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Which Country's Voting System Is Best?
Brut India
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6 months ago
Is India's way of electing its government the best in the world? Dhruv Rathee looks at what other countries do and helps answer that question.
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00:00
Friends, in 2014, Modi became the Prime Minister with just 31% of the vote share in our country.
00:06
That is, 69% of the population voted against him.
00:10
What was the logic behind this?
00:12
On the other hand, in the 2016 US presidential elections,
00:16
Hillary Clinton got 3 million more votes than Donald Trump.
00:21
But still, Donald Trump became the President of the USA.
00:23
So, what kind of a democracy is this?
00:25
How can a person, whose majority votes against him, become the leader of the country?
00:30
Friends, this is what I would like to teach you in this video.
00:33
How do voting systems work in all the democracies of the world?
00:36
And after watching this video, you will be forced to think
00:39
which voting system will actually be the best voting system for democracy.
00:44
Let's see.
00:51
Let's look at an example.
00:52
Assume that there are 4 candidates in your constituency.
00:55
Akshay, Salman, Ranveer, Hrithik.
00:58
Now, you all vote.
01:00
And after voting, we see that Akshay got 35% votes,
01:03
Salman got 39%,
01:05
and Ranveer and Hrithik got 16% and 15% votes.
01:08
Now, what happens in our country is
01:10
the candidate who gets the most votes wins the constituency.
01:14
This is called the first-past-the-post voting system.
01:18
In this case, if Salman gets the most votes, 39%,
01:22
then the leader of our constituency will be Salman with 39% votes.
01:26
This first-past-the-post voting system is used in 58 different democratic countries around the world.
01:32
But it clearly has some disadvantages.
01:35
For example, in the case of our example,
01:37
let's assume that Hrithik's fans hate Akshay a lot.
01:41
They hate Akshay so much that they don't want him to win.
01:44
That's why a lot of Hrithik's fans voted for Salman.
01:48
Because they knew that Salman is a top candidate.
01:51
The media was constantly talking about Akshay and Salman,
01:54
not Hrithik and Ranveer.
01:56
So, people voted for Salman out of helplessness.
02:00
What kind of democracy is this that people are not voting for their first-preference candidate,
02:04
but are voting for another candidate out of fear and helplessness
02:08
so that the third candidate doesn't win?
02:10
Some people will say that we're voting for the lesser of two evils.
02:14
So, you can see that this is a huge disadvantage of this voting system.
02:17
On the other hand, if this example was realistic in our country,
02:20
it's possible that Salman's voters would've called Hrithik a vote-cutting candidate.
02:25
Because from their perspective, Hrithik is just cutting votes.
02:28
The people voting for Hrithik would've voted for Salman.
02:32
So, this vote-cutting is another huge disadvantage.
02:36
The third disadvantage is that a lot of people vote for candidates based on their winnability.
02:42
There are so many chances that they can win realistically.
02:45
If the media is constantly talking about the top two candidates,
02:49
then a lot of people won't vote for the rest of the candidates.
02:52
Because they'll think that what's the point of voting for them if they're not going to win anyway.
02:57
This is called a wasted vote.
02:59
There's a voting system to counter all these disadvantages, friends.
03:03
Instant run-off voting.
03:05
In this, instead of voting for one candidate,
03:08
you arrange all the candidates in the order of preferences.
03:12
You rank the candidates that this is my first preference,
03:15
this is my second preference, and this is my third preference.
03:18
Instant run-off voting is used in the elections in Australia.
03:21
So, let's come back to our example to see how the winners are decided in this type of voting system.
03:27
If our four candidates have the same voting percentages in the first preference,
03:32
then the lowest voting percentage in the first preference will be eliminated
03:37
and the votes will be transferred.
03:39
The 15% votes of Hrithik,
03:42
the second preference of these 15% people will be seen
03:45
and in that second preference, 15% votes will be transferred.
03:49
If we assume that the second preference of Hrithik's voters,
03:53
the second preference of all 15% people was Akshay,
03:56
then these 15% votes will be transferred to Akshay
03:59
and Akshay will have 50% votes in total.
04:01
And Akshay will be declared the winner here.
04:03
Normally, in instant run-off voting, the majority has to pass.
04:08
That is, every candidate has to get more than 50% voting.
04:12
If a candidate gets more than 50% in the first preference,
04:16
then we will not see this second preference thing.
04:19
You can clearly see, friends, what advantages you have as a voter here.
04:23
You don't have to vote out of helplessness.
04:26
You don't have to vote lesser of the two evils.
04:29
In this case, friends, you will generally vote for your first preference.
04:32
And if you feel that you have to defeat the third one,
04:35
then you will put your second candidate in the second preference.
04:38
This eliminates a lot of the disadvantages of the first pass the post.
04:43
This type of voting system is used in a lot of countries.
04:47
And friends, in our country, the election of the President of India
04:50
is also done through instant run-off voting.
04:52
Now, in some countries, this is used in different ways.
04:55
It is possible that instead of arranging all the candidates in a preference order,
04:59
you can only arrange the top 4 or top 3.
05:02
This is called contingent voting.
05:05
This is what happens in the present elections of Sri Lanka, friends.
05:08
Voters choose their top 3 choices.
05:11
They rank 3 people based on which the winner is decided later.
05:15
Interestingly, friends, the winners of the Oscars are also decided through instant run-off voting.
05:20
Now, some people will say that if Hrithik has won 15% votes here,
05:24
then in a true democracy, Hrithik's party should get 15% seats.
05:29
Only then can it be a true democracy.
05:32
Because the percentage of votes that a candidate gets,
05:34
the party should get the same percentage of seats.
05:37
Now, this system is called proportional representation.
05:41
And in fact, it is the most common system used in national legislatures all over the world.
05:46
It is used in more than 80 countries.
05:49
Belgium, friends, was the first country to use the proportional representation system
05:54
in the general elections of 1900.
05:56
Now, there can be many different ways to implement this type of voting system.
06:01
In some countries, like Israel and Netherlands,
06:05
the whole country is one constituency.
06:07
It is not divided into different constituencies.
06:09
So, the people of the country vote based on the parties.
06:12
And according to the voting percentage of the parties, they are allotted seats.
06:17
This is called pure proportional representation.
06:20
What are the other ways in other countries?
06:23
Parties list the candidates.
06:25
And the voters vote based on the list of the candidates.
06:28
This is called closed list system.
06:31
In some countries, the list that the parties list,
06:33
the candidates can vote on that too.
06:35
They can also rank on how the list is being drawn.
06:39
And which candidate will be given the percentage of seats,
06:42
the percentage of votes that we are giving here.
06:44
This is called open list system.
06:46
So, if in the general elections of 2014,
06:48
the proportional representation system was used in our country,
06:52
then according to the 31% vote share, BJP should have got 169 seats out of 545.
06:59
In fact, all the parties should have got their seats according to their percentage.
07:03
But it is not that there are no disadvantages of the proportional representation system.
07:08
Those who criticize it say that
07:10
the voters lose their connection with their leaders at a local level.
07:14
Nationally, it looks fine that a party has won so many votes,
07:19
so it should get so many seats.
07:21
But the local constituency leaders lose their connection.
07:25
Another thing that is said against it is that
07:27
in the proportional representation system,
07:29
it is very difficult for a party to get a majority.
07:32
So, the chances are that the coalition governments will be formed.
07:36
And it is said that coalition governments are not very stable.
07:39
Maybe this is the reason that in countries like Germany,
07:42
a mixture of voting systems is used.
07:44
A mix of first-past-the-post and proportional representation is used.
07:48
In their national legislature in Germany,
07:51
50% seats work like first-past-the-post.
07:54
People elect their constituency leaders.
07:57
And the remaining 50% seats are taken out by the parties
08:00
and proportionally represented by their voting percentage,
08:04
they are given a seat.
08:06
You can say that the advantages of both the types have been balanced.
08:10
In most of the presidential countries of the world,
08:12
like Russia, South America, France,
08:15
a two-round voting system is used.
08:18
In this, there is a voting round.
08:20
If no one gets a majority,
08:22
there will be a second round of voting.
08:24
And generally, in the second round of voting,
08:26
only the top two candidates are seen.
08:28
The disadvantages of this system are the same
08:30
as the disadvantages of the first-past-the-post system.
08:32
In fact, it has more disadvantages.
08:34
The disadvantages are that only two people are selected in some countries.
08:38
So, the smaller parties are not given a chance to rise above.
08:43
So, again, people vote for those candidates
08:46
who have more chances of winning here.
08:48
So, this was an overview of different types of voting systems.
08:52
But in reality, voting systems can be very complicated.
08:55
All the types I told you,
08:56
there can be many sub-types in them.
08:59
Many countries in the world modify it in their own way.
09:02
And there can be many more things in them.
09:04
For example, in Greece,
09:05
the party that wins the majority
09:07
is given a bonus of 50 seats.
09:09
They get 50 seats extra in the parliament
09:12
just because they won the majority.
09:14
So, every country has modified such small things in its own way.
09:17
The more you learn about them,
09:19
the more you will get to know.
09:21
And maybe then you will be able to answer the question
09:23
that which voting system will actually be good.
09:25
What do you think, friends, after watching this video?
09:27
You can write in the comments and tell me
09:29
which voting system will be good according to you.
09:32
Let's meet in the next video, friends.
09:34
Thank you!
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