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  2. Seats-to-votes ratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seats-to-votes_ratio

    The seats-to-votes ratio is used as the basis for the Gallagher index method of analyzing proportionality or disproportionality. Related is the votes-per-seat-won, [3] which is inverse to the seats-to-votes ratio. Also related are the principles of one man one vote and representation by population.

  3. Quota method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quota_method

    and is applied to elections in South Africa. [citation needed] The Hare quota is more generous to less-popular parties and the Droop quota to more-popular parties. Specifically, the Hare quota is unbiased in the number of seats it hands out, and so is more proportional than the Droop quota (which tends to give more seats to larger parties). The ...

  4. Gallagher index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallagher_index

    The 2024 general election in the United Kingdom was the most disproportional in modern British history. [15] The Liberal Democrats recorded their best ever seat result (72), despite receiving only around half the votes they did in 2010, [16] and fewer votes overall than Reform, although the party's seat share was again lower than its share of ...

  5. Electoral threshold - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electoral_threshold

    All parties which won seats in 1999 failed to cross the threshold, thus giving Justice and Development Party 66 percent of the seats. In the Ukrainian elections of March 2006, for which there was a threshold of 3 percent (of the overall vote, i.e. including invalid votes), 22 percent of voters were effectively disenfranchised, having voted for ...

  6. Electoral Calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electoral_Calculus

    Across the 12 general elections from 1992 to 2024, the site correctly predicted the party to win the most seats in all but one (1992). They also correctly predicted the outcome, that is, the party winning a majority or a hung parliament, in six elections (majorities in 1997, 2001, 2005, 2015, 2017 (by a majority of only 3), 2019, 2024; hung parliament for 2010).

  7. Loosemore–Hanby index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loosemore–Hanby_index

    This table uses the 2021 Dutch general election result. [8] The Netherlands uses a nationwide party list system, with seats allocated by the D'Hondt method. The low figure achieved through this calculation suggests the election was very proportional.

  8. Sainte-Laguë method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sainte-Laguë_method

    An election threshold can be set to reduce political fragmentation, and any list party which does not receive at least a specified percentage of list votes will not be allocated any seats, even if it received enough votes to have otherwise receive a seat. Examples of countries using the Sainte-Laguë method with a threshold are Germany and New ...

  9. D'Hondt method - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D'Hondt_method

    In French municipal and regional elections, the D'Hondt method is used to attribute a number of council seats; however, a fixed proportion of them (50% for municipal elections, 25% for regional elections) is automatically given to the list with the greatest number of votes, to ensure that it has a working majority: this is called the "majority ...