TOPIC 7 OF 29

Why Elections? FPTP vs Proportional Representation

🎓 Class 11 Social Science CBSE Theory Ch 3 — Election and Representation ⏱ ~22 min
🌐 Language: [gtranslate]

This MCQ module is based on: Why Elections? FPTP vs Proportional Representation

This assessment will be based on: Why Elections? FPTP vs Proportional Representation

Upload images, PDFs, or Word documents to include their content in assessment generation.

Class 11 · Political Science · Indian Constitution at Work

Chapter 3 · Election and Representation — Part 1: Election Systems & Methods of Representation

Imagine a chess game where the black knight suddenly moved in straight lines, or a cricket match without umpires. Rules and a fair umpire decide what kind of game gets played. The same is true of elections. The method of counting votes can change who wins, even when the votes are identical. This part introduces the two great families of election systems — First-Past-the-Post and Proportional Representation — and shows why our Constitution makers placed these basic rules inside the Constitution itself.

3.0 Why Write Election Rules into the Constitution?

In any sport we accept that rules and an impartial umpire must be fixed before the game begins. The same logic applies to elections. The choice of an electoral system — how votes are cast, how they are counted, how seats are allocated — can favour bigger parties or smaller parties, the majority community or minorities, candidates or party lists. If these basic decisions were left to the government of the day, the ruling party would always be tempted to design rules that suit itself. That is exactly why the Constitution lays them down.

The Constitution of India, like most democratic constitutions, answers five basic questions about elections, leaving the technical detail to laws passed by Parliament:

\1F5F3
Who is eligible to vote?
Universal adult franchise — every Indian citizen above 18 years.
\1F4DD
Who is eligible to contest?
Citizens above the prescribed age, subject to disqualifications.
\2696
Who supervises elections?
An independent Election Commission of India (Article 324).
\1F4CA
How do voters choose their representatives?
Method of voting — by candidate or by party list.

The first three are about ensuring that elections are free and fair; the last two are about ensuring fair representation. Both will be examined across this chapter.

3.1 Elections and Democracy

Two simple questions help us see why elections sit at the centre of any democracy:

  • Can we have democracy without holding elections?
  • Can we hold elections without having democracy?

The first question reminds us of the necessity of representation. In a country of more than a billion people, citizens cannot directly take every decision. We distinguish between direct democracy, where citizens themselves vote on every rule (the ancient Greek city-states; gram sabhas are perhaps our closest example), and indirect or representative democracy, where citizens elect representatives who then govern on their behalf. Once representation becomes essential, the method by which representatives are elected becomes equally essential.

The second question reminds us that not all elections are democratic. Many non-democratic regimes also hold elections — carefully designed so that the rulers always win. A democratic election is one in which:

  • Eligibility to vote and to contest is fairly defined.
  • An impartial body supervises the process.
  • Votes are counted in a way that reflects voter preferences.
\1F4DA Why constitutionalise these rules?
Because they are basic conditions of the democratic “game” itself. If the ruling party of the day could change the rules of how votes are counted, every election would be a different game. By writing the basic framework into the Constitution, we make these rules harder to manipulate — they can be changed only through a formal constitutional amendment.

3.2 Different Methods of Election

People often assume there is only one “natural” way to hold an election — people vote, the candidate with the most votes wins. But there are many ways for voters to express their preference, and many ways to count those preferences. Some rules favour large parties; others give small parties a voice. Some protect majority communities; others give space to minorities. Two major families of systems exist worldwide.

3.2.1 The First-Past-the-Post (FPTP) System

Under the First-Past-the-Post? system, the country is divided into geographical units called constituencies?. Each constituency elects one representative. The candidate who secures the highest number of votes in that constituency — not necessarily a majority of votes — is declared elected. The image is borrowed from horse racing: whoever crosses the post first wins, even if by a single vote.

Because the winner only needs to be ahead of every other candidate, the system is also called the plurality system?. Examples include the United Kingdom and India. Three rules define it:

  • Country is divided into small single-member constituencies.
  • Each constituency elects exactly one representative.
  • The candidate with the highest votes wins, even if below 50%.
\26A0 The 1984 Lok Sabha “distortion”
In the 1984 general election, the Congress party received about 48% of the popular votes but won 415 of 543 Lok Sabha seats — over 80% of seats. Meanwhile the BJP won 7.4% of votes but only 2 seats — less than 1% of the seats. This dramatic mismatch is built into the FPTP system: votes that go to losing candidates simply “waste”, while a party that finishes first in many constituencies (even with under 50% of the vote in each) sweeps the legislature.
Vote share vs. seat share in the 1984 Lok Sabha election. Notice how Congress’s 48% vote share converted into more than 76% of seats, while the BJP’s 7.4% vote share produced almost no seats.

3.2.2 The Proportional Representation (PR) System

Under the Proportional Representation? system, each party gets seats in the legislature in roughly the same proportion as its share of the total votes. A party with 30% of the votes gets approximately 30% of the seats. Voters typically vote for a party rather than for an individual candidate. After the votes are counted, each party fills its quota of seats from a pre-declared list of candidates.

PR comes in two main variants:

  • Single-constituency PR: The whole country is treated as a single constituency. Israel and the Netherlands use this method.
  • Multi-member constituency PR: The country is divided into several large constituencies; each elects multiple representatives in proportion to party vote shares. Argentina and Portugal use this variant.
\1F4D6 Definition
Proportional Representation: An electoral system in which a party’s share of seats in the legislature is roughly equal to its share of votes in the election. The voter usually votes for a party, and seats are then allocated to candidates from a party list.

3.2.3 Israel — A Case of Pure PR

Israel elects its legislature, the Knesset, every four years through a pure proportional system. Every party publishes a list of candidates before the election. Voters vote for the party, not for individual candidates. A party gets seats in proportion to votes polled. There is one threshold: a party must secure at least 3.25% of votes to be eligible for any seats.

Israel — 2015 Knesset Election Results (selected)
PartyVote Share (%)Seats Won (of 120)
Likud23.4030
Zionist Camp18.6724
Joint List10.6113
Yesh Atid8.8211
Kulanu7.4910
Habayit Hayehudi6.748
Shas5.747
Yisrael Beitenu5.106
United Torah Judaism4.996
Other Parties (below 3.25%)4.510

Notice that vote share and seat share match almost exactly. This allows even small parties to win representation, which often produces multi-party coalition governments — a typical feature of PR systems.

3.3 FPTP vs PR — A Side-by-Side Comparison

METHODS OF ELECTION First-Past-the-Post (FPTP) Proportional Representation (PR) Small single-member constituencies One representative per constituency Vote is cast for a candidate Winner needs only the highest votes Seats may exceed vote share Examples: India, U.K. Large or single national constituencies Many representatives per constituency Vote is cast for a party Winner has majority of votes Seats nearly equal vote share Examples: Israel, Netherlands
A bird’s-eye comparison of the two great families of election systems.
FPTP vs PR — Key Differences
FeatureFPTPPR
Constituency sizeSmall geographical unitsLarge area or whole country as one constituency
Representatives per constituencyOneMore than one (multi-member)
Voter votes forA specific candidateA political party
Relationship of votes & seatsA party may get more seats than its share of votesSeats are allocated in proportion to votes
Majority needed to winHighest votes among candidates — not necessarily 50%+1Winning candidates secure majority of votes
ExamplesIndia, United KingdomIsrael, Netherlands

3.4 Hybrid PR in India — The Rajya Sabha and President

India did not adopt PR for the Lok Sabha or State Legislative Assemblies. But the Constitution does prescribe a third, more complex variant of PR for indirect elections — namely, the elections to the Rajya Sabha, the Vidhan Parishads, the President and the Vice-President. The technique used here is known as the Single Transferable Vote (STV).

\1F4D6 Single Transferable Vote (STV)
In Rajya Sabha elections, every State has a quota of seats. The voters are the MLAs of that State (not ordinary citizens). Each MLA ranks the candidates in order of preference. To be declared elected, a candidate must reach a quota of votes calculated as:
Quota = [ Total votes polled ÷ (Number of seats + 1) ] + 1
For example, if 4 Rajya Sabha members must be elected by the 200 MLAs of a State, the quota is (200÷5) + 1 = 41. After counting first-preference votes, if a candidate is short of the quota the candidate with fewest votes is eliminated and his/her votes are transferred to the second preferences. The process continues until the required number of candidates reach the quota.
THINK ABOUT IT — Same votes, different winners?
Bloom: L4 Analyse

Hold a mock election in your class to elect four class representatives, using three different methods:

  1. Each student gets one vote; top four vote-getters win (FPTP-like).
  2. Each student gets four votes, may give them all to one candidate or split them across candidates; top four win.
  3. Each student ranks all candidates by preference, counted using the Rajya Sabha STV method described above.

Did the same four people win all three times? If not, explain why identical voter preferences produced different winners.

\2705 Pointers
Method (1) rewards candidates with the broadest single-issue support; method (2) lets passionate minorities pile votes on a single favourite; method (3) rewards candidates who are second-best in many lists. Same voters, same preferences — but the rule for counting changes who wins. This is the central insight of this chapter: rules of the game shape the outcome of the game.

3.5 The UK and Israel — Two Real-World Cases

\1F1EC\1F1E7
Case 1 · United Kingdom
FPTP — Strong governments, distorted seat shares
The UK divides itself into 650 single-member constituencies for House of Commons elections. Whoever wins the most votes in each constituency wins the seat. The system normally produces a clear majority for one of the two big parties (Conservative or Labour), enabling stable single-party government — but smaller parties such as the Liberal Democrats often receive far fewer seats than their vote share would suggest.
\1F1EE\1F1F1
Case 2 · Israel
Pure PR — Many parties, frequent coalitions
Israel treats the entire country as a single constituency for the 120-seat Knesset. Even very small parties can win seats if they cross the 3.25% threshold. As the 2015 results showed, ten parties shared the 120 seats almost in proportion to their votes. The result is high representativeness but rarely a single-party majority — coalition governments are the norm.
\1F4DC From the NCERT Activity
Collect newspaper clippings about elections in India and any other country. Classify them into (a) system of representation, (b) voter eligibility, and (c) role of the Election Commission. The websites of the Election Commission of India (eci.gov.in) and the ACE Project (aceproject.org) carry comparable data for many countries.
— NCERT, Indian Constitution at Work
\1F4CB

Competency-Based Questions — Part 1

Case Study: A new democracy is being designed. The constitution drafters must choose between FPTP and PR. The country has many small linguistic and religious communities spread across the territory. Two political scientists, Asha and Bharat, give opposite advice based on the methods they have studied.
Q1. In the FPTP system, the winning candidate in a constituency is the one who:
L3 Apply
  • (A) Secures the largest number of postal ballots
  • (B) Belongs to the party with the highest national vote share
  • (C) Has more votes than any other candidate in the constituency
  • (D) Wins more than 50% of the votes
Answer: (C) — FPTP rewards plurality, not majority. The winner only needs to be ahead of every other candidate, even if below 50%.
Q2. In the 1984 Lok Sabha election, the Congress won 48% of the votes but more than 80% of the seats. This best illustrates which feature of FPTP?
L4 Analyse
  • (A) Vote-counting fraud
  • (B) The Rajya Sabha’s Single Transferable Vote
  • (C) The bonus effect — a leading party may secure a far larger share of seats than of votes
  • (D) The PR threshold of 3.25%
Answer: (C) — FPTP often gives the leading party or coalition “bonus seats” well beyond their vote share, because votes for losing candidates are wasted.
Q3. Asha says PR is more fair because seats match votes. Bharat says FPTP is more fair because each constituency has a clear, accountable representative. In about 60 words, evaluate both arguments and state which one you find more convincing in the Indian context.
L5 Evaluate
Model Answer: Asha’s point is that PR ensures every vote weighs equally; small parties and minorities get a voice. Bharat’s point is that FPTP creates a personal link between voter and MP, simplifying accountability. In a vast, diverse country like India where citizens want a known local representative and stable governments, the FPTP advantage is significant — though we lose strict proportionality. Both are partly right.
HOT Q. Design a hypothetical “hybrid” election system for a 100-seat legislature: 60 seats elected by FPTP from constituencies and 40 seats allocated proportionally to parties. Explain in 4 short bullets what problems this system might solve and what new problems it might create.
L6 Create
Hint: Solves — (i) preserves a personal MP for each constituency; (ii) reduces the vote-seat distortion. Creates — (iii) two classes of legislators (constituency MPs vs. list MPs) with different legitimacy; (iv) more complex ballot, possibly confusing to first-time voters. Germany uses a similar mixed-member system.
\2696 Assertion–Reason Questions — Part 1
Options:
(A) Both A and R are true, and R is the correct explanation of A.
(B) Both A and R are true, but R is NOT the correct explanation of A.
(C) A is true, but R is false.
(D) A is false, but R is true.
Assertion (A): The First-Past-the-Post system is also called the plurality system.
Reason (R): Under FPTP, the winning candidate must secure a clear majority of more than 50% of the votes cast.
Answer: (C) — A is true: it is called plurality because the winner only needs the most votes. R is false: a majority of votes is not required; a plurality (the highest, even if below 50%) is enough.
Assertion (A): In a Proportional Representation system, voters generally vote for a party rather than for an individual candidate.
Reason (R): Each party publishes a pre-declared list of candidates, and seats are filled from this list in proportion to the party’s vote share.
Answer: (A) — Both true, and R correctly explains why voters in PR systems express their preference at the party level rather than for individual candidates.
Assertion (A): The Constitution of India uses the Single Transferable Vote system for elections to the Rajya Sabha.
Reason (R): The Rajya Sabha is directly elected by all adult citizens of India through universal franchise.
Answer: (C) — A is true: STV is the prescribed method. R is false: Rajya Sabha is indirectly elected by the State Legislative Assembly MLAs, not by ordinary citizens.
AI Tutor
Class 11 Political Science — Indian Constitution at Work
Ready
Hi! 👋 I'm Gaura, your AI Tutor for Why Elections? FPTP vs Proportional Representation. Take your time studying the lesson — whenever you have a doubt, just ask me! I'm here to help.