Two-party runoff vote A two-party vote is used for elections to the
Bhutanese National Assembly, where the first round selects two parties that are allowed to compete in the second round. Then, a second round is held using
single-member districts with
first-past-the-post.
Top-two primaries In the United States, a two-round system called the
jungle primary is used in
Louisiana in place of traditional primary elections to choose each party's candidate only in legislative, local, and some statewide races other than congressional ones. In this state, the first round is held on
Election Day with runoffs occurring soon after.
Washington adopted a two-round system
in a 2008 referendum, called the
nonpartisan blanket primary or top-two primary.
California approved the system in 2010, which was first used for the
36th congressional district special election in February 2011. The first election (the primary) is held
before the general election in November and the top two candidates enter the general election. The general election is always held, even if a candidate gets over 50%.
Georgia requires a second round if no candidate wins over 50% on Election Day. Georgia uses this system in addition to normal partisan primaries, which usually limit the field to two major candidates. Due to this, second rounds are rare, but a third-party or independent candidate drawing a small share of votes can still force one, as was seen in the
2022 United States Senate election in Georgia.
Exhaustive ballot The exhaustive ballot (EB) is similar to the two-round system, but involves more rounds of voting rather than just two. If no candidate receives an absolute majority in the first round, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated. This continues until one candidate has an absolute majority. Because voters may have to cast votes several times, EB is not used in large-scale public elections. Instead it is used in smaller contests such as the election of the presiding officer of an assembly; one long-standing example of its use is in the
United Kingdom, where local associations (LCAs) of the
Conservative Party use EB to elect their prospective parliamentary candidates (PPCs). Exhaustive ballot is also used by FIFA and the International Olympic Committee to select hosts.
Contingent vote The
contingent or
supplementary vote is a variant of instant-runoff voting (IRV) that has been used in
Queensland and is used in the
United Kingdom to elect mayors. Like IRV, voters vote once and rank candidates. Unlike IRV, contingent voting election system involves only two rounds of counting at most. After the first round of counting all but the two candidates with most votes are eliminated, with their votes transferred. With only two candidates progressing on to the second round of counting, one candidate achieves a majority in the second round and wins. The contingent vote tends to elect the same candidate that the two-round system and instant-runoff voting system do.
Instant-runoff voting Instant-runoff voting (IRV), like the exhaustive ballot, involves multiple reiterative counts in which the candidate with fewest votes is eliminated each time. Whilst the exhaustive ballot and the two-round system both involve voters casting a separate vote in each round, under instant-runoff, voters vote only once. This is possible because, rather than voting for only a single candidate, the voter ranks all of the candidates in order of preference. These preferences are then used to transfer the votes of those whose first preference has been eliminated during the course of the count. Because the two-round system and the exhaustive ballot involve separate rounds of voting, voters can use the results of one round to decide how they will vote in the next, whereas this is not possible under IRV. Because it is necessary to vote only once, IRV is used for elections in many places. For such as Australian general and state elections (called
preferential voting). In the United States, it is known as
ranked-choice voting and is used in a growing number of states and localities. In
Ireland it is known as the
single transferable vote (STV) and is used for
presidential elections and parliamentary by-elections. STV as applied in multi-member districts is a proportional voting system, not a majoritarian one; and candidates need only achieve a quota (or the highest remaining fraction of a quota), to be elected. Multi-winner STV is used in Northern Ireland, Malta, the Australian senate and various other jurisdictions in Australia. STV is often used for municipal elections in lieu of more party-based forms of proportional representation. ==Compliance with voting method criteria==