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Two-party system

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A two-party system is a form of party system where two major political parties dominate the voting in nearly all elections. As a result, all, or nearly all, elected offices end up being held by candidates endorsed by one of the major parties. Coalition governments occur only rarely in two-party systems, though each party may internally look like a coalition.

Under a two-party system, one of the two major parties typically holds a majority in the legislature (or a legislative house in a bicameral system), and is referred to as the Majority Party. The other major party is referred to as the Minority Party. The leader of the majority party may be referred to as the Majority Leader, assisted by the Majority Whip, and the leader of the major opposition party may be referred to as the Minority Leader, assisted by the Minority Whip.

How and why it occurs

Two-party systems often develop spontaneously when the voting system used for elections discriminates against third or smaller parties, because the number of votes received for a party in a whole country is not directly related to the proportion of seats it receives in the country's assembly/assemblies. While there is sometimes a coincidental relationship between votes cast and seats received in these systems, voters are not assured that their one vote will directly count toward an additional seat. The most widely-used system to have this effect, the simple plurality system (first past the post) often appears to pull systems into encouraging the survival of only two major parties, because it encourages compromising, where one insincerely votes for another party in the hopes that the other worse party will not be elected. It is also vulnerable to vote splitting. A third force can break in on the scene (the Labour Party in 20th century United Kingdom, or arguably the Republican Party in the 19th century United States, for example) but only at the ultimate expense of a former major party (the Liberal Party and the Whigs, respectively). The overall system re-stabilizes into two-party mode after a three-party interlude - see Duverger's law. Runoff voting can also help solidify a two party sysetem.

Some representation systems - such as those involving a single elected president or a mayor dominating the government - may encourage two-party systems, since ultimately the contest will pit the two most popular candidates against each other.

When constituencies (electoral districts) vote for candidates on the basis of a geographical constituency, all votes for candidates other than the winner count for nothing. This reflects another factor that encourages a two party system: smaller parties often cannot win enough votes in a constituency because they have smaller support and sometimes more scattered support than larger parties. Often a first-past-the-post electoral system and the election of candidates from geographical constituencies (districts) appear together in a single political system: this means that some smaller parties can garner a significant proportion of votes nationally, but receive few constituency seats and thus cannot realistically expect to compete overall on an equal footing with larger country-wide parties.

In countries that use proportional representation (PR), especially where the whole country forms a single constituency (like Israel), the electoral rules discourage a two-party system; the number of votes received for a party relates directly and proportionally to the number of representative seats won, and new parties can thus develop an immediate electoral niche. Duverger identified that the use of proportional representation would make a two party system less likely. However, other systems do not guarantee new parties access to the system: Malta provides an example of a stable two-party system using the single transferable vote. The Dutch political system is sometimes called the most representative in the world, in part because it has no electoral threshold (only residual seat assignment disturbs the representativeness).

Often, two-party systems result from various factors, mostly the use of a first-past-the-post voting system, rather than from deliberate electoral/political engineering.

Examples

Two-party systems have historically occurred commonly in the so-called Anglosphere nations such as the United Kingdom and former British colonies like Jamaica, New Zealand and the United States. While Americans and Britons often see the two-party system as natural, based on their long experiences with it, it in fact comes about as a product of particular rules and conventions (especially those involving first-past-the-post voting). The two parties that dominate at any particular time thus have an incentive to keep the existing rules in operation, so as to prevent electoral erosion to the benefit of smaller parties.

In Canada, only two parties (Liberals and Conservatives) have a realistic chance of winning, but the other parties often get enough seats that the party in power must consider their views — though rarely to the point where a European-style coalition government is necessary. Canada is sometimes described as a "two party plus" system.

In the United States, only two parties (Democrats and Republicans) have a realistic chance of winning as well. Sometimes independents and third parties will win local elections, however.

It should also be noted that the growing popularity of the British Liberal Democrats (with the party winning between 15-25% of the vote in recent elections) has created a similar situation in modern British politics.

In some countries, the system, while not a true two-party system, may evolve to a situation where there are two rather stable coalitions, each with a dominant party, and power alternates between the two. This is the case in France since 1981 (see Politics of France) and Germany since the 1970s.

Few European nations are considered to operate under a two party system, and are instead considered to be multi-party states driven by coalition governments. However, Greece may be cited as an example of a European two - party system.

Advantages and disadvantages

The two-party system's defenders argue that:

Against the argument that the two-party system leads to more stable governance, critics of two-party systems argue variously that: Observers also criticise two-party systems for the following alleged flaws: The electoral systems which tend to favour two-party systems (notably the "biggest pile of votes wins" system) also receive criticism because:

Examples of two-party systems

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