block vote - определение. Что такое block vote
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Что (кто) такое block vote - определение

WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Bloc voting; Bloc vote; Block vote; Partial block voting; Partial bloc voting; Block vot; Block votes; Block Voting; Block-voting; Bloc-voting
Найдено результатов: 1757
block vote         
¦ noun Brit. a vote proportional in power to the number of people a delegate represents, used particularly at a trade-union conference.
block vote         
(block votes)
A block vote is a large number of votes that are all cast in the same way by one person on behalf of a group of people.
N-COUNT
Block voting         
Block voting or bloc voting refers to electoral systems, in which multiple candidates are elected as once and a group (voting bloc) of voters can force the system to elect only their preferred candidates. Block voting may be used at-large (in a single district with multiple winners) or in several a multi-member district.
Pink vote         
SEGMENT OF THE VOTES IN A SUFFRAGE BELONGING TO THE LGBTI COMMUNITY
User:Tashif/Pink Vote; Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/Pink Vote; Lavender vote; Pink Vote
Pink vote (also called the lavender vote ) are the votes cast by gays and lesbians, and is typically considered a voting bloc. Most prevalent in Britain, the concept has already spread to US, where gays and lesbians are substantially more likely to vote Democratic, and Canada with many other countries like South Africa and Australia starting to acknowledge it.
the vote         
  • 300x300px
2015 BRITISH PLAY
The Vote (play)
the right to indicate a choice in an election.
Conscience vote         
DISCRETIONARY VOTES, PARTICULARLY IN PARLIAMENTARY SYSTEMS
Free vote; Conscience Issues; Conscience issues; Conscious vote; Free votes; Vote of conscience
A conscience vote or free vote is a type of vote in a legislative body where legislators are allowed to vote according to their own personal conscience rather than according to an official line set down by their political party. In a parliamentary system, especially within the Westminster system, it can also be used to indicate crossbench members of a hung parliament where confidence and supply is provided to allow formation of a minority government but the right to vote on conscience is retained.
free vote         
DISCRETIONARY VOTES, PARTICULARLY IN PARLIAMENTARY SYSTEMS
Free vote; Conscience Issues; Conscience issues; Conscious vote; Free votes; Vote of conscience
¦ noun chiefly Brit. a parliamentary division in which members vote according to their own beliefs rather than following a party policy.
Spoilt         
  • Spoilt ballot paper from the [[2016 Kazakh legislative election]] reading "Бойкот Выборам" which means ''Boycott the elections.''
BALLOT THAT IS INVALID AND IS THUS NOT INCLUDED IN THE FINAL VOTE COUNT
Spoiled ballot; Spoiled vote; Spoilt ballot; Informal vote; Spoilt paper; Void vote; Null vote; Residual vote; Stray votes; Ballot spoiling; Spoilt; Informal ballot; Invalid vote; Stray vote; Rejected vote; Spoilt votes
·- of Spoil.
spoilt         
  • Spoilt ballot paper from the [[2016 Kazakh legislative election]] reading "Бойкот Выборам" which means ''Boycott the elections.''
BALLOT THAT IS INVALID AND IS THUS NOT INCLUDED IN THE FINAL VOTE COUNT
Spoiled ballot; Spoiled vote; Spoilt ballot; Informal vote; Spoilt paper; Void vote; Null vote; Residual vote; Stray votes; Ballot spoiling; Spoilt; Informal ballot; Invalid vote; Stray vote; Rejected vote; Spoilt votes
Spoilt is a past participle and past tense of spoil
.
informal vote         
  • Spoilt ballot paper from the [[2016 Kazakh legislative election]] reading "Бойкот Выборам" which means ''Boycott the elections.''
BALLOT THAT IS INVALID AND IS THUS NOT INCLUDED IN THE FINAL VOTE COUNT
Spoiled ballot; Spoiled vote; Spoilt ballot; Informal vote; Spoilt paper; Void vote; Null vote; Residual vote; Stray votes; Ballot spoiling; Spoilt; Informal ballot; Invalid vote; Stray vote; Rejected vote; Spoilt votes
¦ noun Austral./NZ an invalid vote or voting paper.

Википедия

Block voting

Block voting or bloc voting refers to electoral systems in which multiple candidates are elected at once and a group (voting bloc) of voters can force the system to elect only their preferred candidates. Block voting may be used at large (in a single district with multiple winners) or in several multi-member districts. Most types of block voting fall under the multiple non-transferable vote type of system; these terms are sometimes used synonymously. Block voting is also used synonymously with the term majoritarian representation (winner-takes-all) in the context of multi-winner electoral systems.

The two main types of block voting are plurality block voting, where only a plurality is needed to elect candidates, and majority block voting, where candidates need to reach the support of a majority (more than half) of the electorate to get elected. Plurality block voting is an election with n winners, each voter may choose up to n candidates; the n candidates with most votes win. Majority block voting may use multiple rounds of voting or it may be preferential block voting (multiple transferable votes) using ranked ballots.

Other types include block approval voting: in an election with n winners, each voter may vote for any number of candidates, and the candidates with the most votes win; partial block voting (also known as limited voting): in an election with n winners, each voter may choose up to m (m<n) candidates; the n candidates with the most votes win; and party block voting (also known as the general ticket), in an election where each voter may vote for a party, and that party wins all seats.

Block voting is often contrasted with proportional representation, which methods aim to select winners in a way that every voter's vote counts with the same effective weight, while under block voting the usual result is that where the candidates divide into definitive parties the most popular party in the district sees its full slate of candidates elected, resulting in a landslide.