At-large
At large is a description for members of a governing body who are elected or appointed to represent a whole membership or population, rather than a subset. In multi-hierarchical bodies, the term rarely extends to a tier beneath the highest division. A contrast is implied, with certain electoral districts or narrower divisions. It can be given to the associated territory, if any, to denote its undivided nature, in a specific context. Unambiguous synonyms are the prefixes of cross-, all- or whole-, such as cross-membership, or all-state.
The term is used as a suffix referring to specific members. It figures as a generic prefix of its subject matter. It is commonly used when making or highlighting a direct contrast with subdivided equivalents that may be past or present, or seen in exotic comparators. It indicates that the described zone has no further subsets used for the same representative purpose. An exception is a nil-exceptions arrangement of overlapping tiers for return to the very same chamber, and consequent issue of multiple ballots for plural voting to every voter. This avoids plural voting competing with single voting in the jurisdiction, an inherent different level of democratic power.
Examples of a democratic power disparity were found in a small number of states at certain U.S. Congresses, between 1853 and 1967, and in the old lower houses of the Unreformed [House of Commons|United Kingdom] and Ireland, whereby certain voters could vote for at-large and district representatives to them, giving zones of plural voting and thus representation contrasting with zones, for the same national assembly, of single voting and representation. In 1964 the U.S. Supreme Court banned such plural voting for the U.S. Congress.
Universal principles apply regardless whether election are for a member at large, or not.
- a single seat/position/representative: entails a single-winner voting system, often Plurality and First-past-the-post;
- a panel/slate/group of seats/positions/representatives: may entail a multi-winner contest using a multi-winner system such as proportional representation, Single non-transferable vote (basic single-choice, multi-member), or block (basic multi-choice, multi-member) voting. On the other hand, a multi-winner district may still use a single-winner system if each seat is determined through a separate contest.
Canada
Many municipalities in Canada elect part or all of their city councils at-large. In most, the mayor is elected at-large as well.Municipal election at-large is widespread in small towns to avoid "them and us" cultural dissociation produced by partition of voters into wards and their representatives thus being seen to represent only a specific part of the city. It is also used in many large cities in Canada. The voting method in all such elections and multi-member wards today is plurality block voting.
Notable larger instances are, from west to east:
- The main cities of British Columbia: Vancouver, Victoria, Surrey, and Richmond.
- St. Albert and all other municipalities in Alberta
- Portage la Prairie, Manitoba
- North Bay, Ontario
- Thunder Bay, Ontario
- Timmins, Ontario
European Union
The Conference on the Future of Europe has proposed adding "transnational lists" to the European Parliament, in which a small number of members are elected by the entire European Union at large from Union-wide party lists. This is among a number of proposed reforms to deepen European integration.Israel
In Israel, elections for the Knesset are conducted at large by proportional representation from party lists. Election of municipal and town councils are on the same basis.Kazakhstan
elects the proportional representation portion of its lower house, the Mäjilis, from a single nationwide multi-member district using closed party-list proportional representation.Since electoral reforms adopted in 2022, 69 of the 98 seats in the Mäjilis are filled from this at-large national constituency, with seats allocated according to the parties' share of the national vote. A 5% national electoral threshold applies to parties seeking representation.
Netherlands
In the Netherlands, elections for the House of Representatives are conducted at large by proportional representation from party lists.Philippines
This manner of election applies to the Senate. All voters can cast twelve votes to refresh half of the Senate, namely twelve senators, from a longer list of candidates. The simple tally determines the winners.Provinces with smaller populations elect their House representative at large. Some cities that has its own congressional district also elect its representatives this way. Most other provinces and a few cities are divided into two or more districts. Party-list representation in [the House of Representatives of the Philippines|Party-list elections] are elected nationwide at-large.
Likewise, the Sangguniang Kabataan, Sangguniang Barangay, Sangguniang Bayan and some Sangguniang Panlungsod elect the other members. It follows that such true or quasi-local government units do not in the purest sense elect members at large when their geography is analysed, as each member co-exists with the others who have territorial overlap, as representing greater or lower-rank districts. The members are by law chosen by the public directly or indirectly. Members chosen by the City Council or the Sangguniang Panlalawigan are elected such that the city or province may be split into as many as seven districts, and each then elects at least two members.
United States
of the United States Constitution provides for direct election of members of the House of Representatives. The Uniform Congressional District Act, enacted in 1967 and codified as, dictates that representatives must be elected from geographical districts and that these must be single-member districts. Indeed it confirms when the state has a single representative, that will be a representative at large.U.S. House of Representatives
States as at-large congressional districts
Former at-large congressional districts
- Alabama
- Arizona
- Arkansas
- California
- Colorado
- Connecticut
- Florida
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Illinois
- Indiana
- Iowa
- Kansas
- Kentucky
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Minnesota
- Mississippi
- Missouri
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- New Hampshire
- New Jersey
- New Mexico
- New York
- North Carolina
- Ohio
- Oklahoma
- Oregon
- Pennsylvania
- Rhode Island
- South Carolina
- Tennessee
- Texas
- Utah
- Virginia
- Washington
- West Virginia
Non-voting at-large congressional districts
- American Samoa
- American Virgin Islands
- Cherokee delegate to the [United States House of Representatives|Cherokee Nation]
- District of Columbia
- Guam
- Puerto Rico
- Northern Mariana Islands
Former non-voting at-large congressional districts
- Alabama Territory
- Alaska Territory
- Arizona Territory
- Colorado Territory
- Dakota Territory
- Florida Territory
- Hawaii Territory
- Idaho Territory
- Illinois Territory
- Indiana Territory
- Iowa Territory
- Kansas Territory
- Mississippi Territory
- Missouri Territory
- Montana Territory
- Nevada Territory
- New Mexico Territory
- Northwest Territory
- Oklahoma Territory
- Oregon Territory
- Orleans Territory
- Philippines
- Southwest Territory
- Utah Territory
- Washington Territory
- Wisconsin Territory
- Wyoming Territory
Simultaneous at-large and sub-state-size congressional districts
This is a table of every such instance. It shows the situation applied to a small, varying group of states in three periods. The 33rd Congress began in 1853; it ended two years later. The 38th began in 1863; the 50th ended in 1889. The 53rd began in 1893; the 89th ended in January 1967, the final such period. This was due to the 1964 case of Reynolds v. Sims: the United States Supreme Court determined that the general basis of apportionment must be "one person, one vote."| Congress | State & Number of at-large seats |
| 33rd | MS |
| 38th | IL |
| 39th | IL |
| 40th | IL |
| 41st | IL |
| 42nd | IL |
| 43rd | AL, AR, IN, LA, NY, PA, SC, TN, TX |
| 44th | AL |
| 48th | AR, CA, GA, KS, NY, NC, PA, VA |
| 49th | PA |
| 50th | PA |
| 53rd | IL, KS, PA |
| 54th | KS, PA |
| 55th | KS, PA |
| 56th | KS, PA |
| 57th | KS, PA |
| 58th | CO, CT, KS |
| 59th | CO, CT, KS |
| 60th | CO, CT |
| 61st | CO, CT |
| 62nd | CO, CT |
| 63rd | AL, CO, FL, IL, MI, MN, OH, OK, PA, TX, WA, WV |
| 64th | AL, IL, PA, TX, WV |
| 65th | IL, PA, TX |
| 66th | IL, PA |
| 67th | IL, PA |
| 68th | IL |
| 69th | IL |
| 70th | IL |
| 71st | IL |
| 72nd | IL |
| 73rd | CT, FL, IL, NY, OH, OK, TX |
| 74th | CT, FL, IL, NY, OH, OK |
| 75th | CT, IL, NY, OH, OK |
| 76th | CT, IL, NY, OH, OK |
| 77th | CT, IL, NY, OH, OK |
| 78th | CT, FL, IL, NY, OH, PA |
| 79th | CT, IL, OH |
| 80th | CT, IL, OH |
| 81st | CT, OH |
| 82nd | CT, OH |
| 83rd | CT, TX, WA |
| 84th | CT, TX, WA |
| 85th | CT, TX, WA |
| 86th | CT |
| 87th | CT |
| 88th | AL, CT, MD, MI, OH, TX |
| 89th | MD, OH, TX |
State elections
As of 2021, ten U.S. states have at least one legislative chamber which uses multi-winner at-large districts:- Arizona House of Representatives
- New Jersey General Assembly
- South Dakota House of Representatives
- Washington House of Representatives
- Maryland House of Delegates
- Idaho House of Representatives
- North Dakota House of Representatives
- Vermont Senate and Vermont House of Representatives
- Virginia Senate">Virginia's at-large congressional seat">Virginia Senate and West [Virginia House of Delegates]
- New Hampshire House of Representatives
Local elections
Since passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and lessening of some historic barriers to voter registration and voting, legal challenges have been made based on at-large election schemes at the county or city level, including in school board elections, in numerous jurisdictions where minorities had been effectively excluded from representation on local councils or boards. An example is Charleston County, South Carolina, which was sued in 2001 and reached a settlement in 2004. Its county commission changed to nine members elected from single-member districts; in 2015 they included six white Republicans and three African-American Democrats, where the black minority makes up more than one-third of the population.In another instance, in 2013 Fayette County, Georgia, which had an estimated 70% white majority and 20% black minority, was ordered by a federal district court to develop single-member districts for election of members to its county council and its school board. Due to at-large voting, African Americans had been unable to elect any candidate of their choice to either of these boards for decades. Such local election systems have become subject to litigation since enabling more representative elections can create entry points for minorities and women into the political system and provide more representative government. In the late 1980s, several major cities in Tennessee reached settlement in court cases to adopt single-member districts to enable minorities to elect candidates of their choice to city councils, who had previously been excluded by at-large voting favoring the majority population. By 2015, voters in two of these cities had elected women mayors who had gotten their start in being elected to the city council from single-member districts.
The town of Islip, New York was sued by four residents in 2018 for violating the Voting Rights Act by maintaining a discriminatory at-large council system. One-third of Islip's population is Hispanic, but only one person of color has ever been elected to a town seat. As part of the settlement reached in 2020, the at-large system will be abolished and replaced by four council districts by 2023.
Some states have passed laws that further discourage the use of at-large districts. For example, the California [Voting Rights Act] removes one of the criteria required for a successful federal Voting Rights Act challenge, which has thus resulted in hundreds of cities, school districts, and special districts moving to single member area-based elections.
Some jurisdictions have kept at-large city councils and boards. The solution adopted by Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1941 was to elect all council officials via Ranked-choice proportional representation, Single transferable voting.
Territorial elections
Five territorial governments in the United States elect some or all of their members at large or in multi-member districts:- Four members of the Council of the District of Columbia are elected at large by the district.
- Eleven members in both the Senate and House of Representatives of Puerto Rico are elected commonwealth-wide by single non-transferable vote. In addition, two members each are elected by plurality from the Senate's eight senatorial districts.
- The 15 senators of the Guam Legislature are elected at large through an open partisan primary and a subsequent island-wide election.
- One senator in the Legislature of the United States Virgin Islands is elected at large by the territory, but must be a resident of the island of Saint John.
- The Northern Mariana Islands elects 3 senators each from three senate districts, and multiple representatives from five out of seven House districts.