What are constituencies?

A constituency is like a group of friends who all pick the same team captain for a game.

Imagine you and your classmates are playing a big game at recess, and each of you gets to choose a team captain from your class. But instead of every person choosing alone, you all agree on one team captain together, that’s like being in the same constituency.

How it works

In real life, people in a constituency live in the same area, like a neighborhood or a town. They all vote for someone to represent them in a bigger group, like how you and your friends choose one person to be the team captain so they can talk to the other teams.

Why it matters

Having constituencies helps keep things fair because people who live close together often have similar needs and ideas. It’s like when your class picks a team captain, you all want someone who knows what the whole group wants, so everyone feels heard and represented.

That’s how constituencies work, simple as choosing a team captain!

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Examples

  1. A town votes for a representative to speak for them in the national parliament.
  2. A constituency is like a neighborhood that picks one person to make decisions on their behalf.
  3. In an election, every voter in a region chooses who will represent them.

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