Home

Plurality

Plurality is a term used in voting theory to describe a method in which the winner is the candidate who receives more votes than any other candidate, but not necessarily a majority of all votes. This contrasts with a majority requirement, where a candidate must win more than 50 percent. Plurality voting is commonly associated with first-past-the-post systems used in single-member districts, where each voter selects one candidate and the candidate with the largest share of votes wins.

In multi-candidate races, a candidate can win with only a plurality of the vote if no candidate

To address these issues, some jurisdictions use runoff elections, where top candidates face a second round

In linguistics, plurality refers to grammatical number indicating more than one entity, as in the distinction

reaches
a
majority.
For
example,
in
a
three-c
candidate
race,
percentages
of
40%,
35%,
and
25%
would
still
result
in
the
40%
candidate
winning.
This
outcome
can
lead
to
vote-splitting,
where
the
presence
of
multiple
candidates
fragments
support
and
can
affect
the
overall
representativeness
of
the
result.
Proponents
cite
its
simplicity,
quick
results,
and
stability
in
two-party
systems,
while
critics
note
that
plurality
rules
can
yield
winners
who
do
not
enjoy
majority
support
and
can
distort
the
parliamentary
or
policy
mandate.
if
no
candidate
achieves
a
required
threshold,
or
adopt
ranked-choice
voting,
which
can
transfer
votes
to
preferences.
Others
employ
proportional
representation
to
align
legislative
seats
with
overall
vote
shares
more
closely.
The
concept
of
plurality
also
appears
outside
electoral
systems,
referring
more
generally
to
the
largest
count
among
competing
categories.
between
singular
and
plural
forms.