Imagine you and your friends trying to pick a pizza topping. Nine people love pepperoni but hate cheese. Five people love cheese but dislike pepperoni. One person likes both equally if they have to choose. If you ask everyone their top choice, pepperoni wins because it has the most fans. But wait! Eight of those nine pepperoni lovers would actually prefer a half-and-half pizza over plain cheese, and only one truly hates cheese.
The Problem
This is a voting paradox. It happens when the way we count votes doesn't match how people really feel. In big elections, this can mean the winner isn't the person everyone wants most.
Why It Happens
Voting systems are like nets. Some catch only the biggest fish (plurality), while others try to weigh all the sea life (ranked choice). No system is perfect because human feelings change depending on who else is running. That is why elections feel so strange sometimes.
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See also
- Why Does One Vote Sometimes Count More Than Another?
- Why Does One Person's Vote Matter?
- Why Do Elections Have a Winner?
- Why Do Some Democracies Collapse While Others Survive?
- How Can a Single Vote Decide an Election?