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multiparty
[ muhl-tee-pahr-tee, muhl-tahy- ]
multiparty
/ ˌmʌltɪˈpɑːtɪ /
adjective
- of or relating to a state, political system, etc, in which more than one political party is permitted
multiparty democracy
Word History and Origins
Origin of multiparty1
Example Sentences
Maine and Alaska had already altered their elections to allow multiparty ranked-choice ballots, and there was already federal legislation, the Voter Choice Act, promising grants to states and local governments if they followed that lead.
For instance, in a multiparty election, taking down one party might not necessarily help you.
Per state law, after almost every countywide election in Arizona,5 a multiparty audit board must conduct a hand count of ballots from a sample of randomly selected voting precincts and compare them with the results from voting machines.
Electoral reform to allow multiparty democracy is an urgent necessity.
Making end-to-end encryption work with multiparty video is a serious technical challenge, and at least with this early version, Zoom had to make some tradeoffs.
In 1958, Venezuela packed off its last military dictator and established a multiparty democracy.
Turkey's experiment with a multiparty system started five in the 1950s; Egypt's is just beginning.
Turkey's AKP transformed itself after it broke with a more radical Islamist base to adapt in a multiparty atmosphere.
The Rwandan Constitution sets forth the basic tenets of democracy and provides for a multiparty system.
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