[go: nahoru, domu]

Jump to content

Parallel voting: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m v2.04b - Bot T18 CW#553 - Fix errors for CW project (<nowiki> tags)
(41 intermediate revisions by 22 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{short description|Mixed electoral system}}
{{short description|Mixed electoral system}}
{{confuse|Mixed-member proportional representation|Additional member system}}
{{confuse|Mixed-member proportional representation|Additional member system|Majority bonus system}}
{{electoral systems}}In [[political science]], '''parallel''' '''voting''' or [[Linear combination|'''superposition''']] refers to the use of two or more [[Electoral system|electoral systems]] to elect different members of a legislature. More precisely, an electoral system is a superposition if it is a mixture of at least two tiers, which do not interact with each other in any way; one part of a legislature is elected using one method, while another part is elected using a different method, with all voters participating in both. Thus, the final results can be found by calculating the results for each system separately based on the votes alone, then adding them together. A system is called fusion (no to be confused with [[Electoral fusion in the United States|electoral fusion]]) or [[Majority bonus system|majority bonus]], another independent mixture of two system but without two tiers. Superposition (parallel voting) is also not the same as "[[Coexistence (electoral systems)|coexistence]]", which when different districts in the same election use different systems. Superposition, fusion and coexistence are distinct from dependent [[Mixed electoral system|mixed electoral systems]] like [[Mixed-member proportional representation|compensatory]] (corrective) and conditional systems.
{{electoral systems}}
'''Parallel voting''' is a type of [[mixed electoral system]] in which representatives are voted into a single chamber using two or more different systems, most often [[first-past-the-post voting]] (FPTP) with [[party-list proportional representation]] (PR).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Parallel — |url=https://aceproject.org/main/english/es/ese01.htm |access-date=2022-04-21 |website=aceproject.org}}</ref> It is the most common form of [[Mixed-member majoritarian representation|mixed member majoritarian representation]] (MMM), which is why these terms are often used synonymously with each other. In some countries, parallel voting is known as the '''supplementary member''' (SM) system, while in academic literature it is sometimes called the '''superposition''' method within mixed systems.


Most often, parallel voting involves combining a [[winner-take-all system]] with [[party-list proportional representation]] (PR).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Parallel — |url=https://aceproject.org/main/english/es/ese01.htm |access-date=2022-04-21 |website=aceproject.org}}</ref> While [[first-preference plurality]] with PR is the most common pairing in parallel voting, many other combinations are possible.
Parallel voting, as a form of mixed member majoritarian ([[Semi-proportional representation|semi-proportional]]) representation is used in the election of national parliaments as well as local governments in various places such as [[Japan]], [[Taiwan]], [[Lithuania]], [[Russia]], and [[Argentina]]. It is distinct from the mixed election system known as [[mixed-member proportional representation]] (MMP) or the [[additional member system]] (AMS). Under MMP/AMS, district seats are filled and the party vote determines what proportional share of seats each party will receive in the legislature, through "topping up" the party's district seats. Under parallel voting, the election of the two groups of members are not connected in any way, except that they will serve in the same [[Legislative chamber|chamber]].


While FPTP with PR is the most common pairing in parallel voting, many other combinations are possible. The proportion of list seats compared to total seats ranges widely; for example 30% in [[Taiwan]], 37.5% in [[Japan]] and 68.7% in [[Armenia]].<ref>Reynolds et al (2008), ''Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook'', Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 104</ref>
The proportion of list seats compared to total seats ranges widely; for example 30% in Taiwan, 37.5% in Japan and 68.7% in [[Armenia]].<ref>Reynolds et al (2008), ''Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook'', Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 104</ref> Parallel voting is used in both national parliaments and local governments in [[Italy]], [[Taiwan]], [[Lithuania]], [[Russia]], [[Argentina]], and other countries, making it among the world's most popular electoral systems.{{Cn|date=August 2024}}


== Definitions ==
== Definition ==
In parallel voting, voters cast two (or more) votes, one for each method the system contains.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022|reason=Do the votes have to be separate? Are systems with a [[mixed single vote]] like the one in Italy's [[Rosatellum]] law not called parallel?}} However, these votes do not interact in any way: the vote in one method has no effect on the calculation of seats in the other methods.
Although the terms are often applied to the same systems, the terms mixed-member majoritarian representation and parallel voting mean different things.


=== Confusion and conflation ===
Parallel voting may also use two proportional components, or it may use one [[Semi-proportional representation|semi-proportional]] and one proportional component (e.g. SNTV and PR used in Japan). For this reason parallel voting is not always mixed-member majoritarian. Some mixed-member majoritarian systems use some interaction (compensation) between two tiers (e.g. Hungary or South Korea), which parallel voting does not do.
Under the most common form of parallel voting, a portion of seats in the [[legislature]] are filled by the [[Single-member district|single-member]] [[First-past-the-post voting|first-preference plurality]] method (FPP), while others are filled by [[proportional representation]].<ref name="rc332">Royal Commission on Electoral Systems (1986), ''Report of the Royal Commission on the Electoral System: towards a better democracy'', Wellington N.Z.: Government Printing, pg. 33.</ref> This sometimes leads to a [[hypercorrection]] that attempts to limit the term parallel voting to refer only to mixtures of first-past-the-post and proportional representation. Parallel voting can use other systems besides FPP, and can have any mixture of [[Winner-take-all system|winner-take-all]], [[Semi-proportional representation|semi-proportional]], and proportional components.


Although the two are often mistakenly [[Conflation|conflated]], [[mixed-member majoritarian representation]] and parallel voting refer to two different things. Parallel voting refers to a ''rule'' for computing each party's representation in a legislature, which involves two voting systems operating in parallel, with one being layered ([[Superposition|superimposed]]) on top of the other. By contrast, mixed-member majoritarian representation refers to the ''results'' of the system, i.e. the system retains the advantage that some parties parties get in the [[Winner-take-all system|winner-take-all]] side of the system.
Other mixed-member majoritarian systems, such as that used in Italy (''[[Italian electoral law of 2017|Rosatellum]]''), use a single vote, which makes them different from parallel voting even if they use some of the same sub-methods (superposition) as parallel voting.


For this reason, parallel voting is not always mixed-member majoritarian. For example, parallel voting may use a two proportional systems like STV and list-PR and then it would not be mixed-member majoritarian, and a majority bonus system (which is not the same as parallel voting) may also be considered mixed majoritarian. In addition, some mixed-member majoritarian systems are not parallel, in that they allow for interaction (limited compensation) between the two components, for example this is the case in South Korea and Mexico. In South Korea, the hybrid of parallel voting and seat linkage compensation, being between the MMP and MMM type of representation has been called mixed-member semi-proportional representation as well.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022|reason=Do the votes have to be separate? Are systems with a [[mixed single vote]] like the one in Italy's [[Rosatellum]] law not called parallel?}}
Parallel voting is not to be confused with electoral systems where ''de facto'' two or more systems are used in "parallel" because by default, [[party-list proportional representation]] would be used, but the districts are created in a way that some have only a single seat. In this case, unlike in parallel voting, each voter have only one vote and their vote would count only in their district (unless [[Leveling seat|levelling seats]] were also used).


Unlike [[mixed-member proportional representation]], where party lists are used to achieve an overall proportional result in the legislature, under parallel voting, proportionality is confined only to the list seats. Therefore, a party that secured, say, 5% of the vote will have only 5% of the ''list'' seats, and not 5% of all the seats in the legislature.
==Procedure==
Under the most common form of parallel voting, a portion of seats in the [[legislature]] are filled by the [[First-past-the-post voting|first-past-the-post method]] (FPTP/SMP), meaning each district elects one member, and the candidate with the most votes in the single round election wins the seat. Alternatives include using the [[two-round system]] (TRS), in which case the top two candidates participate in a runoff election if no candidate received more than 50% of votes in the first round, or multi-member district systems such as [[Single non-transferable vote|SNTV]] or [[Plurality block voting|block voting]]. Other seats are filled via a [[Party-list proportional representation|list PR system]] based on party list votes, with parties often needing to have polled a certain [[Electoral threshold|threshold]], typically a small percentage, in order to achieve any representation (as is also common in many proportional systems). Any supplementary seats won by a party are usually filled from an ordered list of nominated candidates,<ref name=rc33>Royal Commission on Electoral Systems (1986), ''Report of the Royal Commission on the Electoral System: towards a better democracy'', Wellington N.Z.: Government Printing, pg. 33.</ref> but [[open list]]

In parallel voting, voters cast two (or more) ballots for each type of method the system contains but these votes have no effect on the calculation of seats in the other methods. If the combination of FPTP and list PR is used, voters cat these votes at the same time. If a two-round system is used, voters cast their party list vote in the first round, and a second round is only held in districts where no candidate achieved a majority in the first round among votes for local candidates. Occasionally a system does not allow some voters to cast both constituency and party-list votes, for example non-residents might not have a geographic constituency and therefore may only vote for party lists.{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}

Unlike [[mixed-member proportional representation]], where party lists are used to achieve an overall proportional result in the legislature, under parallel voting, proportionality is confined only to the list seats. Therefore, a party that secured, say, 5% of the vote will have only 5% of the list seats, and not 5% of all the seats in the legislature.


== Advantages and disadvantages ==
== Advantages and disadvantages ==
Line 28: Line 23:
The major critique of parallel systems is that they cannot guarantee overall proportionality. Large parties can win very large majorities, disproportionate to their percentage vote.
The major critique of parallel systems is that they cannot guarantee overall proportionality. Large parties can win very large majorities, disproportionate to their percentage vote.


Parallel voting systems allow smaller parties that cannot win individual elections to secure at least some representation in the legislature; however, unlike in a proportional system they will have a substantially smaller delegation than their share of the total vote. This is seen by advocates of proportional systems to be better than elections using only first-past-the-post, but still unfair towards to constituents of smaller parties. If there is also a threshold for list seats, parties which are too small to reach the threshold are unable to achieve any representation, unless they have a very strong base in certain constituencies to gain individual seats.
Parallel voting systems allow smaller parties that cannot win individual elections to secure at least some representation in the legislature; however, unlike in a proportional system they will have a substantially smaller delegation than their share of the total vote. This is seen by advocates of proportional systems to be better than elections using only first-past-the-post, but still unfair towards constituents of smaller parties. If there is also a threshold for list seats, parties which are too small to reach the threshold are unable to achieve any representation, unless they have a very strong base in certain constituencies to gain individual seats.


Smaller parties are still disadvantaged as the larger parties still predominate. Voters of smaller parties may tactically vote for candidates of larger parties to avoid wasting their constituency vote. If the smaller party close to the threshold may refrain from voting for their preferred party in favour of a larger party to avoid wasting their list vote as well. In countries where there is one dominant party and a divided opposition, the proportional seats may be essential for allowing an effective opposition.
Smaller parties are still disadvantaged as the larger parties still predominate. Voters of smaller parties may tactically vote for candidates of larger parties to avoid wasting their constituency vote. If the smaller party close to the threshold may refrain from voting for their preferred party in favour of a larger party to avoid wasting their list vote as well. In countries where there is one dominant party and a divided opposition, the proportional seats may be essential for allowing an effective opposition.


Those who favour majoritarian systems argue that supplementary seats allocated proportionally increases the chances that no party received a majority in an assembly, leading to [[Minority government|minority]] of [[Coalition government|coalition governments]].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}; the largest parties may need to rely on the support of smaller ones in order to form a government. Those who favour proportional representation see this as an advantage as parties may not govern alone, but have to compromise. It is also argued that parallel voting does not lead to the degree of fragmentation found in party systems under pure forms of [[proportional representation]].<ref name="reynolds112">Reynolds et al (2008), ''Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook'', Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 112</ref>
Those who favour majoritarian systems argue that supplementary seats allocated proportionally increases the chances that no party will receive a majority in an assembly, leading to [[Minority government|minority]] or [[Coalition government|coalition governments]].{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}; the largest parties may need to rely on the support of smaller ones in order to form a government. Those who favour proportional representation see this as an advantage as parties may not govern alone, but have to compromise. It is also argued that parallel voting does not lead to the degree of fragmentation found in party systems under pure forms of [[proportional representation]].<ref name="reynolds112">Reynolds et al (2008), ''Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook'', Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 112</ref>


=== Two types of representatives ===
=== Two types of representatives ===
Line 77: Line 72:
|26
|26
|37%
|37%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|44
|44
|63%
|63%
Line 97: Line 92:
|19
|19
|53%
|53%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|17
|17
|47%
|47%
Line 107: Line 102:
|14
|14
|58%
|58%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|10
|10
|42%
|42%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|
|
|-
| '''{{Flagicon|Georgia}} [[Elections in Georgia (country)|Georgia]]'''
|[[Parliament of Georgia|Parliament]]
|30
|20%
|[[Two-round system|TRS]]
|120
|80%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|
|
Line 129: Line 113:
|38
|38
|33%
|33%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|76
|76
|67%
|67%
Line 139: Line 123:
|[[House of Representatives (Japan)|House of Representatives]]|| 289
|[[House of Representatives (Japan)|House of Representatives]]|| 289
|62%
|62%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]|| 176
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]|| 176
|38%
|38%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]||
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]||
Line 150: Line 134:
|98
|98
|40%
|40%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|
|
|-
|'''{{Flagicon|Kazakhstan}} [[Elections in Kazakhstan|Kazakhstan]]'''
|[[Mazhilis|Majilis]]
|69
|30%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|69
|70
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|
|
Line 158: Line 153:
|36
|36
|40%
|40%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|54
|54
|60%
|60%
Line 172: Line 167:
|70
|70
|50%
|50%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[largest remainder method]])
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[largest remainder method]]): [[Open list|open lists]]
|
|
|
|
Line 179: Line 174:
|[[Chamber of Deputies of Mexico|Chamber of Deputies]]|| 300
|[[Chamber of Deputies of Mexico|Chamber of Deputies]]|| 300
|60%
|60%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]|| 200 (40 seats per [[Electoral regions of Mexico|regions]])
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]|| 200 (40 seats per [[Electoral regions of Mexico|regions]])
|40%
|40%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[Hare quota]])||
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[Hare quota]])||
|
|-
| '''{{Flagicon|Mongolia}}''' '''[[Elections in Mongolia|Mongolia]]<ref>{{Cite web |last=Smith |first=Marissa |title=Parliamentary Elections 2024: Yet Another New Election System |url=https://blogs.ubc.ca/mongolia/2024/yet-another-new-election-system/ |access-date=2024-04-19 |website=Mongolia Focus |publisher=University of British Columbia |language=en-US}}</ref>'''
|[[State Great Khural]]||78
|62%
|[[Block plurality voting|BPV]]|| 48
|38%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]: [[Closed list|closed lists]]||
|
|
|-
|-
Line 188: Line 191:
|165
|165
|60%
|60%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|110
|110
|40%
|40%
Line 198: Line 201:
|[[House of Representatives of the Philippines|House of Representatives]]|| 253
|[[House of Representatives of the Philippines|House of Representatives]]|| 253
|80%
|80%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]|| 63
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]|| 63
|20%
|20%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[Hare quota]]): [[Closed list|closed lists]]||
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[Hare quota]]): [[Closed list|closed lists]]||
Line 206: Line 209:
|[[State Duma]]|| 225
|[[State Duma]]|| 225
|50%
|50%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]|| 225<ref>{{Cite news|url = https://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/03/world/europe/putin-orders-new-system-for-russian-parliamentary-elections.html|title = Putin Orders New System for Russian Parliamentary Elections - NYTimes.com|date = 2013-01-03|access-date = 2014-09-09}}</ref><ref>Since the 2016 election, and from 1993 to the [[2003 Russian legislative election|2003 election]].</ref>
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]|| 225<ref>{{Cite news|url = https://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/03/world/europe/putin-orders-new-system-for-russian-parliamentary-elections.html|title = Putin Orders New System for Russian Parliamentary Elections - NYTimes.com| work=The New York Times |date = 2013-01-03|access-date = 2014-09-09| last1=Herszenhorn | first1=David M. }}</ref><ref>Since the 2016 election, and from 1993 to the [[2003 Russian legislative election|2003 election]].</ref>
|50%
|50%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]||
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]] ([[Hare quota]]): [[Closed list|closed lists]]||
|
|
|-
|-
Line 215: Line 218:
|105
|105
|64%
|64%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|60
|60
|36%
|36%
Line 222: Line 225:
|
|
|-
|-
|'''{{Flagicon|Taiwan}} [[Elections in Taiwan|Taiwan]](Republic of China)'''
|'''{{Flagicon|South Ossetia}} [[Elections in Senegal|South Ossetia]]'''
|
|17
|50%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|17
|50%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]
|
|
|-
|'''{{Flagicon|Taiwan}} [[Elections in Taiwan|Taiwan]] (Republic of China)'''
|[[Legislative Yuan]]
|[[Legislative Yuan]]
|73
|73
|65%
|65%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|34
|34
|30%
|30%
Line 248: Line 262:
|264
|264
|67%
|67%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|113 (women-only lists)
|113 (women-only lists)
|29%
|29%
Line 254: Line 268:
|5 indirectly elected<br>+ 1 attorney general<br>+ 10 nominated by President
|5 indirectly elected<br>+ 1 attorney general<br>+ 10 nominated by President
|4%
|4%
|-
| '''{{Flagicon|Thailand}} [[Elections in Thailand|Thailand]]'''
|[[House of Representatives (Thailand)|House of Representatives]]|| 400
|80%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]|| 100
|20%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]||
|
|-
|-
| '''{{Flagicon|Venezuela}} [[Elections in Venezuela|Venezuela]]'''
| '''{{Flagicon|Venezuela}} [[Elections in Venezuela|Venezuela]]'''
|[[National Assembly (Venezuela)|National Assembly]]|| 113{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
|[[National Assembly (Venezuela)|National Assembly]]|| 113{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
|68%
|68%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]|| 51{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]|| 51{{Citation needed|date=April 2022}}
|31%
|31%
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]|| 3 for indigenous
|[[Party-list proportional representation|List PR]]|| 3 for indigenous
Line 268: Line 290:
!%
!%
!System
!System
!Members elected by majoritarian representation
!Members elected by [[Winner-take-all system|winner-take-all]]
(At-large constituencies)
!%
!%
!System
!System
Line 279: Line 300:
|14
|14
|70%
|70%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|6
|6
|30%
|30%
Line 288: Line 309:
| rowspan="3" |'''''British overseas territories'''''
| rowspan="3" |'''''British overseas territories'''''
|{{Flagicon|Anguilla}} [[Elections in Anguilla|Anguilla]] [[Anguilla House of Assembly|House of Assembly]]
|{{Flagicon|Anguilla}} [[Elections in Anguilla|Anguilla]] [[Anguilla House of Assembly|House of Assembly]]
|9
|7
|69%
|54%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|4
|4
|69%
|31%
|[[Plurality block voting|Plurality block voting (BV)]]
|[[Plurality block voting|Plurality block voting (BV)]]
|2 ''ex officio''
|
|
|15%
|-
|-
|{{Flagicon|Turks and Caicos Islands}} [[Elections in the Turks and Caicos Islands|Turks and Caicos Islands]] [[House of Assembly (Turks and Caicos Islands)|House of Assembly]]
|{{Flagicon|Turks and Caicos Islands}} [[Elections in the Turks and Caicos Islands|Turks and Caicos Islands]] [[House of Assembly (Turks and Caicos Islands)|House of Assembly]]
|10
|10
|48%
|48%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|5
|5
|24%
|24%
Line 309: Line 330:
|{{Flagicon|British Virgin Islands}} [[Elections in the British Virgin Islands|British Virgin Islands]] [[House of Assembly of the British Virgin Islands|House of Assembly]]
|{{Flagicon|British Virgin Islands}} [[Elections in the British Virgin Islands|British Virgin Islands]] [[House of Assembly of the British Virgin Islands|House of Assembly]]
|9
|9
|69%
|60%
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP/SMP]]
|[[First-past-the-post voting|FPTP]]
|4
|4
|69%
|27%
|[[Plurality block voting|Plurality block voting (BV)]]
|[[Plurality block voting|Plurality block voting (BV)]]
|2 ''ex officio''
|
|
|13%
|}
|}


Line 323: Line 344:
=== Hybrid use and similar systems ===
=== Hybrid use and similar systems ===


* '''[[Hungary]]''''s [[National Assembly (Hungary)|National Assembly]] uses a system where the parallel voting component shares a pool of seats (93) with the compensatory vote transfer system and with the minority list seats with a reduced entry threshold. This means the number of seats effectively assigned proportionally based on the parallel party list votes is unknown/unknowable before the election takes place.<ref>Political Capital (2012) The new electoral law in Hungary - In-depth analysis http://www.valasztasirendszer.hu/wp-content/uploads/PC_ElectoralSystem_120106.pdf</ref>
* '''[[Hungary]]''''s [[National Assembly (Hungary)|National Assembly]] uses a system where the parallel voting component shares a pool of seats (93) with the vote transfer system and with the minority list seats with a reduced entry threshold. This means the number of seats effectively assigned proportionally based on the parallel party list votes is unknown/unknowable before the election takes place.<ref>Political Capital (2012) The new electoral law in Hungary - In-depth analysis http://www.valasztasirendszer.hu/wp-content/uploads/PC_ElectoralSystem_120106.pdf</ref>
* '''Italy''': Starting with the [[2018 Italian general election|2018 election]], both houses of the [[Italian parliament]] are elected using a system similar to parallel voting. 62.5% of the seats are assigned proportionally to party lists; party lists are also linked in coalitions supporting constituency candidates running for the remaining 37.5% of the available seats, who are elected by means of a first-past-the-post system. Electors have a single vote with two-fold effects for a party list (proportional) and its associated local candidate (majoritarian). Split-ticket voting is not allowed, a voter may mark their ballots only next to a list, a candidate, or a list and a candidate associated with it and all of these votes has the same effect. If a voter marks a candidate not associated with the list they marked, like voters may under parallel voting, the vote is invalid under the Italian system.
* '''Italy''': Starting with the [[2018 Italian general election|2018 election]], both houses of the [[Italian parliament]] are elected using a system similar to parallel voting. 62.5% of the seats are assigned proportionally to party lists; party lists are also linked in coalitions supporting constituency candidates running for the remaining 37.5% of the available seats, who are elected by means of a first-past-the-post system. Electors have a single vote with two-fold effects for a party list (proportional) and its associated local candidate (majoritarian). Split-ticket voting is not allowed, a voter may mark their ballots only next to a list, a candidate, or a list and a candidate associated with it and all of these votes has the same effect. If a voter marks a candidate not associated with the list they marked, like voters may under parallel voting, the vote is invalid under the Italian system.
* '''Jersey (UK)'''
* '''Jersey (UK)'''
Line 330: Line 351:
* '''Pakistan'''
* '''Pakistan'''
* '''Seychelles'''
* '''Seychelles'''
* '''[[South Korea]]''''s [[National Assembly (South Korea)|National Assembly]] used parallel voting from 1988 to 2019. Since 2019, it uses a hybrid system of parallel voting and mixed-member proportional, with both compensatory seats (30) and supplementary seats (17).


===Former use===
===Former use===
* [[Albania]] used parallel voting in the 1996 and 1997 elections (before switching to [[mixed-member proportional representation]] from 2001 to [[2005 Albanian parliamentary election|2005]]).{{sfnm |1a1=Gallagher |1y=2011 |1p=185 |2a1=Gallagher |2y=2014 |2p=18}}<ref>{{cite web |last=Lublin |first=David |title=Albania |website=Election Passport|url=http://www.electionpassport.com/electoral-systems/albania/ |publisher=American University |access-date=24 March 2016}}</ref>
* [[Albania]] used parallel voting in the 1996 and 1997 elections (before switching to [[mixed-member proportional representation]] from 2001 to [[2005 Albanian parliamentary election|2005]]).{{sfnm |1a1=Gallagher |1y=2011 |1p=185 |2a1=Gallagher |2y=2014 |2p=18}}<ref>{{cite web |last=Lublin |first=David |title=Albania |website=Election Passport|url=http://www.electionpassport.com/electoral-systems/albania/ |publisher=American University |access-date=24 March 2016}}</ref>
* Argentina: [[Santiago del Estero Province]] (1997-2009)
* Argentina: [[Santiago del Estero Province]] (1997–2009)
* [[Armenia]]
* [[Armenia]]
* [[Azerbaijan]]'s [[Azerbaijan's National Assembly|National Assembly]] (the Milli Məclis) had previously used an SM system in which 100 members were elected for five-year terms in single-seat constituencies and 25 were members were elected by proportional representation. Since the latest election Azerbaijan has returned to electing members from single-member constituencies. Due to the corruption present within Azerbaijan,<ref>Election Rigging and How to Fight It ''Journal of Democracy'' - Volume 17, Number 3, July 2006, pp. 138-151.</ref> the limited proportionality that SM was able to offer had little effect.
* [[Azerbaijan]]'s [[Azerbaijan's National Assembly|National Assembly]] (the Milli Məclis) had previously used an SM system in which 100 members were elected for five-year terms in single-seat constituencies and 25 were members were elected by proportional representation. Since the latest election Azerbaijan has returned to electing members from single-member constituencies. Due to the corruption present within Azerbaijan,<ref>Election Rigging and How to Fight It ''Journal of Democracy'' - Volume 17, Number 3, July 2006, pp. 138-151.</ref> the limited proportionality that SM was able to offer had little effect.
Line 340: Line 360:
* [[Croatia]] (1993&ndash;2001)
* [[Croatia]] (1993&ndash;2001)
* [[Egypt]] (2020)
* [[Egypt]] (2020)
* [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] (1990–2024): Georgia initially used a two-round system for its constituency seats. Up until 2016, 73 seats out of 150 seats were allocated in constituencies. In the 2020 election, this number was reduced to 30 out of 150 as a result of the [[2019 protests in Georgia (country)|2019 protests]]. By 2024, Georgia will switch to a fully proportional electoral system.<ref>{{cite news|title=Key Points of Newly Adopted Constitution|url=http://civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=30474|access-date=27 September 2017|work=Civil Georgia|date=27 September 2017}}</ref>
* [[Italy]] (1993&ndash;2005, with modifications)
* [[Italy]] (1993&ndash;2005, with modifications)
* [[Elections in North Macedonia|North Macedonia]] (1998)
* [[Elections in North Macedonia|North Macedonia]] (1998)
* [[Palestinian Authority]] ([[2005 Palestinian presidential election|2005]]), for the [[2014 Palestinian general election|next election]], the system was changed to [[party-list proportional representation]].
* [[Palestinian Authority]] ([[2005 Palestinian presidential election|2005]]), for the [[2014 Palestinian general election|next election]], the system was changed to [[party-list proportional representation]].
*[[South Korea]]: (1988-2024) [[National Assembly (South Korea)|National Assembly]] used parallel voting from 1988 to 2019. From 2019 to 2024, it uses a hybrid system of parallel voting and mixed-member proportional, with both compensatory seats (30) and supplementary seats (17).
* Thailand
*[[Ukraine]]: In the last elections to the Verkhovna Rada, a parallel voting system was used. 50% of seats are distributed under party lists with a 5% [[election threshold]] and 50% through [[first-past-the-post]] in [[Single-member constituency|single-member constituencies]]. The method of 50/50 mixed elections was used in the 2002, 2012, 2014 and 2019 elections; however, in 2006 and 2007, the elections were held under a proportional system only. According to the election law that became valid on 1 January 2020 the [[2023 Ukrainian parliamentary election|next election to the Verkhovna Rada (set for 2023)]] again will be held under a proportional scheme.
*[[Ukraine]]: In the last elections to the Verkhovna Rada, a parallel voting system was used. 50% of seats are distributed under party lists with a 5% [[election threshold]] and 50% through [[first-past-the-post]] in [[Single-member constituency|single-member constituencies]]. The method of 50/50 mixed elections was used in the 2002, 2012, 2014 and 2019 elections; however, in 2006 and 2007, the elections were held under a proportional system only. According to the election law that became valid on 1 January 2020 the [[2023 Ukrainian parliamentary election|next election to the Verkhovna Rada (set for 2023)]] again will be held under a proportional scheme.

===Proposals for use===
===Proposals for use===
In [[New Zealand]], the [[Royal Commission on the Electoral System]] reviewed the electoral system in 1985-86 and considered parallel voting as a possible replacement for the [[First-past-the-post|single-member plurality (SMP)]] system in use at the time.
New Zealand considered adopting Parallel Voting but instead MMP was more popular.
In [[New Zealand]], the [[Royal Commission on the Electoral System]] reviewed the electoral system in 1985-86 and considered SM to be a possible replacement for [[plurality voting]], which was in use at the time. They suggested SM could be implemented in New Zealand with the following features: each elector would have 2 votes, 1 for a constituency candidate and the other for a party list; there would be a total of 120 seats, with 90 seats determined by votes in constituencies and the remaining 30 from party lists; a modified [[Sainte-Laguë method]] would be used to allocate list seats proportionate to a party's total share of votes, a threshold of 5% was suggested before parties could be allocated seats.<ref name="rc39">Royal Commission on Electoral Systems (1986), ''Report of the Royal Commission on the Electoral System: towards a better democracy'', Wellington N.Z.: Government Printing, pg. 39.</ref>

The commission came to the conclusion that SM would be unable to overcome the shortcomings of New Zealand's previous plurality electoral system (FPP). The total seats won by a party would likely remain out of proportion to its share of votes—there would be a "considerable imbalance between share of the votes and share of the total seats"—and would be unfair to minor parties (who struggle to win constituency seats).<ref name=rc39/> In the [[Electoral reform in New Zealand|indicative 1992 electoral referendum]], SM was one of the four choices of alternative electoral system (alongside [[mixed-member proportional representation|MMP]], [[Instant-runoff voting|AV]] and [[single transferable vote|STV]]), but came last with only 5.5 percent of the vote. By clear majority, a change to MMP was favoured, as recommended by the Royal Commission, and was subsequently adopted after the [[1993 electoral referendum]].


The commission came to the conclusion that parallel voting would be unable to overcome the shortcomings of New Zealand's previous SMP system. The total seats won by a party would likely remain out of proportion to its share of votes—there would be a "considerable imbalance between share of the votes and share of the total seats"—and it would be unfair to minor parties (who would struggle to win constituency seats).<ref name="rc392">Royal Commission on Electoral Systems (1986), ''Report of the Royal Commission on the Electoral System: towards a better democracy'', Wellington N.Z.: Government Printing, pg. 39.</ref> In the [[Electoral reform in New Zealand|indicative 1992 electoral referendum]], parallel voting was one of four choices for an alternative electoral system (alongside [[Mixed-member proportional representation|MMP]], [[Instant-runoff voting|AV]] and [[Single transferable vote|STV]]), but came last with only 5.5 percent of the vote. An overwhelming majority of voters supported MMP, as recommended by the Royal Commission, and the system was adopted after the [[1993 electoral referendum]].
In [[2011 New Zealand voting method referendum|another referendum in 2011]], 57.77% of voters elected to keep current the MMP system. Among the 42.23% that voted to change to another system, a plurality (46.66%) preferred a return to the pre-1994 plurality electoral system (also known as [[First-past-the-post]], FPTP). Supplementary member was the second-most popular choice, with 24.14% of the vote.


In [[2011 New Zealand voting method referendum|another referendum in 2011]], 57.77% of voters elected to keep current the MMP system. Among the 42.23% that voted to change to another system, a plurality (46.66%) preferred a return to the pre-1994 SMP system. Parallel voting was the second-most popular choice, with 24.14% of the vote.{{Cn|date=August 2024}}{{Portal|Politics}}
{{Portal|Politics}}


==References==
==References==
Line 360: Line 377:


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.idea.int/publications/esd/index.cfm A Handbook of Electoral System Design] from [http://www.idea.int International IDEA]
*[https://www.idea.int/publications/esd/index.cfm A Handbook of Electoral System Design] from [[International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance|International IDEA]]
* [http://www.aceproject.org/ace-en/topics/es Electoral Design Reference Materials] from the [http://www.aceproject.org ACE Project]
* [http://www.aceproject.org/ace-en/topics/es Electoral Design Reference Materials] from the [http://www.aceproject.org ACE Project]
* [http://www.accuratedemocracy.com/e_intro.htm Accurate Democracy] suggests Parallel Voting by PR and Condorcet rules to make a balanced council with a few central swing voters.
* [https://www.accuratedemocracy.com/e_intro.htm Accurate Democracy] suggests Parallel Voting by PR and Condorcet rules to make a balanced council with a few central swing voters.


{{voting systems}}
{{voting systems}}

Revision as of 13:50, 4 September 2024

In political science, parallel voting or superposition refers to the use of two or more electoral systems to elect different members of a legislature. More precisely, an electoral system is a superposition if it is a mixture of at least two tiers, which do not interact with each other in any way; one part of a legislature is elected using one method, while another part is elected using a different method, with all voters participating in both. Thus, the final results can be found by calculating the results for each system separately based on the votes alone, then adding them together. A system is called fusion (no to be confused with electoral fusion) or majority bonus, another independent mixture of two system but without two tiers. Superposition (parallel voting) is also not the same as "coexistence", which when different districts in the same election use different systems. Superposition, fusion and coexistence are distinct from dependent mixed electoral systems like compensatory (corrective) and conditional systems.

Most often, parallel voting involves combining a winner-take-all system with party-list proportional representation (PR).[1] While first-preference plurality with PR is the most common pairing in parallel voting, many other combinations are possible.

The proportion of list seats compared to total seats ranges widely; for example 30% in Taiwan, 37.5% in Japan and 68.7% in Armenia.[2] Parallel voting is used in both national parliaments and local governments in Italy, Taiwan, Lithuania, Russia, Argentina, and other countries, making it among the world's most popular electoral systems.[citation needed]

Definition

In parallel voting, voters cast two (or more) votes, one for each method the system contains.[citation needed] However, these votes do not interact in any way: the vote in one method has no effect on the calculation of seats in the other methods.

Confusion and conflation

Under the most common form of parallel voting, a portion of seats in the legislature are filled by the single-member first-preference plurality method (FPP), while others are filled by proportional representation.[3] This sometimes leads to a hypercorrection that attempts to limit the term parallel voting to refer only to mixtures of first-past-the-post and proportional representation. Parallel voting can use other systems besides FPP, and can have any mixture of winner-take-all, semi-proportional, and proportional components.

Although the two are often mistakenly conflated, mixed-member majoritarian representation and parallel voting refer to two different things. Parallel voting refers to a rule for computing each party's representation in a legislature, which involves two voting systems operating in parallel, with one being layered (superimposed) on top of the other. By contrast, mixed-member majoritarian representation refers to the results of the system, i.e. the system retains the advantage that some parties parties get in the winner-take-all side of the system.

For this reason, parallel voting is not always mixed-member majoritarian. For example, parallel voting may use a two proportional systems like STV and list-PR and then it would not be mixed-member majoritarian, and a majority bonus system (which is not the same as parallel voting) may also be considered mixed majoritarian. In addition, some mixed-member majoritarian systems are not parallel, in that they allow for interaction (limited compensation) between the two components, for example this is the case in South Korea and Mexico. In South Korea, the hybrid of parallel voting and seat linkage compensation, being between the MMP and MMM type of representation has been called mixed-member semi-proportional representation as well.[citation needed]

Unlike mixed-member proportional representation, where party lists are used to achieve an overall proportional result in the legislature, under parallel voting, proportionality is confined only to the list seats. Therefore, a party that secured, say, 5% of the vote will have only 5% of the list seats, and not 5% of all the seats in the legislature.

Advantages and disadvantages

Representation for smaller parties

The major critique of parallel systems is that they cannot guarantee overall proportionality. Large parties can win very large majorities, disproportionate to their percentage vote.

Parallel voting systems allow smaller parties that cannot win individual elections to secure at least some representation in the legislature; however, unlike in a proportional system they will have a substantially smaller delegation than their share of the total vote. This is seen by advocates of proportional systems to be better than elections using only first-past-the-post, but still unfair towards constituents of smaller parties. If there is also a threshold for list seats, parties which are too small to reach the threshold are unable to achieve any representation, unless they have a very strong base in certain constituencies to gain individual seats.

Smaller parties are still disadvantaged as the larger parties still predominate. Voters of smaller parties may tactically vote for candidates of larger parties to avoid wasting their constituency vote. If the smaller party close to the threshold may refrain from voting for their preferred party in favour of a larger party to avoid wasting their list vote as well. In countries where there is one dominant party and a divided opposition, the proportional seats may be essential for allowing an effective opposition.

Those who favour majoritarian systems argue that supplementary seats allocated proportionally increases the chances that no party will receive a majority in an assembly, leading to minority or coalition governments.[citation needed]; the largest parties may need to rely on the support of smaller ones in order to form a government. Those who favour proportional representation see this as an advantage as parties may not govern alone, but have to compromise. It is also argued that parallel voting does not lead to the degree of fragmentation found in party systems under pure forms of proportional representation.[4]

Two types of representatives

Because voters have two votes, one for a constituency candidate and one for a list, there is a critique that two classes of representatives will emerge under a parallel voting system: with one class beholden to their electorate seat, and the other concerned only with their party. Some consider this as an advantage as local as well as national interests will be represented. Some prefer systems where every constituency and therefore every constituent has only one representative, while others prefer a system where every MP represents the electorate as a whole as this is reflected in the electoral system as well.

Compared to MMP and AMS

Parallel systems are often contrasted with mixed-member proportional systems (MMP) or the additional member system (AMS). There are a unique set of advantages and disadvantages that apply to these specific comparisons.

A party that can gerrymander local districts can win more than its share of seats. So parallel systems need fair criteria to draw district boundaries. (Under MMP a gerrymander can help a local candidate, but it cannot raise a major party’s share of seats, while under AMS the effects of gerrymandering are reduced by the compensation)

Japan, and subsequently Thailand and Russia adopted a parallel system to provide incentives for greater party cohesiveness.[5] The party is sure to elect the candidates at the top of its list, guaranteeing safe seats for the leadership. By contrast, under the MMP or AMS system a party that does well in the local seats will not need or receive any compensatory list seats, so the leadership might have to run in the local seats.

Certain types of AMS can be made de facto parallel systems by tactical voting and parties using decoy lists, which (other) MMP systems generally avoid. This specific type of tactical voting does not occur in parallel voting systems as there is no interaction between its systems to exploit in a way that makes it irrelevant. However, other types of tactical voting (such as compromising) are more relevant under parallel voting, than under AMS, and are virtually irrelevant under MMP.[citation needed] Tactical voting by supporters of larger parties in favour of allied smaller parties close to a threshold, to help their entry to parliament are a possibility in any parallel, AMS or MMP system with an electoral threshold.

Parallel systems support the creation of single-party majorities more often than MMP or AMS systems, this may be a positive or a negative depending on the view of the voter.

Use

Current use

Parallel voting is currently used in the following countries:[6]

Country Body Candidates elected by
Members elected in constituencies % System Members elected by proportional representation % System Other %
Andorra Andorra General Council 14 (2 seats per constituency) 50% PBV 14 50% List PR
Argentina Argentina Córdoba Province, Argentina Legislature of Córdoba Province 26 37% FPTP 44 63% List PR
Río Negro Province Legislature of Río Negro Province 24 (3 seats per constituency) 52% List PR 22 48% List PR
San Juan Province, Argentina Chamber of Deputies of San Juan 19 53% FPTP 17 47% List PR
Santa Cruz Province, Argentina Chamber of Deputies of Santa Cruz 14 58% FPTP 10 42% List PR
Guinea Guinea National Assembly 38 33% FPTP 76 67% List PR (Hare quota)
Japan Japan House of Representatives 289 62% FPTP 176 38% List PR
House of Councillors 147 60% SNTV 98 40% List PR
Kazakhstan Kazakhstan Majilis 69 30% FPTP 69 70 List PR
Kyrgyzstan Kyrgyzstan Supreme Council 36 40% FPTP 54 60% List PR
Lithuania Lithuania Seimas 71 50% TRS 70 50% List PR (largest remainder method): open lists
Mexico Mexico Chamber of Deputies 300 60% FPTP 200 (40 seats per regions) 40% List PR (Hare quota)
Mongolia Mongolia[7] State Great Khural 78 62% BPV 48 38% List PR: closed lists
Nepal Nepal House of Representatives 165 60% FPTP 110 40% List PR: closed lists
Philippines Philippines House of Representatives 253 80% FPTP 63 20% List PR (Hare quota): closed lists
Russia Russian Federation State Duma 225 50% FPTP 225[8][9] 50% List PR (Hare quota): closed lists
Senegal Senegal National Assembly 105 64% FPTP 60 36% List PR (largest remainder method)
South Ossetia South Ossetia 17 50% FPTP 17 50% List PR
Taiwan Taiwan (Republic of China) Legislative Yuan 73 65% FPTP 34 30% List PR 6 for indigenous citizens 5%
Tajikistan Tajikistan Assembly of Representatives 41 65% TRS 22 35% List PR
Tanzania Tanzania[10] National Assembly 264 67% FPTP 113 (women-only lists) 29% List PR 5 indirectly elected
+ 1 attorney general
+ 10 nominated by President
4%
Thailand Thailand House of Representatives 400 80% FPTP 100 20% List PR
Venezuela Venezuela National Assembly 113[citation needed] 68% FPTP 51[citation needed] 31% List PR 3 for indigenous 2%
Country Body Members elected in constituencies % System Members elected by winner-take-all % System Other %
Realm of New Zealand Niue Niue Assembly 14 70% FPTP 6 30% Plurality block voting (BV)
British overseas territories Anguilla Anguilla House of Assembly 7 54% FPTP 4 31% Plurality block voting (BV) 2 ex officio 15%
Turks and Caicos Islands Turks and Caicos Islands House of Assembly 10 48% FPTP 5 24% Plurality block voting (BV) 4 appointed + 2 ex officio 28%
British Virgin Islands British Virgin Islands House of Assembly 9 60% FPTP 4 27% Plurality block voting (BV) 2 ex officio 13%

Philippines

The Philippines' electoral system for Congress is an exceptional case. Political parties running for party-list seats are legally required to be completely separate from those running in constituency seats. Furthermore, political parties are capped at 3 seats (out of 61). As a result, the mixed-member system utilized in the Philippines is not representative at all of the share of the vote that "normal" political parties obtain (even amongst mixed-member majoritarian systems), let alone for those in full proportional representation systems.

Hybrid use and similar systems

  • Hungary's National Assembly uses a system where the parallel voting component shares a pool of seats (93) with the vote transfer system and with the minority list seats with a reduced entry threshold. This means the number of seats effectively assigned proportionally based on the parallel party list votes is unknown/unknowable before the election takes place.[11]
  • Italy: Starting with the 2018 election, both houses of the Italian parliament are elected using a system similar to parallel voting. 62.5% of the seats are assigned proportionally to party lists; party lists are also linked in coalitions supporting constituency candidates running for the remaining 37.5% of the available seats, who are elected by means of a first-past-the-post system. Electors have a single vote with two-fold effects for a party list (proportional) and its associated local candidate (majoritarian). Split-ticket voting is not allowed, a voter may mark their ballots only next to a list, a candidate, or a list and a candidate associated with it and all of these votes has the same effect. If a voter marks a candidate not associated with the list they marked, like voters may under parallel voting, the vote is invalid under the Italian system.
  • Jersey (UK)
  • Monaco
  • Mexico: In contrast to the parallel voting system for the Chamber of Deputies, for electing the Chamber of Senators (upper house), a single (party list) vote is used similarly to the Italian system. However, constituencies have 3 seats with a type of limited (party block) voting being used: 2 seats are given to the largest party and 1 to the second largest party. Party-list PR is used for the nationwide seats.
  • Pakistan
  • Seychelles

Former use

Proposals for use

In New Zealand, the Royal Commission on the Electoral System reviewed the electoral system in 1985-86 and considered parallel voting as a possible replacement for the single-member plurality (SMP) system in use at the time.

The commission came to the conclusion that parallel voting would be unable to overcome the shortcomings of New Zealand's previous SMP system. The total seats won by a party would likely remain out of proportion to its share of votes—there would be a "considerable imbalance between share of the votes and share of the total seats"—and it would be unfair to minor parties (who would struggle to win constituency seats).[16] In the indicative 1992 electoral referendum, parallel voting was one of four choices for an alternative electoral system (alongside MMP, AV and STV), but came last with only 5.5 percent of the vote. An overwhelming majority of voters supported MMP, as recommended by the Royal Commission, and the system was adopted after the 1993 electoral referendum.

In another referendum in 2011, 57.77% of voters elected to keep current the MMP system. Among the 42.23% that voted to change to another system, a plurality (46.66%) preferred a return to the pre-1994 SMP system. Parallel voting was the second-most popular choice, with 24.14% of the vote.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Parallel —". aceproject.org. Retrieved 2022-04-21.
  2. ^ Reynolds et al (2008), Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook, Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 104
  3. ^ Royal Commission on Electoral Systems (1986), Report of the Royal Commission on the Electoral System: towards a better democracy, Wellington N.Z.: Government Printing, pg. 33.
  4. ^ Reynolds et al (2008), Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook, Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 112
  5. ^ Mixed-Member Electoral Systems in Constitutional Context. 2016. doi:10.1353/book.52095. ISBN 9780472121588.
  6. ^ Reynolds et al. (2008), Electoral System Design: The New International IDEA Handbook, Sweden: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, pg. 30–33
  7. ^ Smith, Marissa. "Parliamentary Elections 2024: Yet Another New Election System". Mongolia Focus. University of British Columbia. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  8. ^ Herszenhorn, David M. (2013-01-03). "Putin Orders New System for Russian Parliamentary Elections - NYTimes.com". The New York Times. Retrieved 2014-09-09.
  9. ^ Since the 2016 election, and from 1993 to the 2003 election.
  10. ^ "Art. 66, Constitution of Tanzania". Constitute Project.
  11. ^ Political Capital (2012) The new electoral law in Hungary - In-depth analysis http://www.valasztasirendszer.hu/wp-content/uploads/PC_ElectoralSystem_120106.pdf
  12. ^ Gallagher 2011, p. 185; Gallagher 2014, p. 18.
  13. ^ Lublin, David. "Albania". Election Passport. American University. Retrieved 24 March 2016.
  14. ^ Election Rigging and How to Fight It Journal of Democracy - Volume 17, Number 3, July 2006, pp. 138-151.
  15. ^ "Key Points of Newly Adopted Constitution". Civil Georgia. 27 September 2017. Retrieved 27 September 2017.
  16. ^ Royal Commission on Electoral Systems (1986), Report of the Royal Commission on the Electoral System: towards a better democracy, Wellington N.Z.: Government Printing, pg. 39.