A joint Politics and Economics series |
Social choice and electoral systems |
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In electoral systems, a wasted vote is any vote cast that is not "used" to elect a winner, and so is not represented in the outcome. However, the term is vague and ill-defined, having been used to refer to a wide variety of unrelated concepts and metrics.[1] The way a wasted vote is defined changes the analysis.
Wasted votes are seldom imposed on each party equally irrespective of the system that produces them. More wasted votes for one party and less for another creates a disproportionate chamber of elected members. Elections are often said to mean to produce a microcosm of the wider society; distortions produced by wasted votes work against that representative process. However, a system that produces wasted votes may prevent instability caused by many parties being elected to the legislature.
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