too. I found the same thing when adding "Strong government": it's an advantage only if you value strong government. If, on the other hand, you are saying that the points I raised are NOT in general stated as advantages by any commentators, my entry should probably be removed. I am not an expert on political theory, just trying to add some missing neutrality to what seems an excessively partisan article. ] 16:19, 27 Nov 2004 (UTC)

==Why do we call it First Past the Post instead of Plurality?==
In the U.S., I most commonly hear it referred to as the Plurality voting system. ] 23:14, 11 Jan 2005 (UTC)

:In the UK, I've never heard that term, so First Past The Post is probably a better main name for historical and current purposes. It may justify a redirected entry, if there isn't one ] 09:46, 12 Jan 2005 (UTC)

:In the US, I've never heard FPTP except in online comparisons of voting methods. Besides, Syd1435 pointed out above (tersely) that FPTP doesn't even make sense as a name. It implies that the goal of the system is to get to a certain number of votes (like a majority), at which point the election is decided. But the fact is that candidates can (and often do) win with just a plurality, by getting more votes than any other candidate. It doesn't make sense to be "first" to get a plurality, and the "post" seems to move around!

:Also, "plurality" is a more concise term to use when comparing voting systems on Misplaced Pages. I think the page should be moved to "Plurality voting".

:] 16:48, May 13, 2005 (UTC)

== First past the post ==

I think first past th epost voteing scheme is alot fairer than the single transferable and proportional representation voting schemes.It is alot fairer than the others because it is the same as winning a game or a race for instance, you come first you win, unlike the others this is lot more straight forward and is easier to work out who gets the position.You don't have to split the moddle vote you just have to look at the scores and who ever gets the highest wins.The other voteing schemes share out your votes and then you wouyldn't be putting forward your own vision on who should win, In other words people could be twisting the votes in favour of someone else and to me that is cheating. It could be easily sabataged by someone who would like their choice to win and the person themselves could sabatage it, that's why the people should have that confidence that they are making a difference to the vote instead of not going to someone else. Would you like that to happen. by G Beddis

:Do you think the article gives a fair representation of the views for and against this system? ] 13:00, 19 Jan 2005 (UTC)

::I don't know enough about the issue to comment, but I just moved the "Advantages" section above the "Disadvantages" one. "Disadvantages" had been listed first, and to me, it seemed a little off-kilter to cite the negatives before the positives. After all, we say ''pros and cons'', not ''cons and pros''. ] 07:02, 19 Apr 2005 (UTC)

== FPTP not NPOV ==

:"First Past the Post" should not be the title of the article for the good and sufficient reason that it's not NPOV: it's a pejorative term used by those who onsider the method obsolete and think that discussing alternatives is a sensible thing to do. The article needs to be renamed "Plurality voting", with FPTP becoming a redirect. -- Anonymous, 02:00 June 15 (UTC).

From my comments above, you can tell that I agree, though I never thought of it being POV - my complaint so far was only that FPTP makes no sense as a name.

Anyway, are there any objections to moving the page to ]? ] 05:45, Jun 15, 2005 (UTC)

'''Object'''. I think it is far more commonly used outside policical theory. Also, I do not see it being used pejoratively in the UK; it is always discussed publicly, so far as I've seen, by those for and against, using that term (e.g. the British Conservative Party, who are firmly in favour: ). ] 08:09, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)

:I also object, though I think the misunderstanding may be a British/American one. I've seen a lot of British writing refer to "first past the post" as "first past the post". In the U.S., it seems only academics and reformers use "first past the post". "Winner take all" or "plurality" would be more common. Regardless, it seems fine if the British way of referring to it prevails. If this conversation is to persist, someone will have to explain why FPTP is "pejorative". -- ] 22:44, Jun 15, 2005 (UTC)

Move (and redirect) to Single-Member District Plurality, the formal name of the voting system. First-past-the-post, despite being more common outside of poli-sci circles, is a nickname and a description, not the formal name.] 12:58, 20 Jun 2005 (UTC)

* It's the same mathematical system when you're not voting for political candidates in districts. The article doesn't talk about the system much outside of the context of districts, though. Perhaps we need a split, with FPTP or SMDP talking about the large-scale political version, and Plurality talking about the voting theory aspects, independent of its implementation, and with the two articles linking to each other in the introduction. ] 02:44, Jun 21, 2005 (UTC)

I see the page was moved. Strange sort of consensus, it seems to me. Is that how it goes? A draw, so change the status quo? ] 2 July 2005 23:20 (UTC)

== Independent candidates ==

It struck me that, while First Past The Post may tend to foster dominant parties, it may also be the only system where independent candidates can transcend party politics and stand in their own right, being elected only local or moral issues. Accordingly, it may be the only system where party politics are not built in to the electoral system, since all other systems apply balances among a group of candidates or party, implicitly supporting the idea that party politics is desirable. But is this really the case? Do other systems exist where a group of voters can reject party politics and vote for an individual, and that potentially the entire elected body ''could'' be independent? Hoping to learn, ] 29 June 2005 14:19 (UTC)

Certainly there are. In fact, the only ] I know of that requires candiates to be in a party is ] (including all its variants). Look at the ] article if you want to learn what other systems there are.

In practice, ] is a moderately popular voting system that doesn't give much of a practical advantage to being in a party. ] elects its city council with STV, and generally, party affiliations are never even mentioned in the candidates' campaigns.

So Plurality isn't unique in this respect, and in fact Plurality does have a strategic advantage to being in a party: you want to hold a party primary to avoid ].

] 01:25, July 28, 2005 (UTC)

== Opening paragraph ==

In order to avoid getting into a revert war, I will instead here, object to changes which have been repeatedly applied, which infer a point of view and also destroy the meaning - even the sentence structure.

The change was:
When this system is in use at all levels of politics it usually results in a true two-party system, based on single seat district voting systems. However, the system of forming a governing government is also crucial; it is very common in former British colonies and is the single most commonly used system for election of parliaments ] based on FPTP voting districts. A thorough list is given below.

to:
When this system is in use at all levels of politics it may result in a two-party system, based on single seat district voting systems. However, the system of forming a government is also crucial. It is used in some former British colonies but is only used in 43 of the 191 countries in the United Nations. The system can elect a candidate who is opposed by a majority of voters.
based on FPTP voting districts. A thorough list is given below.

Overall, the author seems to have a very strong negative view of FPTP, and this reflects the choice of presentation of facts. The reason I watch this article in the first place is that it seemed to have been written by people who thought it was a lousy system, so I am alert to signs of this bias coming back.

Comment:
Sentence 1 ("When this..."): probably improved.
Sentence 2 ("However..."):
(a) changed "very common" to "it is used". Both points may be true, but it is much softened. Is it "very common"? If so, it should probably say so, or better still say "used in XXX% of...".
(b) changed "single most commonly used system for election of parliaments" to "only used in 43 of the 191 countries in the United Nations". How about combining these: "the single most commonly used system for election of parliaments, used by 43 of the 191 countries in the United Nations". This allows the reader to form their own view.
(c) added a completely new sentence "The system can elect a candidate who is opposed by a majority of voters." bang in the middle of this sentence, so it is no longer correct English. This at least should be fixed. In addition, why add this particular point? It is covered by "disadvantages". The selective presentation of facts is Point of View too: why not bring in advantages too if we're at it? "The system tends to produce stable and strong government but can elect a candidate who is opposed by a majority of voters." I don't see any need for this, as it is covered later.
Sentence 3 ("A thorough"): was isolated from the previous sentence, on which it depends for context.


Agree on the whole and will make appropriate changes, execpt how can it be the most common if it is only used by 43 nations? ] 06:54, 28 July 2005 (UTC)

"Most common" doesn't imply a majority (e.g. the most common is O+, which 38% of people have). But the trouble with summarising statistics is that it provides an opportunity to present selective facts. The table linked to in the article shows that this method is used by

(a) In the group "independent states and semi-autonomous territories of the world which have direct parliamentary elections"
* 33% of countries (highest; list PR 32%)
* 45% by population (highest; list PR 23%)

(b) in the group "established democracies"
* 30% of countries (not highest; list PR 42%)
* 71% by population (list PR 9%)

This doesn't present the United Nations data, so I don't know whether, among the United Nations data set, it is highest by country or not.

This data could be used to write

* List PR is used by 42% of established democracies, with this method used by only 30%
* Almost three quarters (71%) of the world's population living in established democracies use this method, with a mere 9% using list PR

I wouldn't write either of these, but you get the gist. For now, I think the article has returned close to balance, though is it in danger of breaching ]? Not sure. I do think the "only" in "is only used in 43 of the 191 countries in the United Nations" is unnecessary and implies bias in the presentation. We have the numbers, let people decide what they will. I will remove the "only" at this point.

But there remains another serious problem. Originally the text went "single most commonly used system for election of parliaments based on FPTP voting districts." where was the URL above. Unfortunately it now reads "It is used in some former British colonies but is". However the URL, which is a valuable source, does not relate to the sentence in which it is used. I will leave this for now, and hope someone else can find a way to resolve this; I don't think removing the source reference is a good plan, however. I'll return to this if it doesn't get resolved somehow. Maybe picking data from the source would be better, rather than the unattributed UN data. ] 09:04, 28 July 2005 (UTC)

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To-do list for Plurality voting: edit·history·watch·refresh· Updated 2024-04-19

  • Sections that are really long and choppy are tagged stubs and need rewrites
  • Clear up inconsistencies in use of plurality voting, explain broad and narrow definitions.
  • Contrast with majority voting, explain relation to majoritarian/semi-proportional/non-proportional representation
  • Add a Voting system criteria section, as found in many other voting system articles
  • in-line citations rather than just a list of supposed references at the bottom of the article

Archives
Archive 1Archive 2

This article was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment, between 13 January 2022 and 16 April 2022. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): Samarodeh0, Liammarkhauser, LoganM123 (article contribs).

Isn't "two-round voting" much more common?

E.g., mayoral elections in Germany use it ... --User:Haraldmmueller 10:16, 18 September 2020 (UTC)

I don't think either one is much more common than the other. –Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 00:58, 22 February 2024 (UTC)

No mentioning of "election inversion" - why?

Similar question to Talk:First-past-the-post voting: Election inversion is a standard term; and a phenomenon mainly occurring with FPTP (albeit not only: Rounding procedures can produce them also in proportional systems). Why isn't this even mentioned here, let alone discussed - see of course 2000 and 2016 in the US (Michael Geruso, Dean Spears, Ishaana Talesara. 2019. "Inversions in US Presidential Elections: 1836-2016." NBER paper, slides by Nicholas R. Miller). It would nicely fit into the "wasted votes" section, because different amounts of "waste" for each selection directly imply the possibility of election inversion. --User:Haraldmmueller 08:20, 18 September 2020 (UTC)

It's not included because nobody's added it. Feel free to add it! Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 00:57, 22 February 2024 (UTC)

Similar articles

Plurality (voting) and this article seem to have same topic. Suggest merge. HudecEmil (talk) 19:36, 12 October 2022 (UTC)

Merge proposal

I am proposing Plurality (voting) be merged into Plurality voting. The articles have overlapping information and are about the same subject. Plurality voting is the longer article, is slightly higher quality, and receives more monthly pageviews (Plurality (voting) versus Plurality voting). -- Primium (talk) 17:45, 13 January 2024 (UTC)

@HudecEmil: Previously brought this up. -- Primium (talk) 17:50, 13 January 2024 (UTC)
@Primium the two topics are different, but the article you've linked is badly-named; I think we definitely don't want an article called "Plurality (voting)" that's different from "Plurality voting".
Plurality just means "the biggest share" (in British English, this is called a relative majority). It contrasts with a majority (in British English, an absolute majority), whch is a fraction bigger than 50%. Plurality (voting) could either be kept, turned into a Wiktionary entry, or merged into the majority page.
On the other hand, I just found out the page on first-past-the-post voting exists. That page is 100% a duplicate, since these are two names for the exact same system, and they need a merge. Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 02:32, 7 February 2024 (UTC)
Happy with a merge, but I think it should be to First-past-the-post voting (or simply First-past-the-post), which is the WP:COMMONNAME. Number 57 16:11, 24 February 2024 (UTC)
Google n-grams seems to suggest plurality is slightly more popular but I have no strong opinion on this. Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 03:15, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
Technically, there is a slight difference; first-past-the-post is the single-member version of plurality voting, which also includes multi-member versions. So merging into First-past-the-post doesn't make sense. Either merge into Plurality voting or shrink Plurality voting down to an overview of the different types of plurality voting, with a referral to First-past-the-post for a more detailed article on single-member plurality.174.67.226.163 (talk) 22:53, 9 March 2024 (UTC)
  • Oppose
Just, I oppose it. It's just obvious why
Cheers, Arotparaarms (talk) 15:53, 28 February 2024 (UTC)
Oppose for reasons stated above: it is a distinct concept, and in particularly common use among political-science discussion in the USA (it's far more common of a term). A merge would add confusion, not remove it. Denzera (talk) 14:51, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
Oh, I also oppose it but I didn't have a concrete reason, so I guess I now have a solid reason, and it's interesting how it's a common term across the globe. Arotparaarms (talk) 15:38, 12 March 2024 (UTC)
Moved to Talk:Plurality voting § Merge from FPTP

Merge from FPTP

FPTP and Plurality are the same system. FPTP should be merged into this article with a redirect. Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 17:21, 12 March 2024 (UTC)

  • Oppose FPTP is a particular case of plurality (and the most popular). What we need is to rewrite the lead to reflect this fact. --Викидим (talk) 06:18, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
    1. This is asking about whether plurality (voting) should be merged with Plurality voting (which are two completely different things).
    2. FPTP and plurality are synonyms.
    Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 17:23, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
    Many authors would disagree with your #2. Plurality voting, in many sources at least, includes such non-FPTP systems as two-round system and alternative vote. Викидим (talk) 17:41, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
    I'd like to see a source for that, because I've never seen any of those systems called "plurality", but if correct, everything in this article would need to be merged into FPTP and this article rewritten from scratch (because it only talks about FPTP right now). –Maximum Limelihood Estimator 17:43, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
    In general FPTP = SMP (single-member plurality a.k.a. simple plurality). I can point to Maurice Duverger of the Duverger Law fame. A brief summary of his beliefs can be found in not-very-authoritative source here: on p. 331 ("Plurality system with additional conditions"). Sorry, I do not have Duverger's book handy and cannot check his terminology immediately. This is not the only PoV; many authors use FPTP and plurality system synonymously and drop the single-member/simple qualifiers - but many retain them. Викидим (talk) 18:25, 13 April 2024 (UTC)

A brief summary of his beliefs can be found in not-very-authoritative source here: on p. 331 ("Plurality system with additional conditions"). Sorry, I do not have Duverger's book handy and cannot check his terminology immediately.

  1. The text doesn't seem to quote Duverger himself directly, it just talks about Duverger's law.
  2. The text is, as mentioned, a not-very-authoritative source.
  3. The text also seems to be confusing the use of a single non-transferable vote in the first round of a runoff (which can arguably be called "plurality voting") with the two-round runoff as a whole, which is not a kind of plurality voting.

This is not the only PoV; many authors use FPTP and plurality system synonymously and drop the single-member/simple qualifiers—but many retain them.

The synonymous usage seems to be by far the more common use in social choice theory. With regards to the other two terms you mentioned:
  • "Single-member" means the combination of plurality with single-member districts, i.e. local elections. The term "single-member" is used to distinguish plurality voting from its multi-member (multi-winner) variant, called SNTV.
  • "Simple plurality" has the same meaning as in "simple majority" (which means a majority, ignoring abstentions). In other words, it's a plurality of votes, ignoring abstentions: if the largest number of votes is for "abstain", this option is ignored, rather than leading to a do-over election. –Maximum Limelihood Estimator 15:37, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
IMHO for authors that consider plurality synonymous with FPTP, the qualifiers "single-member", "simple" would be excessive and unnecessary, their very use underscores that differences do exist. SNTV seems to me like one more plurality system. Викидим (talk) 19:09, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
SNTV is one of several minor variants of FPTP/Plurality, yes, which is why it has a separate article. But as the article itself says in the opening, SNTV is a kind of FPTP.
IMHO for authors that consider plurality synonymous with FPTP, the qualifiers "single-member", "simple" would be excessive and unnecessary,
Yes, they would be, because this is how everyone understands the term "Plurality"! If the term was this ambiguous, nobody would use it; they'd just say FPTP. As mentioned, the current article says nothing about these other systems, because nobody uses the term plurality like this.
In all my years reading the social choice literature I have never seen anyone use "plurality" to mean "instant-runoff voting", and the source you provided is at best ambiguous as to whether it's even doing that. –Maximum Limelihood Estimator 19:54, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
I can easily agree with you on instant runoff. For the purposes of this discussion, it is enough to establish that FPTP and "plurality" are not the same thing (SNTV does that), and I am way out of my depth to provide any suggestions on where the evolution of Plurality voting should go. Викидим (talk) 19:58, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
For the purposes of this discussion, it is enough to establish that FPTP and "plurality" are not the same thing (SNTV does that),
OK, so how about :
1. Redirecting "FPTP" to "Plurality" (which is the most common use), and then
2. Putting up a "For the multi-winner variant of plurality, see SNTV".
I am way out of my depth to provide any suggestions on where the evolution of Plurality voting should go.
That's fair. –Maximum Limelihood Estimator 20:05, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
I am no expert on the issue. However, (1) FPTP is a colloquial, but very well-known - and easy to understand - term. Few people would understand the plurality correctly. Correspondingly, the sheer volume of information on FPTP is much larger than that on other forms of plurality combined. So, if redirecting, it would be expedient and historically correct, to go other way, explaining the non-FPTP plurality as a deviation from (or an improvement of) the simple one. (2) I do not think this would be the best approach. Instead, this article can become an overview of the voting systems that are rightly or wrongly described as plurality systems, with a list of actual use. (3) The main dichotomy, IMO, is between the proportional / plurality systems, and this might be a good place to expound on their differences. Викидим (talk) 20:46, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
So, I checked on Google Scholar to be extremely sure. Of the first 20 hits for "plurality voting", 19 were about first-past-the-post in a single-winner context, and one was a false positive (it picked up "plural voting" instead of "plurality voting").
To make sure this wasn't just a technical term, I googled "plurality voting". I took the first 5 reliable sources I came across. (I judged one source unreliable, but it agreed as well). Of those 5 pages, 4 defined plurality voting as a single-winner election method (i.e. defined it as FPTP), those being Britannica, Ballotpedia, and two pages from Moravian and Georgetown universities. The 5th was this page. –Sincerely, A Lime 21:58, 13 May 2024 (UTC)
Opppose
Plurality voting is a broader concept, which includes:
- SNTV - a multi winner system with very different results than FPTP
- bloc voting, general ticket, the multi-winner version with similar effects. Because of it's widespread use, FPTP deserves a seperate article which doesn't include these
- limited voting, approval voting (of course, not PAV, and of course, even single winner is not often called plurality voting since it would be confusing)
it is important to contrast plurality voting to:
-majority voting - usually IRV and TRS would be considered so as they have the principle of having next rounds if there is no majority. otherwise, majority and plurality are similar rules, so highlight that not everywhere they have the same linguistic usage - "relative/absolute/simple majority/plurality
-proportional representation, completely different principle Rankedchoicevoter (talk) 07:08, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
That said, if you're right, we'll need to merge this page into FPTP instead of the other way around, and then turn this page into a disambiguation directing people to choose SNTV or FPTP. –Maximum Limelihood Estimator 16:39, 24 April 2024 (UTC)

@Rankedchoicevoter the term "Majority voting" in social choice theory has a much more restrictive meaning (see Condorcet winner criterion, often called majority-rule in the social choice/voting theory/welfare economics literature). IRV and two-round would be considered to fall under the sequential-loser or core support umbrella instead, alongside plurality.

Approval voting would never be considered a variant on plurality voting. (On the other hand, TRS might actually be counted as a variant of FPP/Plurality.)

"Plurality" without qualification excludes all the systems you mentioned. FPTP also includes SNTV (the proportional-representation form of FPTP). The phrases FPTP and Plurality voting are synonymous. –Maximum Limelihood Estimator 23:29, 23 April 2024 (UTC)

in addition to SNTV, there is also Misplaced Pages's "plurality block voting", the multi-winner plurality system known as block voting, as non-FPTP plurality election system.
name of article should be changed to Plurality electing, covering both FPTP and Block voting.
the single X voting is shared with FPTP and SNTV but effect is different due to way votes are counted and seats filled.
FPTP is not voting system -- it is an election system.
SNTV is not voting system -- it is an election system.
for both, Single voting is the voting system.
Single voting can be ranked vote or X vote.
Ranked voting is not used in plurality election system.
plurality implies taking votes as first placed, and just giving seat or seats to whoever is first whether with majority or not.
ranked votes implies use of quota and electing on a scientific basis - under IRV, AV or STV.
it is complicated but distinguishing between voting systems in the district contest, and the vote count (election system) -- how seats are filled -- is important to clear communication.
a third level is the overall result - how the chamber is composed. (majoritarian IRV district contests may result in a minority government; proportional STV district results may result in a minority government overall even if a party has majority of the vote or visa versa, because districts vary in voter numbers and voter turnout rate.)
actually there are two more levels -
- whether or not votes are transferred in the district contest,
and
-whether or not top-up levelling seats are added after district seats are allocated. 2604:3D09:8880:11E0:F53A:7827:BD1F:42F0 (talk) 22:29, 12 December 2024 (UTC)

Terminology sources

Trying to list the works that can be used as references for terminology. Feel free to expand or object.

Викидим (talk) 01:54, 24 April 2024 (UTC)

It looks like Rosen (1974) says:

Bloc voting and plurality voting are, respectively, the multi-member and single-member forms of the first-past-the-post class of systems.

Nice source, I like it :) –Sincerely, A Lime 21:45, 13 May 2024 (UTC)
Good. I have no deep knowledge, so any agreement on the sources would work for me. It is clear to me by now that the terminology varies across the researchers; this is not an unusual situation for many fields of study. We can simply accept someone's terminology (with attribution), and mention other versions. Ideally, we should find a source that acknowledges the differences and attributes them to particular researchers. While writing Zigzag Moderne (about an architectural style the very existence of which is debated), I was lucky to have such a source. Let's hope we can find one here, too. Викидим (talk) 23:32, 13 May 2024 (UTC)
That sounds like the other way way around. Plurality voting is the general type, bloc voting a multi-member version. I added sources in the article supporting that view. I am aware of the wide range of use for these terms and when it gets more rigorous, these have to be clarified, but first-past-the-post is same as SMP, and it would add additional confusion to say otherwise (it's in the name "first", at least that part makes sense, even if there is no post...). Rankedchoicevoter (talk) 09:07, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
As I have said, I am OK with any arrangement that would state something like "X defines PV as a subset of FPTP" (or the reverse). It seems to me that there is no consistency here, so we need to attribute the definitions. Викидим (talk) 09:39, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
"First" can also just mean the beginning of a list, e.g. "the first 100 people to sign up will receive a discount".
FWIW, I agree that I don't like the use of the term "FPTP" as including SNTV; if I wanted to say SNTV, I'd say SNTV. It seems like the vast majority of papers nowadays use "Plurality" and "FPTP" interchangeably, but some older sources try to maintain a distinction; but this is inconsistent. –Sincerely, A Lime 20:44, 14 May 2024 (UTC)
If this is the case, we need to reflect it. It would be great to find a source that reflects this change. Викидим (talk) 00:15, 15 May 2024 (UTC)
A good example of people using "Plurality" quite differently from how most people use it today is Merrill and Nagel 1987, who use it to mean any voting rule that elects the candidate(s) with the highest score(s). (Which makes ~no sense to me, because every voting rule does that.) –Sincerely, A Lime 02:18, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
(From what I can tell everyone else agrees, because I was unable to find any other papers using this meaning.) –Sincerely, A Lime 02:19, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
It makes perfect sense to me. The proportional voting does not elect candidates with most of the votes, it elects a particular number of representatives from party lists, while parties decide themselves (ahead of the elections) who the representatives will be. Merrill and Nagel are not alone in the main (top-level) classification split being proportional vs. plurality. These researchers treat plurality a a generic case, with further details like FPTP vs. multi-candidate districts. Викидим (talk) 03:36, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
Well, the thing is, you can define proportional representation as being plurality rules in that sense too... see highest averages method: Seats are awarded to the candidate with the highest value of votes seats {\displaystyle {\frac {\text{votes}}{\text{seats}}}} (or a slightly different ratio for different divisor methods).
No matter what you do, it's still a "plurality" rule :)
I think it's supposed to contrast with a majority in the sense that, if no candidate wins a majority, there is no winner. Balloting continues until a candidate achieves a majority. Most parliamentary officers are elected this way (e.g. the Speaker of the House). –Sincerely, A Lime 04:00, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
All I am trying to say is that a significant number of researchers appear to split the voting methods into two broad groups: proportional vs. plurality, with further subdivision happening on the inside of these two classes. Whether they are right or wrong is immaterial, IMHO: we simply need to reflect this PoV (part of the mainstream) somewhere. To me, this article is a convenient place to do so: if some expert takes an opinion that "plurality" is a synonym of FPTP, we can mention their position here and write down the details in the FPTP article. If, however, an expert thinks that plurality is the opposite of proportionality, their opinion belongs here. Викидим (talk) 04:56, 26 May 2024 (UTC)
Right, what I'm saying is I don't think any expert defines "plurality" as just meaning "not proportional".
In any case I'd give this glossary as a decent citation (where it defines "plurality" to mean FPTP).
http://ndl.ethernet.edu.et/bitstream/123456789/77460/1/21.pdf#page=138 –Sincerely, A Lime 16:51, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
(1) I am happy with this text. (2) However, it also says that the multiple-candidates election is also plurality, so plurality is not equal to FPTP. (3) There are plenty of sources that are published in peer-review journals and books from reputed publishers that contain very clear language of opposition between PR and PV, like "plurality vs proportional", etc. (4) Therefore, there is no single definition that we can present to the reader, IMHO. Ideally, it would be great to find a review of contradictions in definitions. Викидим (talk) 18:12, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
Here is one of these sources with very clear language: on page 3. Викидим (talk) 18:14, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
Interesting, thanks. I'd never seen that before. I think this explains the disagreement and confusion:
1. Some (particularly older) sources, mostly in political science, define "plurality voting" to mean winner-take-all representation.
2. Other (especially newer) sources, including most of social choice, define "plurality" as an abbreviation of the term first-preference plurality.
In that case, is it reasonable to make "plurality voting" a disambiguation page that explains these two common meanings? cc @Rankedchoicevoter Closed Limelike Curves (talk) 18:43, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
My goal here is twofold:
  1. I am sure there is a conflict of definitions even in the expert literature. We need to reflect this conflict in our encyclopedia, so the readers can understand better both other articles in Misplaced Pages and the external literature
  2. In order to achieve #1, we should not merge plurality and FPTP, IMHO
Викидим (talk) 00:48, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
we should note that most accounts simply ignore block voting although it is and was common.
so when they say plurality is FPTP, they do not mean to leave out block voting, they just do.
candidate with most votes wins under any system
"plurality" means votes as first placed are not transferred, and no more rounds of voting take place - the one (or multiple candidates) with plurality wins.
in FPTP (1 winner) or Block voting (multiple winners) voters can cast as many votes as the number of seats to fill.
ranked votes imply transfers but only if necessary, in STV or IRV.
two-round system implies an additional round of voting but only if necessary.
SNTV is form of single voting (one vote but multiple winners)
STV is form of single voting (one vote but multiple winners, and voter may or must mark back-up preferences) 2604:3D09:8880:11E0:F53A:7827:BD1F:42F0 (talk) 22:42, 12 December 2024 (UTC)
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