Multiple winners are typically elected simultaneously in one non-transferable round of voting. In some cases, multiple non-transferable voting (MNTV) appears in a
runoff or two-round version, as seen in certain
local elections in France, where candidates without an absolute majority are thinned out before a second round. election and not
proportional (as in
party-list on the right), it typically elects a landslide slate of candidates.
Plurality block voting In a block voting election, all candidates compete for
m positions, often referred to as the district magnitude. Each voter selects up to
m candidates on the ballot. The
m candidates with the most votes, but not necessarily a majority, are elected and fill the positions.
Two-round block voting Two-round block voting is a variation of plurality-at-large where the field of candidates is thinned out before a second round.
General ticket / Party block voting Party block voting (PBV) or the general ticket is the party-list version of block voting. In contrast to the classic block vote, where candidates may stand as non-partisan and some minority nominations can theoretically succeed, PBV associates each candidate with a party list voted on by electors, often leading to a landslide outcome. The
Parliament of Singapore uses this system for most of its elections.
Approval block voting Block approval voting permits every voter to vote for any number of candidates, provided that they do not vote more than once for the same candidate. Block voting, specifically plurality block voting, is compared with preferential block voting as both often produce landslide victories for similar candidates. Instead of checkboxes, preferential block voting utilizes a
preferential ballot, making it a multiple
transferable vote rather than a multiple
non-transferable vote. Under both systems, a slate of the top preferred candidate and their clones typically secures every available seat.
Preferential block voting Block voting, or plurality block voting, is often compared with
preferential block voting as both systems tend to produce landslide victories for similar candidates. Instead of a series of checkboxes, preferential block voting uses a
preferential ballot. A slate of clones of the top preferred candidate will win every seat under both systems, however in preferential block voting this is instead the
instant-runoff winner. == Similar voting systems ==