Why Do Elections Have a Winner?

When you pick your favorite ice cream flavor, the one with the most scoops wins. That is plurality voting in action! But what if the winner only got a little more votes than everyone else? This can leave many people feeling like their choice did not matter.

The Simple Way

Imagine a classroom voting for a class pet. If three kids want a dog, two want a cat, and one wants a hamster, the dog wins because it has the most votes. Even though seven other children did not pick the dog, the rule is simple: more votes mean you win.

When It Gets Tricky

Sometimes, a candidate can win without being the favorite of everyone. If we had five pets and four different types, the dog might still win even if most kids preferred cats or hamsters combined. This is called majority vs plurality. Majority means over half (50% plus one). Plurality just means the biggest group.

Real Life Examples

Think about U. S. presidential elections where a candidate gets more total votes but loses due to how states are counted. It is like winning the most scoops of ice cream even if the other flavors were popular in different neighborhoods!

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Examples

  1. A child picks the most stars on their report card to win the class prize, even if other kids picked more books.
  2. In a game of musical chairs, the person sitting when the music stops wins, regardless of how many people played initially.
  3. You vote for your favorite pizza topping, and pepperoni wins because it got the most stickers on the ballot box.

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