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supermajority

/soo-per-muh-jawr-i-tee, -jor-/US // ˈsu pər məˌdʒɔr ɪ ti, -ˌdʒɒr- //

超级多数,超多数,超级大多数,超额多数

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural su·per·ma·jor·i·ties.

    • : a majority that must represent some percentage more than a simple majority.
    • : a majority greater than a specified number, as 60%, of the total: required to pass certain types of legislation, override vetos, etc.

Examples

  • There is an excitement in the air about San Diego having a majority of Democrats on the County Board of Supervisors and a supermajority on the City Council, as well as a Democratic mayor.

  • It’s rare to get a supermajority of 60 senators to agree on changes, and much of the Democrats’ ambitions—Medicare for All, police reform, climate change policy—would likely stall in the Senate.

  • Democrats are trying to break a supermajority there just to have a bit more of a say.

  • In other words, the conservative legal movement is poised to remake large swaths of American law — and it’s well-positioned to do so in the years to come so long as Republicans control a supermajority of Supreme Court seats.

  • The filibuster has turned the Senate from an institution in which bills passed when a majority of senators support them to an institution in which bills can only pass, with rare exceptions, with the backing of a 60-vote supermajority.

  • Caution: Wonkjuice is not intended as a substitute for a supermajority.

  • “Married people had a supermajority of political power at the time the [current tax] rules were enacted,” Kahng notes.

  • But they fell three votes short of the supermajority required to send the package to Congress.

  • That vote, however, was insufficient because the bill moved through fast-track procedures that require a two-thirds supermajority.

  • But if the Republicans succeed in blocking the bill, they may end up electing a supermajority of Democrats in November.