Originally posted by: b0mbrman
Uh...nothing complicated about it.
Imagine an election in the United States with three candidates along the political spectrum:
-L--C--R-
Each candidate gets 1/3 of the vote...until L gets smart:
---LC--R-
Now L gets 4/9 of the vote, C gets 2/9, and R gets 1/3. Hooray for L...until R gets smart:
---LCR---
Now L and R each get 4/9 of the vote and C gets 1/9. Now, C knows it has almost no chance of winning so he either decides which candidate he likes best and throws his support behind him or he's convinced through some sort of payoff...possibly a cabinet position or the promise of incorporating some of C's wacky ideas into the new government.
In other countries, people vote for parties and each party gets the fraction of parliament seats equal to the ratio of total votes that party got...and the party with the most votes gets to pick the prime minister.
There are also other ways to pick leaders like monarchy or military control. Anyhow...
Cheers