Majority jackpot system

The majority jackpot system (MJS), also known as a majority-minority apportionment, is a mixed-member majoritarian and conditional voting rule.[1] It produces subproportional representation by fixing the final apportionment for a party or alliance that wins a majority of the vote at some level (e.g. 55% of the seats). It differs from the similar majority bonus system in that the total number of seats is fixed, whereas the majority bonus assigns a fixed number of "bonus" seats to the majority party.

The majority jackpot system (right) is a supermixed system: by default, it not only mixes a winner take all and PR formulas in the same district and tier (fusion), it also has a conditional and compensatory element as well. (bonus system to the left)

It is currently used in Armenia and San Marino, and was previously used in Italy from 2006 to 2013.[citation needed]

History

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Benito Mussolini was the first politician to enact a law to give automatic seats to the winning party and ensured his victory in the 1924 Italian general election. The system was reintroduced for the 1953 Italian general election, in which any parliamentary coalition winning an absolute majority of votes would be awarded two-thirds of the seats in Parliament. The Christian Democracy-led coalition fell narrowly short of this majority in the election, and the system was abolished before the 1958 election.[citation needed]

A similar plurality jackpot system, which awarded 55% of seats to the largest party, was introduced for local elections in 1993 and national ones in 2006 (replacing scorporo).[citation needed] In the 2013 Italian general election, the Democratic Party won 292 seats in the House using its 8,644,523 votes and so needed 29,604 preferences to obtain a seat. Its major opponent, The People of Freedom, won 97 seats with 7,332,972 votes and so needed 75,597 votes for a single seat. The system in use in Italy from 2006 until 2013, which assigned the jackpot to the plurality party (even if they lacked a majority), was judged unconstitutional by the Constitutional Court of Italy.[2][3] After a proposed modification involving a run-off vote (between the top two alliances) was also struck down, parallel voting was adopted for the 2018 Italian general election.[4]

Jackpot vs. bonus

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The jackpot system ensures the winning party or alliance ends up with at least a certain fixed number of seats in total, by granting it however many additional seats are needed. In the Sanmarinese Parliament, the majority alliance is given 35 out of 60 seats.[5] A majority jackpot system can be seen as a variant on the (compensatory) additional member system, where a set of seats are assigned by the plurality principle (but in case of the jackpot system, in a multi-member district), while the rest of the seats are assigned with the proportionality principle, taking into account the seats already distributed. This means if the majority jackpot is set at 55%, and the largest party/coalition receives 35% of the vote, they will be entitled to the additional 20% to reach 55%, but no more. The rest of the seats are distributed among the other parties, unlike the majority bonus system, which would not take them into account (like parallel voting). If the largest party would receive 60% of the vote, they would be entitled to the additional 5% of seats above the majority jackpot, unless there is also a minority jackpot. The size of a jackpot is typically above 50%, to provide for a clear majority, but may also provide for a certain size of supermajority.

Size of jackpot

(%)

Vote share

of the largest party (%)

Vote share

of the 2nd largest party (%)

Appr. seat share

of the largest party (%)

Appr. seat share

of the 2nd largest party (%)

Effective bonus

for largest party (%)

Effective bonus

for second-largest party (%)

50% 35% 25% 50% 19% 15% -6%
55% 35% 25% 55% 17% 20% -8%
60% 35% 25% 60% 15% 25% -10%
50% 45% 25% 50% 23% 5% -2%
55% 45% 25% 55% 20% 10% -5%
60% 45% 25% 60% 18% 15% -7%
50% 55% 25% 55% 25% 0% 0%
55% 55% 25% 55% 25% 0% 0%
60% 55% 25% 60% 22% 5% -3%

The table below shows the difference between the jackpot and bonus rules.

Size of

bonus (%)

Size of

jackpot (%)

Vote share of the

largest party (%)

Appr. seat share of the largest party (%) Effective bonus
Bonus system Jackpot system
10% 45% 51% 6%
25% 45% 59% 14%
50% 45% 73% 28%
50% 45% 50% 5%
55% 45% 55% 10%
60% 45% 60% 15%
10% 55% 60% 5%
25% 55% 66% 11%
50% 55% 78% 23%
50% 55% 55% 0%
55% 55% 55% 0%
60% 55% 60% 5%

The jackpot system essentially gives the size of the jackpot or the vote share (whichever is higher, making it a conditional system and an effectively flexible "bonus"), while the bonus system gives a fixed bonus (in terms of seat numbers, which mean slightly variable effective bonus in terms of percentages) and a proportional share of the rest of the seats. The jackpot only modifies the seat share when the largest party's proportional seats count based on its vote share is below the size of the jackpot. A jackpot system may also be have further conditional elements: it may provide for a supermajority jackpot only for a party which received an absolute majority of vote.

Minority jackpot

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A variant on the majority jackpot is the minority jackpot, which ensures a certain amount of minimum representation for political or minorities. A variation of the minority jackpot is lower threshold for certain minority lists or reach their first seat.

Country Type of election Type of system Size of jackpot Notes
Armenia national elections (legislative) conditional majority jackpot (two rounds) 54% Second round is held if no party reaches 54% of seats and no coalition government can be formed

If a party would receives more than 2/3 of seats, their share is capped at 2/3, all minority parties must have at least 1/3 of seats in total.

minority jackpot (compensatory) 33%
Djibouti national elections (legislative) majority jackpot 80% Used in multi-member district.
Italy provincial elections conditional majority jackpot (two rounds) 60% Using a double simultaneous vote with the presidency. If no list wins more than 50% of the vote, a runoff is held with a majority jackpot of 60%.[6]
municipal elections above 15 000 inhabitants conditional majority jackpot (two rounds) 67% With 2 votes cast, the second vote is for the jackpot and also functions as a double simultaneous vote with the mayoral race. Split ticket is allowed.[6]
San Marino national elections (legislative) conditional majority jackpot (two rounds) 55%

References

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  1. ^ Massicotte & Blais (1999). "Mixed electoral systems: a conceptual and empirical survey". Electoral Studies. 18 (3): 341–366. doi:10.1016/S0261-3794(98)00063-8.
  2. ^ Unconstitutionality sentence by the Italian Constitutional Court
  3. ^ The ruling awaited in Palace of Consulta after the public hearing on 3 December 2013 could cause an earthquake the Italian public scene, changing some of coordinates that determine the behavior of politicians and the electorate: Buonomo, Giampiero (2013). "La legge elettorale alla prova di costituzionalità". L'Ago e Il Filo Edizione Online. Archived from the original on 2012-08-01. Retrieved 2016-04-10.
  4. ^ Marco Bertacche (March 2, 2018). "How Italy's New Electoral System Works". Bloomberg Politics.
  5. ^ REPUBLIC OF SAN MARINO EARLY PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS 11 November 2012
  6. ^ a b "Italy - Politics, Regions, Constitution | Britannica". www.britannica.com. 2024-08-09. Retrieved 2024-08-11.

Caciagli, Mario; Alan S. Zuckerman; Istituto Carlo Cattaneo (2001). Italian Politics: Emerging Themes and Institutional Responses. Berghahn Books. pp. 87–89.