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Balance of power (Parliament) : ウィキペディア英語版 | Balance of power (Parliament)
In parliamentary politics, the term balance of power may describe a parliamentary situation in which a member or a number of members of chamber are in a position by their uncommitted vote to enable a party to attain and remain in minority government, and the term may also be applied to the members who hold that position. The members holding the balance of power may guarantee their support for a government by either joining it in a coalition government or by an assurance that they will vote against any motion of no confidence in the government or abstain in such a vote. In return for such a commitment, such persons may demand legislative or policy commitments from the party they are to support. A person or party may also hold a balance of power in a chamber without any commitment to government, in which case both the government and opposition groupings may on occasion need to negotiate that person's legislative support. The term itself is partially a misnomer of its misapplication from geopolitics in the 20th century and European politics in the 19th century which involved, for example, the assessment of the conditions of war following the Napoleonic campaigns across Europe (see Metternich). ==Australia==
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