Plural voting is the practice whereby one person might be able to vote multiple times in an election. It is not to be confused with a plurality voting system, which elects winners by relative lead in vote tallies and does not necessarily involve plural voting. It is different from the multiple voting that occurs under block voting.
Weighted voting is a generalisation of plural voting.
Every male citizen over 25 got one vote for legislative elections, but some electors got up to two supplementary votes according to some criteria: L'évolution du droit de vote , Belgium.be (official Belgian Portal) Marie-Thérèse Bitsch, Histoire de la Belgique de l'Antiquité à nos jours, Bruxelles, Editions Complexe, 2004,
The system was unpopular. Two more general strikes - in 1902 and in 1913 - were conducted to demand the abolition of plural voting.
For municipal elections, a fourth vote was granted to family heads who paid a fixed level of electoral tax, or whose cadastral income was at least of 150 francs.
The Local Government (Dublin) Act 1930, passed by the Cumann na nGaedheal government, provided that Dublin City Council would comprise 30 popularly elected "ordinary members" and five "commercial members" elected by business (individuals or ). The commercial members were elected in a single five-member constituency. They were elected by single transferable vote but with each elector casting one ballot or up to six ballots, depending on the tax amount they paid.; ; The commercial members were abolished in 1935 by the Fianna Fáil government.;
Inland fisheries boards prior to 2010 were elected by holders of fishing licences, who until 1980 had varying numbers of votes depending on the cost of their licences. Fisheries (Ireland) Act 1848, §9; Fisheries Act 1925, §8;
After 1910, the Liberal government was intent on passing a Plural Voting Bill that sought to prevent electors who appeared on the electoral register more than once from voting more than once. Liberal and Unionist headquarters were in agreement that 29 seats were won by Unionists in December 1910 because of plural voting.Ian Packer, Lloyd George, Liberalism and the Land The bill actually passed third reading, but before the bill could pass into law, the Great War started and the bill was shelved. These practices were finally abolished for parliamentary elections by the Representation of the People Act 1948, which first applied in the 1950 General Election. However, plural voting for local government elections continued until it was abolished, outside the City of London, by the Representation of the People Act 1969. It still exists in the City of London.
Limited companies and occupiers of premises with a rateable valuation of £10 could appoint nominees—as could companies for each £10 of their valuations—under a system of plural voting, which even allowed such votes to be cast in another constituency...Plural voting also existed in local government elections in Northern Ireland, as in the rest of the United Kingdom (see above).
Yulia Latynina proposes to offer money to voters who agree to sell their voting right.
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