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Singlemember

Single-member districts, also referred to as single-member constituencies, are electoral districts that elect exactly one representative to a legislative body. Voters in each district cast a single vote for individual candidates, and the candidate who receives the most votes wins the seat. In many countries the winner is decided by simple plurality, while some systems require a majority and use run-off elections or ranked-choice ballots to determine the winner.

Single-member districts are a hallmark of first-past-the-post and similar plurality-based electoral systems. They are widely used

The use of single-member districts shapes political strategy, accountability, and policy outcomes. They can promote geographic

in
countries
such
as
the
United
States
(House
of
Representatives),
the
United
Kingdom
(Parliament),
Canada
(House
of
Commons),
and
India
(Lok
Sabha).
By
contrast,
proportional
representation
and
multi-member
districts
allocate
seats
to
reflect
party
vote
shares
rather
than
geographic
districts,
influencing
party
systems
and
representation
differently.
representation
and
stable
party
competition,
but
may
also
magnify
regional
disparities
or
underrepresent
smaller
parties.
Boundary
drawing,
or
gerrymandering,
can
affect
electoral
results
without
changing
national
vote
shares.
Some
jurisdictions
implement
alternative
voting
methods
within
single-member
districts,
such
as
instant-runoff
or
ranked-choice
voting,
to
ensure
the
winner
has
broader
support.