New Zealand uses MMP, which is like a fun game where everyone gets to pick their favorite team, and more teams get to play if they have lots of fans.
Imagine you're at a school fair, and there are different clubs: the soccer club, the art club, the music club, and so on. Each club has members who want to be representatives in a big group called the Parliament.
How Voting Works
When it's time to choose representatives, everyone gets to vote for their favorite club, like choosing your favorite team at the fair.
Sometimes, one club might get the most votes and have more people in Parliament than others. But other clubs also get to send some of their members if they do well too, just like how a smaller club can still get to play if it has enough fans!
How It Helps Everyone
This way, even if your favorite club doesn’t win, you might still get someone from that club in Parliament, because people like you voted for them. That means lots of different ideas and voices get heard, just like how different clubs bring fun activities to the school fair!
Examples
- Imagine voting for your favorite team and also picking the best overall player.
- New Zealanders pick one person to represent them locally and support a party nationwide.
Ask a question
See also
- How Does Democracy vs. Autocracy: An Unproductive Dichotomy Work?
- How Does Democracy, Authoritarianism, & More: Every Government Type Explained Work?
- How Does General election 2019: The voting system explained - BBC News Work?
- How Does Parliamentary vs. Presidential Democracy Explained Work?
- How Does History Summarized: Athens (Accidentally) Invents Democracy Work?