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authorAndrew Yu <andrew@andrewyu.org>2022-08-10 12:17:39 +0800
committerAndrew Yu <andrew@andrewyu.org>2022-08-10 12:17:39 +0800
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 		<h2 id="plurality-voting">Plurality Voting</h2>
 		<p>
-		Elections in the US uses what's called ``plurality voting'', where each voter casts one vote to their favorite canidate
+		Single-winner elections in the US uses what's called ``plurality voting'', where each voter casts one vote to their favorite canidate and the canidate with the most votes win.  This contributes to the partisan dualopoly (not an actual word, but it basically means ``monopoly'' but with two rather than one) as voters who support smaller parties will undergo the decision of choosing their honest favorite or one of the two big parties that most closely ressembles their favorite.  As it's hard to gather votes for smaller parties, and thus there's a small chance of them actually winning the electron, many voters strategically vote for the big party in order to not be ``taken over'' by the big party that they oppose more.
 		</p>
 
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