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Majority

Majority denotes the value or group that comprises more than half of a total. In decision-making, it is the threshold required to approve a proposal, select a leader, or allocate a seat. A majority can be defined in several ways: a simple (or relative) majority requires more than half of the votes cast; an absolute majority requires more than half of all eligible votes, regardless of turnout; a plurality is the largest share but may not exceed half; a supermajority is a higher threshold, such as two-thirds or three-fifths, used for particular actions.

In political and organizational contexts, decisions are often made by majority rule. If a party or coalition

Other uses of the term appear in law, jurisprudence, and statistics. Juries or panels may require a

holds
a
majority
of
seats,
it
can
typically
pass
legislation,
form
a
government,
or
control
committees.
When
no
clear
majority
exists,
a
minority
government
or
a
coalition
government
may
form.
Votes
for
executives,
referenda,
or
constitutional
changes
may
require
different
majorities
depending
on
legal
or
constitutional
rules,
and
these
requirements
can
shape
bargaining
and
governance
strategies.
majority
verdict
in
some
jurisdictions,
while
others
demand
unanimity.
In
corporate
governance,
voting
shares
or
members
may
determine
control
by
majority
approval.
In
statistics
and
everyday
language,
majority
denotes
the
dominant
position
or
the
majority
of
observations,
meaning
more
than
half
of
the
considered
group.
Overall,
the
concept
of
majority
underpins
many
democratic
and
organizational
decision
processes.