I can think of an exaggerated scenario though in which that sounds reasonable depending on the goal:
say preferences are 1 (low) to 5 (high).
suppose 65% of the population ranked candidate A at 5 and B at 4, and the other 35% ranked A at 1 and B at 5. the majority doesn't get their favorite choice, but they do get an outcome they're happy with, and the minority doesn't have a horrible outcome. Exaggerated, but I don't think situations like this are unrealistic.
Absolutely, of course there are secenarios where it can work well.
Where it fails is when one major party is saying: we will drive up energy prices with Net Zero ideology, make housing unaffordable, import foreigners at a ratio of 5 to 1 local births…
And that other party is offering the same to a higher degree.
There are other options. Pauline Hanson’s One Nation party is polling strongly. Let’s see if that results in actual votes.
South Australian state election coming up 21st March this year - I’m encouraging everyone I know who lives there to at least listen to Michelle Grattan podcast.
say preferences are 1 (low) to 5 (high).
suppose 65% of the population ranked candidate A at 5 and B at 4, and the other 35% ranked A at 1 and B at 5. the majority doesn't get their favorite choice, but they do get an outcome they're happy with, and the minority doesn't have a horrible outcome. Exaggerated, but I don't think situations like this are unrealistic.