The term binomial system refers to the dual-member districts the system uses. Within these districts, the
apportionment method (between parties, not candidates) is technically
proportional, but because of the small district magnitude it is across the whole assembly,
semi-proportional. In practice, because there are only two seats and Chile operates under a
two-party system, the rule behaves like a
power-sharing agreement where the two major parties each take maximum half the seats in the legislature (unless in enough districts the larger party can win with a landslide - in this case double the number of votes as the runner-up party). The binomial system is also distinct from
biproportional apportionment, despite the similarity in name, although it is technically proportional both geographically and within districts, biproportional systems used a unified
algorithm for determining how many seats each region gets and to achieve party proportionality on the whole, based on the votes cast. It is also not to be confused with the
dual-member mixed proportional (DMP) system, often shortened to dual-member proportional, a system invented in 2013 (the same year the binomial system was abolished in Chile). This method is different from the binomial system, being a
mixed system which provides
mixed-member proportional representation by allocating the first seat by
plurality, and the second within the
compensation mechanism (based on the national or regional popular vote). Under DMP, a voter can vote for pairs of candidates on their ballot, functioning as a
closed list locally, but as a best loser system for compensation. == Characteristics ==