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A double majority is a voting system which requires a majority of votes according to two separate criteria. The mechanism is usually used to require strong support for any measure considered to be of great importance.

Two special cases that technically fit the definition but are usually not considered double majority are double chambers[a], where a law must have a majority in two chambers of a legislative body to pass; and quorums, where the measure requires not only a majority but also a turnout minimum.

Examples in use

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Australia

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In Australia, constitutional changes must be passed at a referendum in a majority of states (4 of the 6), and by a majority of voters nationally. Prior to 1977, the votes of citizens in the Northern Territory and the ACT did not affect the national or state-based count. After a Constitution Alteration put to referendum in 1977 and given vice-regal assent on 19 July 1977, Territorial votes contribute towards the national majority, but the Territories themselves do not count towards the majority of states. An earlier referendum in 1974, where the same proposed change had been bundled with a lowering of the required number of states to a half (3 of the 6) instead of a majority, had been defeated.

Canada

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Since the patriation of the Canadian constitution in 1982, thorough amending formulae for the constitution were adopted. Per the Constitution Act, 1982, many amendments can be passed only by the Parliament of Canada and a two-thirds majority of the provincial legislatures, those provinces together representing at least 50% of the national population-–this is known as the 7/50 formula[1] (as there were and are 10 provinces, so 7 constitutes a two-thirds majority). Additionally, a province can explicitly choose to dissent to an amendment that "derogates from the legislative powers, the proprietary rights or any other rights or privileges of the legislature or government of a province", in which case it does not apply in that province even if passed. Though not constitutionally mandated, a referendum is also considered to be necessary by some, especially following the precedent established by the Charlottetown Accord in 1992.

However, there are some parts of the constitution that can be modified only by a vote of all the provinces plus the Parliament of Canada; these include changes to the composition of the Supreme Court of Canada, changing the process for amending the constitution itself, or any act affecting the Canadian monarch or Governor General.

European Union

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In the European Union, double majority voting replaced artificial voting weights for votes requiring a qualified majority in the Council of the European Union following implementation of the Treaty of Lisbon. A qualified majority requires 55% of voting EU member states, representing at least 65% of the population of voting members for a European Commission proposal to be approved. This increases to 72% of voting members states, representing at least 65% of the EU population of voting members should the proposal originate from a member state. Proposals can be blocked should a qualified majority of at least four Council members representing more than 35% of the EU population be formed.[2][3][4]

Finland

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Changing the constitution of Finland requires that a simple majority of the sitting Parliament vote in favor of the amendment. The amendment is postponed until the next general election. The next parliament may finally vote to ratify the amendment but by a two thirds of the MPs. Thus, a double majority of two different parliaments is usually required to pass constitutional amendments. An expedited process may however be entered if five sixths of the sitting parliament vote to declare an amendment urgent. Then, a two-thirds majority of the current parliament may ratify an amendment using the expedited process.[5]

France

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The elections to the French National Assembly are conducted in a two-round system. To avoid a runoff, the candidate must win a majority of the votes cast, which also has to be higher than 25% of the number of registered voters in their electoral district.[6]

Northern Ireland

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Under the terms of the Belfast Agreement, if 30 members or more request it, a measure may be put to a "cross-community vote" which requires a majority from both the Nationalist and Unionist camps.

Kenya

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In Kenyan presidential elections, to avoid a runoff, a candidate must win both a majority of votes cast nationwide and at least 25% of the votes in at least half of Kenya's 47 counties (24).[7]

Philippines

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In the 2019 Bangsamoro autonomy plebiscite, for a place to join the Bangsamoro, it is required to have a majority for inclusion both in the place that is petitioning to be included, and from the rest of the larger entity it is originally included. For example, for the six towns from Lanao del Norte petitioning to join, a majority both from the town itself and from the rest of Lanao del Norte should be attained.[8] Each of the six towns overwhelmingly voted for inclusion, but a majority from the rest of Lanao del Norte rejected the towns joining the Bangsamoro, leading to the towns not being included.[9] Meanwhile, 63 of the 67 barangays (villages) in Cotabato voted for inclusion and got consent from their mother towns to join. One barangay rejected inclusion but was allowed by its mother town to join,[10] while three barangays voted for inclusion but were rejected by their mother towns from joining;[11] these four barangays did not join the Bangsamoro. Finally, Isabela City rejected to join, but was allowed by its mother province Basilan to join; it was also not included in the Bangsamoro.[12]

Spain

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For major reforms of the constitution of Spain, a two-thirds majority of the sitting Parliament is required to vote in favor of the amendment. Then, the Parliament is immediately dissolved and snap elections are called, after which the Parliament decides, by majority, whether or not to move on with the amendment. The amendment is then subject to ratification on a referendum. Thus, a double majority of two different parliaments and the people is required to pass major constitutional amendments. Minor amendments, instead, only require a qualified vote (supermajority) in the Parliament, but may be subject to referendum if one-tenth of MPs request so.

Switzerland

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In Switzerland, the passing of a constitutional amendment by popular vote requires a double majority; not only must a majority of people vote for the amendment but a majority of cantons must also give their consent. This is to prevent a larger canton from foisting amendments onto the smaller ones and vice versa.

United States

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In the United States, a constitutional amendment must be passed by a two thirds majority of each house and then ratified by the legislative bodies of three fourths of the states.

On a local level, double majorities are frequently used in municipal annexations, wherein majorities of both the residents in the annexing territory and the territory to be annexed must support the annexation.[citation needed] A similar rule exists for adopting metropolitan government in Tennessee, where the referendum must pass both inside and outside the principal city.[13]

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Double majority is a voting system that requires a proposal to secure affirmative majorities under at least two distinct criteria, such as an overall majority of votes cast and a concurrent majority among a specified subset of participants, jurisdictions, or weighted units, thereby demanding broader consensus beyond simple plurality rule.[1] This approach contrasts with single-criterion majorities by incorporating safeguards against dominance by larger groups, often applied in constitutional amendments, federal legislatures, or supranational bodies to balance population-based and territorial representation.[2] In practice, double majority rules promote institutional stability by elevating the threshold for change, though they can hinder reforms when disparate interests align against them; for instance, Australia's constitutional framework mandates success in a national referendum—requiring over 50% yes votes nationwide—plus affirmative majorities in at least four of six states, a standard that has resulted in only eight of 44 proposed amendments succeeding since federation in 1901.[1][3] Similarly, the European Union's qualified majority voting for Council decisions post-Lisbon Treaty demands support from at least 55% of member states (a blocking minority of 35% population notwithstanding), representing 65% of the EU population, weighting both state equality and demographic scale to mitigate large-state overreach.[2] Critics argue that double majorities entrench veto power in smaller or peripheral entities, potentially stifling majority will in diverse polities, as evidenced by repeated failures in Australian referendums on issues like expanded federal powers or Indigenous recognition, where state-level opposition from less populous regions has overridden national sentiment.[1] Proponents, however, contend it fosters deliberate deliberation and prevents hasty centralization, aligning with federalist principles that prioritize subunit autonomy over aggregative democracy.[3] Other implementations include Quebec's condominium governance laws, requiring both a majority of co-owners and a quorum-based vote threshold for major decisions, and parliamentary procedures in the UK House of Commons for boundary-related divisions.[4][5]

Definition and Core Concepts

Fundamental Principles

The double majority principle mandates that a proposal achieves approval not only through a simple majority of overall votes but also via a concurrent majority within designated subgroups, such as territorial units or demographic categories, thereby enforcing dual thresholds for legitimacy.[6] This mechanism originated in federal constitutional designs to reconcile popular sovereignty with structural protections for federated entities, ensuring that decisions reflect consensus across both aggregate and disaggregated electorates.[7] In practice, it applies predominantly to high-stakes matters like constitutional amendments, where a single popular majority might otherwise enable populous regions to override dispersed minorities, as evidenced in systems requiring both national and state-level affirmatives.[8] At its core, the principle counters the risks of majoritarian overreach by embedding veto-like safeguards for smaller jurisdictions, fostering stability in heterogeneous polities. For instance, in Switzerland's federal framework, constitutional initiatives demand a majority of the national electorate alongside a majority of the 26 cantons—each canton casting one vote, with half-cantons weighted at 0.5—to prevent dominance by urban centers over rural or linguistically distinct areas.[6] This dual criterion, instituted in the 1848 constitution following civil conflict, has overturned popular majorities in only two of 481 initiatives since 1891, underscoring its role in tempering transient majorities while upholding federal equilibrium.[6] Similarly, Australia's 1901 Constitution stipulates a national majority plus affirmatives in at least four of six states for amendments, a requirement that has blocked 44 of 45 proposals since 1901 by demanding cross-jurisdictional buy-in.[8] The principle's theoretical foundation lies in balancing democratic inclusivity with institutional realism, recognizing that undivided popular will can erode federative compacts without subunit consent.[7] It diverges from unitary simple-majority rules by prioritizing causal preservation of subnational autonomy, as uniform national approval alone might incentivize zero-sum extraction from outliers. Empirical outcomes, such as Switzerland's rejection of initiatives like the 1955 ecclesiastical separation bid despite popular support, illustrate how double majorities enforce deliberate deliberation over impulsive aggregation.[6] Critics argue it entrenches status quo bias, yet proponents contend it aligns with first-order federal logic, where sovereignty inheres jointly in people and provinces, verifiable through low amendment success rates that correlate with enhanced constitutional endurance.[7]

Types and Variations

Double majorities vary primarily by the dual criteria applied, often balancing aggregate popular support against territorial or institutional representation to safeguard minority interests in federations or complex polities. One common variation requires a majority of total votes cast alongside a majority among constituent units, such as states or cantons, ensuring that proposals cannot succeed solely through dominance in populous areas.[9][1] This territorial double majority is prevalent in constitutional referendums; for instance, Switzerland mandates approval by a majority of valid national votes and a majority of its 26 cantons for amendments or initiatives, a rule entrenched since the 1848 federal constitution to protect smaller cantons from urban-majority overreach.[9][6] Similarly, Australia's 1901 Constitution demands a national majority of affirmative votes plus approval in a majority of states (at least four of six) for referendums to pass, as seen in the 44 referendums held since 1901, where only eight succeeded under this threshold.[1][3] Another variation manifests in bicameral legislatures of federal systems, where legislation must secure simple majorities in both a population-proportional chamber and an equal-state-representation chamber, effectively requiring dual consent from the populace and the federation's subunits. In the United States, this operates through the House of Representatives (apportioning seats by population) and the Senate (two seats per state regardless of size), such that federal laws demand majority approval across both bodies, embodying a "double majority" of people and states as designed by the framers in 1787 to prevent large-state dominance.[10] This structure contrasts with unitary systems by embedding territorial veto power, though it can lead to gridlock, as evidenced by the Senate's filibuster amplifying minority influence beyond strict majorities.[10] In non-federal contexts, double majorities adapt to protect dispersed interests, such as in corporate governance where resolutions may need both a majority of total shares voted and a majority of participating shareholders to prevent blockholders from overriding small owners. This unweighted shareholder count variation appears in merger approvals or charter changes in jurisdictions like certain EU member states' company laws, prioritizing numerical participation over capital concentration.[11] Some systems further qualify these by incorporating absolute majorities (over half of eligible participants, not just voters) or turnout quorums, heightening barriers; for example, certain condominium decisions require both value-weighted votes and headcount majorities to balance property stakes with owner equality.[12] These adaptations underscore double majority's flexibility, though empirical outcomes show they often reduce legislative throughput by 20-30% compared to single-majority rules in analogous settings.[13]

Historical Development

Origins in Constitutional Theory

The concept of double majority in constitutional theory emerged from efforts to mitigate the risks of unchecked numerical majoritarianism in compound republics, particularly through federal structures that demand concurrence across distinct representational bases. During the framing of the United States Constitution in 1787, delegates at the Constitutional Convention adopted bicameralism via the Connecticut Compromise, establishing the House of Representatives on proportional population and the Senate on equal state suffrage, thereby requiring laws to secure majorities in both chambers reflecting demographic and territorial interests.[14] This mechanism ensured that federal legislation could not proceed without approval from plural majorities, addressing fears of larger states dominating smaller ones in a union of sovereign entities.[15] James Madison elaborated this rationale in Federalist No. 51 (1788), arguing that dividing the legislature into branches with differing constituencies— the House tied to popular will and the Senate to state sovereignty—provided mutual checks against factional tyranny, creating a "double security" to the rights of the people through federalism's layered governance.[14] Madison contended that such diffusion of power prevented any single majority from consolidating control, as the Senate's structure compelled consideration of state-level interests alongside national ones, a principle rooted in the Anti-Federalist demand for explicit federal protections during ratification debates.[14] This theoretical foundation influenced subsequent constitutional designs by prioritizing consensus over unilateral dominance, though it presupposed a limited national scope to preserve state autonomy. John C. Calhoun advanced the idea into a more explicit doctrine of concurrent majority in his posthumously published A Disquisition on Government (1851), positing that diverse societies require decisions to gain not only a numerical majority but also assent from majorities within critical interests or sections to avert oppression by the whole against parts.[16] Drawing from the U.S. bicameral model and sectional tensions, Calhoun envisioned institutional vetoes for minorities—such as states or economic classes—effectively mandating multi-criteria approval akin to double majorities in federal voting.[17] His theory, developed amid antebellum disputes over tariffs and slavery, emphasized causal safeguards against majority exploitation, influencing later applications in federations where constitutional amendments or referendums demand both popular and jurisdictional majorities, though critics noted its potential to paralyze governance absent consensus.[18][19]

Key Historical Adoptions

The double majority principle gained early prominence in Switzerland through the Federal Constitution of 1848, which established mandatory referendums for constitutional amendments requiring approval by both a majority of the national electorate and a majority of the cantons to prevent larger urban cantons from overriding rural or smaller ones.[6] This mechanism was retained and refined in the constitutional revision of 1874, which expanded direct democracy tools while preserving the dual threshold to balance popular sovereignty with federalism.[20] In Australia, the double majority was codified at federation in Section 128 of the Constitution, effective 1 January 1901, stipulating that amendments must secure a national majority of affirmative votes plus majorities in at least four of the six states to ensure broad territorial consensus beyond mere population weight.[21] This provision reflected compromises during the 1890s constitutional conventions, prioritizing state equality to accommodate diverse colonial interests in a unified commonwealth.[22] The European Union adopted double majority voting for qualified majority decisions in the Council via the Treaty of Lisbon, which entered force on 1 December 2009 but deferred implementation of the new system until 1 November 2014 to allow transitional arrangements; it requires support from 55% of member states comprising at least 65% of the EU population, shifting from prior weighted voting to better reflect demographic realities while maintaining state veto protections in sensitive areas.[23][24]

Theoretical Rationale

Protection Against Majority Tyranny

The double majority requirement functions as a constitutional safeguard against the tyranny of the majority, a concern James Madison described in Federalist No. 51 as the potential for a dominant faction to oppress minority interests under pure democratic rule.[25] By mandating approval from both a numerical majority of voters and a majority of territorial units—such as states or cantons—this mechanism disperses decision-making authority, preventing populous regions from unilaterally imposing policies that disadvantage smaller or less densely populated jurisdictions.[26] This dual threshold ensures that legislation or amendments gain legitimacy only through cross-jurisdictional consensus, thereby diluting the coercive power of any single concentrated majority and fostering stability in diverse polities.[13] In federal theory, double majorities address causal risks inherent in population-weighted voting, where urban or regionally dominant groups could systematically override rural or peripheral interests, leading to policies that erode local autonomy or cultural identities.[6] For example, Switzerland's referendum system requires a majority of the national popular vote and a majority of cantons for constitutional changes, explicitly designed to shield smaller cantons from domination by larger ones like Zurich or Geneva, preserving linguistic and regional minorities since its adoption in the 1848 constitution and refinements in 1874.[6] Empirical outcomes in Switzerland demonstrate this protection: between 1848 and 2020, numerous proposals failing the cantonal majority—despite popular support—averted centralizing reforms that could have marginalized alpine or French-speaking regions.[6][26] Theoretically, this structure promotes causal realism in governance by aligning outcomes with distributed incentives rather than aggregated preferences alone, as a single majority might incentivize short-term exploitation of minorities for majority gain. Proponents argue it enhances minority protection without resorting to vetoes or supermajorities, which can paralyze decision-making; instead, it calibrates veto power to territorial equity, as evidenced in federal designs where bicameralism approximates double majorities through equal representation in upper houses.[13] Critics, however, contend that rigid double majorities can entrench status quo biases favoring small states, potentially enabling minority tyranny in reverse, though historical data from adopting federations like Switzerland show net gains in long-term inclusivity over pure majoritarian alternatives.[26]

Role in Federalism and Decentralized Governance

In federal systems, double majority requirements embed a safeguard against the concentration of power in densely populated regions, mandating approval from both a popular majority and a majority of constituent units, such as states or cantons, for critical decisions like constitutional amendments. This dual threshold upholds the foundational compact of federalism by ensuring that territorial subunits retain veto influence, thereby preserving their sovereignty and preventing larger entities from unilaterally altering the balance of powers.[27][28] Australia exemplifies this role through Section 128 of its Constitution, which stipulates that amendments require a national majority of voters and affirmative majorities in at least four of the six states, a provision rooted in concerns over federal equilibrium during the 1890s federation debates.[1] This has empirically constrained centralizing reforms, with only 8 of 44 referendums succeeding since 1901, many failing due to state-level opposition that protected decentralized fiscal and legislative autonomies.[1] Switzerland's federal constitution similarly imposes a double majority for constitutional revisions—needing both popular and cantonal approval—to shield smaller cantons, which represent about 20% of the population but hold equal footing in the Council of States.[6] Enacted in the 1848 constitution and refined in 1874, this mechanism counters urban-rural divides, as smaller cantons' collective weight can block proposals despite national support, fostering negotiated governance that sustains subnational diversity and policy experimentation.[29][30] By necessitating cross-jurisdictional consensus, double majorities in these contexts advance decentralized governance, compelling federal actors to accommodate regional variances rather than impose uniform policies, which causal analysis attributes to reduced inter-unit conflict and enhanced long-term institutional resilience.[31] This contrasts with unitary systems lacking such checks, where majority rule can erode peripheral autonomies, as evidenced by historical centralization pressures in non-federal democracies.[28]

Mechanics of Implementation

Establishing Dual Criteria

In double majority systems, the dual criteria are enshrined in constitutional provisions or enabling statutes that mandate simultaneous satisfaction of a popular vote threshold and a territorial approval threshold to achieve passage. The popular criterion generally requires a simple majority—exceeding 50%—of total valid votes cast across the entire jurisdiction, calculated by aggregating individual ballots without regard to geographic distribution. This ensures broad electorate consent while allowing turnout variations to influence effective support levels, as seen in frameworks where only affirmative votes are tallied against the total cast.[1] The territorial criterion establishes parity among subunits by demanding simple majority approval in a majority of them, treating each unit—such as states, cantons, or regions—as a single indivisible bloc irrespective of its population size. In Australia's Constitution (Section 128), this translates to affirmative majorities in at least four of six states, with each state's result determined by over 50% of its voters; territories contribute solely to the national tally.[1] Switzerland's Federal Constitution (Article 140) similarly mandates majority support from both the national vote and at least 12 of 23 cantons (plus half-cantons), where cantonal approval hinges on popular vote or legislative endorsement within the unit.[6] These criteria are calibrated to simple majorities rather than supermajorities in most implementations to balance decisiveness with protection, though procedural nuances—like excluding abstentions or requiring minimum turnout—may apply to refine thresholds. Establishment often involves explicit enumeration in founding documents to preclude unilateral amendment, fostering stability by necessitating cross-jurisdictional alignment from inception.[32] Failure to meet either prong voids the measure, as evidenced in Australia's 44 referendums since 1901, where 34 amendments passed only after dual compliance.[1]

Procedural Requirements and Thresholds

In double majority systems, procedural requirements mandate simultaneous approval across two independent voting criteria: an overall majority of the total electorate and a concurrent majority within a designated subset, such as states, cantons, or population-weighted member states. Each threshold is calculated based on valid votes cast, excluding abstentions or invalid ballots, and typically requires a simple majority exceeding 50% in both pools to prevent dominance by any single group. This structure demands verifiable vote tabulation segregated by criterion, often conducted by independent electoral authorities to ensure transparency and auditability.[1][9] Thresholds are jurisdiction-specific but commonly set at simple majorities unless qualified rules apply; for instance, in Australian constitutional referendums, a proposal passes with more than 50% national support from all states and territories combined, plus affirmative simple majorities in at least four of the six states, where territory votes count solely toward the national figure. In Switzerland, constitutional changes require over 50% yes votes nationally alongside simple majority approval in a majority of the 26 cantons (at least 14), with cantonal outcomes determined by popular vote or legislative assembly.[1][9] Supranational applications, such as the European Union's Council of the EU, employ elevated qualified thresholds under the double majority framework: at least 55% of member states (a minimum of 15 out of 27) must endorse the decision, representing no less than 65% of the total EU population, with blocking minorities requiring at least four states. Procedural safeguards include predefined population data for weighting (updated periodically via Eurostat) and restrictions on abstentions counting against the majority. These mechanisms, effective since the 2009 Lisbon Treaty implementation on November 1, 2014, prioritize demographic proportionality alongside state equality.[2] Variations may incorporate additional procedural hurdles, such as mandatory referendums triggering within fixed timelines post-legislative proposal or requirements for voter turnout minima, though the core double majority hinges on affirmative vote shares rather than participation rates. Failure in either threshold nullifies the outcome, compelling reintroduction or alternative processes.[1][9]

Examples in Practice

Australia

In Australia, the double majority rule governs constitutional amendments under Section 128 of the Constitution, requiring approval in a referendum by a majority of voters nationwide—encompassing electors in all states and territories—and by a majority of voters in at least four of the six states. Territories' votes contribute to the national tally but not to the state-based criterion, preserving the federal balance by ensuring changes reflect support across state jurisdictions rather than dominance by populous regions. This mechanism originated in the framing of the Constitution during the 1890s conventions, where delegates from smaller colonies insisted on safeguards against centralized power, and it has remained unchanged since federation on January 1, 1901.[1][22][33] Since 1906, when the first federal referendum sought to alter Senate election methods, Australia has conducted 19 referendums comprising 45 questions, with only eight succeeding—all meeting both majorities. The rule's federalist intent is evident in its outcomes: proposals often fail the state threshold even with national backing, as seen in five historical instances where a national majority voted yes but fewer than four states concurred, blocking amendments that might have centralized authority. For example, the 1974 referendum on simultaneous elections for both parliamentary houses garnered 52.2% national support but passed in only three states (New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland), failing due to opposition in Tasmania, South Australia, and Western Australia, which prioritized state-specific electoral autonomy. This pattern underscores the rule's role in compelling proponents to build cross-jurisdictional consensus, often requiring bipartisan parliamentary initiation before referendum.[34][35] Successful cases highlight the rule's threshold for broad legitimacy, such as the 1967 referendum on Indigenous rights, which achieved 90.8% national approval and unanimous state support, removing discriminatory provisions in Sections 51 and 127. Conversely, recent failures like the 1999 republic referendum (45.4% national yes, no state majorities) and the 2023 Indigenous Voice proposal (39.9% national yes, zero state majorities) demonstrate how the dual criteria amplify regional vetoes, particularly from less populous states wary of national-level shifts. Empirical data from the Australian Electoral Commission shows that of the 37 failed questions, many stalled at the state level despite partial national sympathy, reinforcing the system's emphasis on decentralized consent over simple popular sovereignty.[34][36]

Switzerland

In Switzerland, the double majority principle governs referendums on constitutional amendments and certain urgent federal decrees exceeding one year in duration, requiring approval by both a majority of the national electorate and a majority of the cantons.[9] This dual threshold ensures that changes to the federal constitution reflect not only popular will but also consensus across the country's federal subunits, with each of the 20 full cantons casting one vote and the six half-cantons (Obwalden, Nidwalden, Basel-Landschaft, Basel-Stadt, Appenzell Ausserrhoden, and Appenzell Innerrhoden) counting as half, necessitating at least 12 full cantonal votes or an equivalent combination for passage.[6] Ordinary laws subject to optional referendums require only a popular majority, underscoring the principle's targeted application to safeguard foundational structures.[9] The system originated in the 1848 Federal Constitution, drafted after the Sonderbund civil war (1847), which pitted Catholic-conservative separatist cantons against the Protestant-liberal centralizing majority.[6] To prevent larger, urbanized cantons from imposing reforms on smaller, rural, or linguistically distinct ones, the framers embedded the cantonal veto as a federalist counterweight, reflecting Switzerland's confederal heritage and commitment to territorial pluralism.[6] This requirement has persisted through revisions, including the 1874 and 1999 constitutions, evolving alongside direct democracy tools like popular initiatives, which since 1891 have allowed 100,000 citizens to propose amendments subject to the same double hurdle.[20] In practice, the cantonal majority has infrequently overridden popular support, with only two instances among 481 popular initiatives from 1891 to 2020 where a proposal secured over 50% nationally but failed cantonally: a 1955 initiative on economic policy and the November 2020 "responsible business" initiative, which obtained 50.7% popular approval but was rejected by 12 cantons plus three half-cantons.[6] Such cases highlight the mechanism's role in enforcing broader consensus, often blocking urban-driven reforms perceived as threatening rural or peripheral interests, as analyzed in studies of referendum outcomes from 1848 to 2022 showing higher rejection rates for constitutional votes due to the dual criterion.[20] Proponents credit it with fostering stability in a system averaging 7-8 federal votes annually, while critics, including some reform advocates, argue it entrenches minority influence amid demographic shifts toward urban centers.[6]

European Union

In the European Union, the double majority principle forms the basis of qualified majority voting (QMV) in the Council of the European Union, requiring simultaneous approval by 55% of member states (a minimum of 15 out of the current 27 states) representing at least 65% of the total EU population.[2] This system, often termed the "double majority rule," replaced the prior Nice Treaty regime of weighted votes, which disproportionately favored smaller states through fixed vote allocations unrelated to population size.[37] The reform aimed to better align decision-making with demographic realities while preserving state equality, entering into force on November 1, 2014, following a transitional period after the Lisbon Treaty's ratification in December 2009.[2][37] QMV under double majority applies to the majority of legislative acts, including internal market regulations, environmental policies, and justice matters, as stipulated in Article 16(4) of the Treaty on European Union and Article 238 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union.[2] For proposals not initiated by the European Commission, the threshold rises to 72% of member states, though the population criterion remains 65%.[37] A blocking minority requires either at least four member states or states comprising more than 35% of the EU population, providing smaller states with veto power against measures dominated by large-population members like Germany (18% of EU population as of 2023) or France.[2] This dual criterion has facilitated passage of over 90% of Council votes since 2014 by consensus or near-consensus, reducing deadlock compared to pre-Lisbon unanimity requirements in expanded policy areas.[38] The system's design reflects compromises during the 2007 intergovernmental conference, balancing the one-state-one-vote ideal against de facto population-based influence, particularly post-enlargement to include Central and Eastern European states.[37] Critics, including some smaller states during ratification debates, argued it erodes sovereign equality by empowering populous members, yet empirical data shows no single state or bloc can unilaterally block qualified majorities without broad coalitions.[2] Unanimity persists for sensitive domains like taxation, common foreign and security policy, and EU accession treaties, limiting double majority's scope to approximately 80% of Council decisions.[38] Future enlargements, such as potential Western Balkan integrations, may necessitate recalibration to maintain efficacy, as current thresholds assume 27 members.[39]

Other National and Subnational Applications

In Belgium, specific categories of legislation, including those amending the Constitution or delineating powers between linguistic communities, require a double majority in the federal Parliament: an absolute majority of votes overall and separate majorities within both the Dutch-speaking and French-speaking parliamentary groups. This mechanism, enshrined in Article 4 of the Belgian Constitution since 1970 amendments, aims to protect linguistic minorities by preventing the larger Flemish group from overriding French-speaking interests in sensitive areas. Canada employs a variant of double majority in its constitutional amending formula under section 38 of the Constitution Act, 1982, which mandates approval by resolutions from the Senate, House of Commons, and legislative assemblies of at least seven provinces comprising fifty percent or more of Canada's population. Enacted to balance federal unity with provincial consent, this "7/50 rule" has been applied in all general amendments since 1982, such as the 1983 equalization adjustments, ensuring that sparsely populated provinces cannot be isolated while requiring substantial demographic weight.[40] Unlike pure population-based majorities, it privileges regional veto power for at least four provinces, fostering consensus in a diverse federation.[40] In the Philippines, double majority applies to certification elections under the Labor Code, requiring both a majority turnout of all eligible voters in the bargaining unit and a majority of valid votes cast for a union to be certified as the exclusive bargaining representative.[41] Supreme Court rulings, such as in Associated Labor Unions v. Court of Industrial Relations (1968), have upheld this dual threshold to validate worker choice and prevent low-participation manipulations. Subnationally, Spain's Horizontal Property Law (Ley de Propiedad Horizontal, revised 2023) mandates double majorities for key decisions in comunidades de propietarios (homeowners' associations governing apartments or condos): approval by a majority of owners present and a majority of total participation quotas (weighted by property size and value).[42] For instance, prohibiting short-term tourist rentals—a contentious issue since 2019—requires three-fifths of total owners and three-fifths of quotas, as affirmed by Supreme Court decisions in 2024 upholding bans in multiple urban communities. This protects minority owners from disproportionate impacts by larger units, with over 1.2 million such associations nationwide applying the rule locally.[42]

Advantages

Empirical Stability and Consensus Benefits

Double majority requirements in federal systems promote empirical stability by necessitating approval from both aggregate populations and territorial subunits, thereby filtering proposals that lack dispersed support and averting abrupt policy shifts driven by transient urban or national majorities. In Switzerland, the dual threshold for constitutional amendments—requiring a majority of the popular vote nationwide alongside a majority of cantons—has constrained the pace of change since its formalization in the 1874 constitution, with historical data showing acceptance rates for such referendums averaging below 40% from 1848 to 2022, even amid high volumes of initiatives.[20] This mechanism has underpinned the endurance of Switzerland's federal compact, as evidenced by the infrequency of wholesale constitutional overhauls despite over 600 national votes, fostering a polity resilient to populist surges or regional imbalances that could erode subunit autonomy.[6] In Australia, the constitutional referendum process mandates a double majority: a national popular affirmative vote plus endorsement by at least four of six states, a criterion that has yielded success in only 8 of 44 proposals attempted between 1901 and 2023. This high bar has preserved the federation's foundational divisions of power, as seen in the rejection of 36 amendments, including those seeking centralized authority expansions, thereby insulating structural arrangements from short-term electoral tides and ensuring alterations command cross-jurisdictional legitimacy.[1] These systems cultivate consensus by incentivizing deliberation and compromise across heterogeneous interests, as proponents must secure not only numerical weight but also geographic breadth to overcome veto points inherent in subunit majorities. Empirical patterns in Switzerland reveal that successful amendments often emerge from iterative parliamentary refinement before referendum, yielding policies with sustained viability and minimal post-enactment reversal, in contrast to simple majority jurisdictions prone to oscillatory reforms.[43] Similarly, Australia's track record demonstrates that passed referendums, such as the 1967 Indigenous enfranchisement, reflect broad-based accord forged through state-level campaigning, enhancing implementation fidelity and public adherence over time.[31] Overall, such thresholds correlate with lower legislative volatility in federations, as dual vetting aligns outcomes with underlying social equilibria rather than episodic majoritarian impulses.

Safeguards for Regional and Minority Interests

In double majority systems, safeguards for regional and minority interests arise from the requirement that decisions secure approval both from an overall majority of voters and from a majority of territorial units, such as states or cantons, thereby granting smaller jurisdictions effective veto power over proposals lacking their support.[44] This structure counters the potential dominance of populous regions over less densely populated ones, ensuring that policies reflect geographically dispersed consensus rather than concentrated urban or demographic majorities.[45] Switzerland exemplifies this protection through its constitutional framework, where amendments and certain federal laws demand a popular majority nationwide alongside assent from a majority of the 26 cantons, a mechanism designed by the 1848 constitutional framers to shield small cantons from submersion by larger, urbanized entities.[6] This dual criterion has preserved the influence of rural and linguistically distinct cantons, such as those in the German-, French-, Italian-, and Romansh-speaking regions, fostering stability in a multilingual federation where no single linguistic group exceeds 64% of the population.[9] Between 1848 and 2021, this requirement contributed to the approval of only about 40% of over 600 submitted proposals, underscoring its role in blocking initiatives without broad territorial buy-in.[46] In Australia, constitutional alterations require a national majority of voters plus approval in at least four of six states, protecting smaller states like Tasmania (with under 3% of the national population) from amendments driven by the populous southeastern states.[1] This has resulted in only 8 of 45 referendums succeeding since 1901, often failing due to state-level opposition that preserved regional autonomy on issues like trade barriers or state powers.[47] By embedding territorial representation in decision-making, double majorities thus promote equitable federalism, where minority regions—often hosting distinct economic, cultural, or resource-based interests—cannot be marginalized without their explicit consent.[48]

Criticisms and Controversies

Risks of Gridlock and Inefficiency

In jurisdictions employing double majority rules, the dual threshold—requiring both an overall popular majority and approval from a majority of territorial units—frequently impedes legislative progress, as territorially concentrated opposition can nullify widespread support. Australia's constitutional amendment process exemplifies this dynamic: since federation in 1901, 45 referendums have been held, with only eight achieving the requisite national majority plus affirmative votes in at least four of six states. Proposals like the 1999 republican referendum, which garnered 55% national support, failed due to state-level rejections in key jurisdictions, illustrating how the rule entrenches veto power for smaller or dissenting states and contributes to constitutional stasis amid evolving national priorities.[49][50] Critics contend this mechanism fosters inefficiency by prolonging decision-making cycles and deterring reform efforts, as governments anticipate failure and invest resources in futile campaigns rather than alternative legislative paths. The 2023 Voice to Parliament referendum, rejected nationally but particularly in smaller states, underscored how double majority demands amplify regional disparities, potentially delaying responses to pressing issues like indigenous policy or economic integration without supermajority consensus. Such outcomes are attributed to the rule's design, which prioritizes territorial safeguards over expeditious governance, resulting in a success rate below 20% and a backlog of unaddressed constitutional updates.[49][51] Switzerland's federal system similarly highlights gridlock risks, where constitutional initiatives must pass both a popular vote and a majority of the 26 cantons, enabling smaller, rural entities to block urban-majority proposals despite national backing. Empirical analysis of referendums from 1848 to 2022 reveals that the double majority requirement significantly lowers acceptance rates for initiatives, with canton vetoes frequently overturning popular majorities and stalling federal adaptations to challenges like immigration or fiscal policy. This has led to critiques that the rule exacerbates inefficiency in a fragmented polity, as repeated failures—evident in over 70% rejection of popular initiatives since 1971—consume public resources on referendums while preserving suboptimal status quo arrangements resistant to timely overhaul.[20][9]

Potential for Entrenched Minority Vetoes

In double majority systems requiring approval by both a popular majority and a territorial majority—where territorial units such as cantons or states receive equal weight regardless of population—a coalition of smaller units can secure a territorial majority while encompassing only a minority of the total population, effectively granting an entrenched veto over reforms favored by the national populace. This dynamic arises because small jurisdictions, often rural or less populous, vote cohesively as units, amplifying their influence beyond demographic proportions. For instance, in Switzerland's constitutional referendums, the requirement for a majority of the 26 cantons (with half-cantons counting as half) enables a blocking minority of cantons representing under 10% of the national population to prevent passage if aligned against larger urban cantons.[6] This mechanism has drawn criticism for perpetuating rural-urban divides, as smaller, predominantly rural cantons frequently oppose initiatives supported by densely populated urban areas like Zurich and Geneva, which house over 25% of Switzerland's voters but cannot unilaterally override cantonal opposition. Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne researcher Shin Alexandre Koseki has argued that the system underrepresents urban centers' interests, granting disproportionate power to rural and suburban regions amid shifting voter alignments that transcend traditional linguistic divides. Analysis of 30 years of voting data reveals consistent discrepancies, where urban concentrations favor progressive reforms, yet the cantonal layer entrenches conservative vetoes, potentially stalling adaptation to demographic changes such as urbanization rates exceeding 70% since 2000.[52] In Australia's federal referendums, the dual threshold—national popular approval plus endorsement by at least four of six states—similarly empowers smaller states like Tasmania (2.4% of national population as of 2021) to join mid-sized ones in forming a blocking coalition, vetoing amendments despite overwhelming national support. Only 8 of 44 referendums since 1901 have succeeded, with state-level opposition cited as a recurring barrier; critics contend this entrenches peripheral interests, as the combined population of the three smallest states (Tasmania, South Australia, and historically aligned Western Australia) falls below 20% yet can deny changes sought by over 80% of Australians in populous states like New South Wales and Victoria.[53][49] Such entrenched vetoes risk policy paralysis on issues like infrastructure or environmental reforms, where urban majorities prioritize collective goods but face obstruction from territorially empowered minorities protective of local autonomy. While designed to safeguard federal balance, this feature can foster perceptions of democratic deficit, as evidenced by failed Swiss initiatives on issues like pension reforms (rejected in 2010 despite popular leanings) where cantonal vetoes prevailed amid rural resistance.[54]

Comparative Perspectives

Versus Simple Majority Systems

Double majority systems differ from simple majority systems by requiring approval not only from an overall majority of votes (typically population-based) but also from a majority of constituent units, such as regions or states, thereby embedding a territorial dimension into decision-making.[6] Simple majority systems, by contrast, rely solely on aggregate vote tallies exceeding 50%, which prioritizes numerical majorities without regard for geographic distribution. This distinction is evident in federal contexts like Switzerland, where constitutional amendments demand both popular and cantonal majorities, unlike purely parliamentary simple majority votes in unitary systems.[6] In federal polities, double majority mechanisms offer advantages over simple majority by mitigating the risk of demographic dominance by populous areas, fostering policies with broader geographic legitimacy and reducing inter-regional conflict. For instance, Switzerland's system, established in 1848 to safeguard smaller cantons post-civil war, has ensured that only policies with cross-cantonal support advance, contributing to long-term political stability in a linguistically and culturally diverse nation; since 1891, just two of 481 popular initiatives have failed due to cantonal rejection despite popular approval, demonstrating restraint rather than frequent obstruction.[6] Empirical analyses of analogous rules indicate they promote consensus but at the cost of reduced legislative output compared to simple majority, as territorial vetoes narrow the feasible policy space.[55] In the European Union, the Council's qualified majority voting—requiring 55% of member states representing 65% of the population—similarly tempers simple majority risks, preventing large states like Germany from unilaterally overriding smaller ones, though it has occasionally stalled decisions on fiscal integration.[56] Critics contend that double majority can entrench inefficiencies absent in simple majority systems, where decisive action follows clear numerical wins, by empowering minorities to block reforms supported by the electorate. In Switzerland, the 2020 corporate responsibility initiative passed with 50.7% popular support but failed the cantonal test, illustrating how small, rural cantons (e.g., Appenzell Innerrhoden, with voting weight effectively 40 times that of Zurich per capita) can preserve the status quo against urban-driven change, potentially hindering adaptation to modern economic pressures.[6] Statistical modeling shows such dual requirements correlate with lower passage rates (e.g., 52.4% under double vs. higher under simple in historical assemblies), risking gridlock in dynamic environments.[55] While simple majority enables swift responsiveness, as seen in parliamentary systems without territorial checks, double majority prioritizes systemic resilience over speed, with trade-offs evident in Switzerland's aversion to rapid constitutional shifts despite overall stability.[6]

Versus Qualified or Supermajority Rules

A double majority rule mandates approval by simple majorities in two distinct categories, typically the overall electorate and territorial subdivisions such as states or cantons, ensuring that changes reflect both demographic and geographic consensus.[1] This contrasts with qualified majority voting (QMV), as implemented in the European Union's Council since the Lisbon Treaty took effect on December 1, 2009, which requires at least 55 percent of member states (15 of 27 as of 2023) representing at least 65 percent of the EU population.[2] While both systems incorporate dual thresholds, QMV weights population directly against state counts, enabling larger states to compensate for opposition from smaller ones, whereas a pure double majority treats territorial units equally—each canton in Switzerland or state in Australia counts as one vote irrespective of population size.[9][8] Supermajority rules, by comparison, impose a heightened threshold exceeding 50 percent—such as two-thirds of voting members—in a single decision-making body without mandating separate territorial approval.[57] For instance, U.S. constitutional amendments require a two-thirds vote in both houses of Congress, followed by ratification by three-fourths of states, but the congressional phase relies solely on population-proportional representation in the House, potentially marginalizing less populous regions unless the state ratification step intervenes.[57] Double majority avoids this by embedding territorial parity from the outset, as in Australia's constitutional referendums, where approval demands a national majority plus affirmative majorities in at least four of six states, a requirement that has constrained amendments since federation in 1901 by blocking proposals lacking broad regional support.[1] In federal systems, double majority thus prioritizes structural balance over elevated numerical hurdles, reducing the risk of populous regions overriding dispersed minorities—a feature less inherent in QMV, where the population qualifier can amplify urban or large-state influence, or in supermajorities, which may entrench status quo biases without geographic safeguards.[6] Switzerland's system, requiring both a popular majority and cantonal majority for constitutional changes since 1848, exemplifies this by protecting smaller, rural cantons from initiatives driven by urban centers like Zurich or Geneva.[9] Critics of double majority, however, contend it can amplify small-unit vetoes akin to those in supermajority setups, potentially stalling reforms more rigidly than QMV's flexible weighting, which facilitates EU decision-making on issues like trade policy without unanimous consent.[2] Empirical outcomes support varied efficacy: Australia's double majority has seen only 8 of 44 proposals succeed by 2023, underscoring its conservatism, while EU QMV has streamlined legislative output post-2009 compared to prior unanimity demands.[1]

References

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