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This article is about the mathematical concept of majority. For the various legal definitions of adulthood, see Age of majority. The age of majority is the threshold of Adulthood as it is conceptualized (and recognized or declared in Law.

A majority, also known as a simple majority in the U.S., is a subset of a group that is more than half of the entire group. The United States of America —commonly referred to as the This should not be confused with a plurality, which is a subset having the largest number of parts. A plurality is not necessarily a majority, as the largest subset may be less than half of the entire group.

For example, in a hypothetical group of 40 athletes there are:

In this group, a majority would consist of more than half the total number of athletes, or 21 athletes. Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a Team sport played between two teams of eleven players and is widely considered Sprints are short running races in athletics. They are roughly classified as events in which top runners will not have to "pace themselves" but can run as fast as The marathon is a long-distance foot race with an official distance of 42 The group of all ball sport players together (15 football players + 6 table tennis players = 21) comprise a majority. However, football players, 15 in number, comprise a plurality, not a majority.

Contents

Parliamentary rules

In parliamentary procedure (the "rules of order" concerning the conduct of business in a deliberative body), the term 'majority' refers to "more than half. Rules of order, also known as standing orders or rules of procedure, are the written rules of Parliamentary procedure adopted by a Deliberative assembly Rules of order, also known as standing orders or rules of procedure, are the written rules of Parliamentary procedure adopted by a Deliberative assembly A deliberative assembly is an Organization, comprising of members that uses Parliamentary procedure for making decisions " As it relates to a vote, a majority is more than half of the votes cast (noting that an abstention is simply the refusal to vote).

A common error is to list a majority as being "one more than half" or "fifty percent plus one". This is incorrect when there is an odd number of votes cast. When there are 51 votes cast, half is 25. 5. So, only 26 votes is needed, not 26. 5 votes.

The definition of "majority vote" can differ, however from one parliamentary authority to another. A Parliamentary authority is a manual on parliamentary law containing Rules of order for the transaction of business in deliberative assemblies. Robert's Rules of Order, (abbreviated RONR) defines a majority as being more than one half of the votes cast including votes cast for an ineligible candidate, or improper choice (e. Robert's Rules of Order is the informal short title of a book containing Rules of order intended to be adopted for use by a Deliberative assembly. g. a vote of "maybe" on a yes or no vote); these votes referred to as "illegal votes cast by legal voters[1]. " The Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure (abbreviated TSC) defines a majority as being more than half of the "legal" votes cast [2].

For example, assume that votes are cast for three people for an office, Mr. A, Ms. B, and Wimpy the Gerbil (who is ineligible). The vote totals are:

Using the definition in RONR, no candidate has a majority and no candidate is elected; 20 votes cast, a majority (in whole numbers) is 11 and no candidate received 11. Using the definition in TSC, Mr. A is elected; 20 cast, 3 illegal, 17 legal, with a majority of legal votes cast (in whole numbers) being 9.

In politics, political voting systems, and even in parliamentary procedure in some cases, there are several different popular concepts relating to a majority:

These concepts are not to be confused with the concept of a majority as understood in parliamentary procedure, which is a common error. While they do have counterparts in parliamentary procedure, in it they are undefined as termed, and their discussion is beyond the scope of this article.

Comparison of 'simple majority' with other terms

A simple majority does not include abstentions or absent members. Abstention is a term in Election procedure for when a participant in a vote either does not go to vote (on election day or in Parliamentary procedure, is present It is more strict than a plurality vote, but less strict than an absolute majority vote (which in countries other than the U. The plurality voting system is a Single-winner voting system often used to elect executive officers or to elect members of a legislative assembly which is based on single-member An absolute majority or majority of the entire membership (in American English, a Supermajority Voting requirement is a Voting basis S. still simply means more than half, though the simpler American term "majority" is becoming increasingly popular). It is the most common requirement in voting for a measure to pass, especially in deliberative bodies and small organizations. A deliberative assembly is an Organization, comprising of members that uses Parliamentary procedure for making decisions In parliamentary procedure, the unqualified term "majority" has this meaning, and the usage "simple majority" is discouraged. Parliamentary procedure is the body of Rules Ethics, and Customs governing meetings and other operations of Clubs Organizations

Examples

Consider three propositions: A, B, and C, that are proposed in a club of 100 members. A club is an association of people united by a common interest or goal In order for a proposition to be successful, a simple majority must agree to it. The results of the election are:


Since there are more votes for B than there are votes for both A and C combined, B has the simple majority, and so wins. An election is a Decision-making process by which a population chooses an individual to hold formal office That is, the votes for B make up more that 50% of the total counted votes (90). If all the votes were considered, including the 10 blank votes, as in an absolute majority vote, then B would not have a majority. Abstentions and non-voters do not affect a simple majority process, since they neither support nor oppose. They affect only an absolute majority.

In an election for president in the same club having candidates Jim, Bob, Sally, and Bridget, the results are as follows:

In this election, no one has more votes than the combined votes of the opponents, so no one wins. President is a Title leaders of Organizations companies, Trade unions universities, and countries. Sally's 40 votes do not make up more than 50% of the total number of votes. In a case like this, most systems would either adopt a plurality rule or would have a second ballot with all of the candidates present, unless the organization's bylaws specify otherwise (as is commonly done to create a runoff election).

Tie votes do not meet simple majority because not more than half of the votes cast approve, so ties are classfied as failures.

References

  1. ^ Robert's Rules of Order Newly Revised, 10th edition, 2000, pp. 387, 404
  2. ^ The Standard Code of Parliamentary Procedure, 4th edition, 2001, pp. 134, 158-9

See also


Template:Voting trio

Majority rule is a decision rule that makes one of two alternatives the "winner" based on which has more than half the votes Majoritarianism is a traditional Political philosophy or agenda which asserts that a Majority (sometimes categorized by Religion, Language, or An electoral wipeout occurs when a major party receives far fewer votes or seats in a Legislature than their position justifies

Dictionary

majority

-noun

  1. More than half (50%) of some group
  2. The difference between the winning vote and the rest of the votes
  3. (dated) Legal adulthood
  4. (UK) The office held by a member of the armed forces in the rank of major
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