Why Does the Winner Take Less? The Paradox of Plurality Voting

What Is Plurality Voting?

Imagine you have a classroom full of kids voting for their favorite ice cream flavor. There are three flavors: Chocolate, Vanilla, and Strawberry. Each kid picks just one.

The Winner Takes All

The flavor with the most tickets wins. If Chocolate gets 40%, Vanilla 35%, and Strawberry 25%, Chocolate wins even if 60% of kids didn't pick it!

Why Is It Confusing?

It feels unfair because the winner doesn't have a true majority (more than half). They just had more votes than everyone else. This can happen when two similar flavors split the vote, letting a third one win by accident.

This system is simple to count but sometimes picks a result that most people wouldn't choose if they voted again.

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Examples

  1. Three ice cream flavors compete but Chocolate wins with less total love.
  2. A small dog beats two big dogs at the park because they distracted each other.
  3. You pick one sticker, and whoever has the most stickers gets the prize.

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