Module 07: Political Participation, Parties, and Elections

7.3 Elections: How Political Power Is Chosen

Elections are one of the main ways political power is chosen in modern political systems. An election is a formal process where people vote to choose leaders, representatives, or policies. Elections can be used to choose presidents, legislators, governors, mayors, judges, local officials, or members of parliament. In some cases, elections are also used to decide specific laws or constitutional changes.

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7.0 Political Science Module 7: Political Participation, Parties, and Elections

Module 7 explains how citizens influence government through participation, parties, elections, and electoral systems. It begins by defining political participation as the many ways ordinary people try to shape public life, from voting and joining parties to protesting and organizing. It then shows how political parties organize voters, candidates, and ideas into groups that compete for power and help structure political choice. The module also explains that elections are one of the main formal ways political power is chosen and leaders are held accountable.

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