Some folk might call it a balanced parliament. After all with the 'winner takes all' system, you can have the wishes of almost one half ignored.
In New Zealand, three times in about 15 years, we had the situation where the governing party got more seats than the opposition, but the opposition party got a great majority of the votes. Hence the move to a MMP system (Multi Member Proportional Representation) Where one half of the parliament is elected on a 'seat' basis, and the other half is elected on a 'party list' basis. It seems to work well, but maybe a little fine tuning is still required.
A hung Parliament is where one party IE Conservatives have lets say 250 seats. labour has 200 and Lib Dem's have 60. the Conservatives cannot win on the majority as labours and Lib Dem's seats are more than the Conservatives. That is a hung Parliament.
A hung parliament is one in which no party has an overall majority. The UK parliament will have 650 seats. If no party gains 326 seats or more in today's General Election, there will be a hung parliament. If there is a hung parliament the two largest parties (Labour and Conservative) will be trying to form pacts with any of the smaller parties in order to gain an effective majority.
it is hung on hung on i think unless its hang then it could be both
A hung parliament occurs when no single party gains an outright majority of seats in the legislature. In the UK, this means that no party has more than 326 seats in the House of Commons, which has a total of 650 seats. Consequently, a hung parliament typically results in parties needing to negotiate alliances or agreements to form a government. The exact number of seats for a hung parliament can vary depending on the overall distribution of seats among parties.
i think so but i hard that he was a good teacher from china
because no party had an overall majority
A hung parliament is when no single party wins an overall majority and in order to form a government a coalition is formed. Lots of countries have had that situation. Ireland and the United Kingdom are two examples.
A hung parliament is one where, after voting, neither party has the majority of power (or seats). To put it simply, it's a draw.
no
An act of Parliament clock is a large clock, once hung in inns, erroneously thought to derive from a tax on clocks.
no one... it was a hung Parliament although the Tories did get 250 seats.
Prior to the 2010 general election, a general election had not caused a hung Parliament since February 1974, when Labour narrowly failed to win an overall majority at the polls.