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Proportional representation
election system in which the party appoints legislative members proportional to the election results. This system promotes multiple parties being represented in the legislative branch and is sometimes called party list elections and often features multimember districts. With the appointment of representatives by party leaders, proportional representation systems can help increase the number of women and minority community representatives.
Gender quotas
requirements that a certain percentage of candidates or representatives placed in seats in proportional representation systems be women in an effort to promote the ideal of gender equity as seen in Mexico.
Single-member district
plurality system election system in which one candidate with the most votes (not necessarily a majority of 50% + at least 1 vote) in a district wins the sole representative seat. Tends to promote two- party systems. These provide voters with strong constituency service and accountability because there is a single representative per district. This type of system ensures geographic representation."
Hybrid (mixed) election system
the use of a combination of single-member district and proportional (party list) elections for legislative elections. Mexico and Russia use this type of election system for their lower chambers. And Mexico also uses this mixed/hybrid system for its senate elections. The single member district elections guarantee representation for different regions. The proportional elections allow for multiple parties to be represented in the legislatures. Scotland's regional parliament uses a similar type of system called an Additional Member System.
Executive election plurality system
election system in which one candidate wins the election as the sole executive by winning the most votes (not necessarily a majority of 50% + at least 1 vote.)
Second round
runoff election system election system in which a candidate for a sole executive position or legislative positions must win a majority of the vote (50% + at least 1 vote.) In a multi-candidate race, the winning candidate must win a majority of the vote either in the first round of balloting or in the second round of balloting that features the top two vote earners in the first round.
Majoritarian rules
winning candidate must win a majority of the vote (50% + at least 1 vote.)
Multi-party system
when elections feature more than two parties competing for governing power.
Two-party system
when elections feature two major parties competing for governing power.
Dominant party system
when elections allow multiple parties to run in elections, but one major party inevitably wins governing power.
One party system
when only one party is allowed to control governing power even if other parties exist.
Catch-all political parties
often the dominant party in a dominant party system that earns support from groups with different characteristics, attracting popular support with ideologically diverse platforms*
El dedazo
translates as "the point” metaphor from Mexico describing the nomination process of a new PRI candidate (who would become the expected presidential winner during PRI dominance until 2000) by the outgoing PRI president
Patronage
also known as patron-client relationship or clientelism, this allowed government officials to distribute government jobs and services in return for voter loyalty: institutionalizes a quid pro quo ("this for that") relationship between elected officials and voters is often viewed as examples of corruption by those not benefitting from the patronage relationship
Social movements
involve large groups of people pushing collectively for significant political or social change such as indigenous civil rights, redistribute revenues to different classes, conduct fair and transparent elections, and ensure fair treatment of citizens of different sexual orientations."
Interest groups
groups organized to represent and advocate for a specific interest or policy issue.
Grassroots social movements
exert their power up from the local level to the regional, national, or international level
Single peak associations (SPAs)
a type of interest group that commonly represents professional or commercial groups and helps establish standards for that profession or industry.
Political access
ability to contact government officials to shape policies.