---
title: "Multimember Districts — AP Comp Gov Definition & Exam Guide"
description: "Multimember districts elect several representatives per district. In AP Comp Gov, Iran's Majles uses them, and they connect to PR systems and electoral rules in Unit 4."
canonical: "https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/multimember-districts"
type: "key-term"
subject: "AP Comparative Government"
unit: "Unit 4"
---

# Multimember Districts — AP Comp Gov Definition & Exam Guide

## Definition

Multimember districts are electoral districts where voters elect more than one representative from the same district. In AP Comparative Government, the key course-country example is Iran, where Majles members are directly elected in both single-member and multimember districts (Topic 4.1).

## What It Is

A multimember district is exactly what it sounds like. Instead of one district sending one winner to the [legislature](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/legislature "fv-autolink"), one district sends several. So a single district might elect three or five representatives at once, depending on how many seats it's been assigned.

In [AP Comp Gov](/ap-comp-gov "fv-autolink"), this term lives in Topic 4.1 (Electoral Systems and Rules). The CED's essential knowledge (DEM-2.A.1) ties it directly to Iran: members of the Majles are directly elected in a mix of single-member and multimember districts, sometimes requiring a second round of voting if no candidate clears the threshold. Two more details make Iran's version unusual. Candidates must first be vetted by the Guardian Council, and the Majles operates without formal political parties. So even though the election itself is direct and competitive on paper, the rules upstream shape who can even appear on the ballot. That's the bigger [Unit 4](/ap-comp-gov/unit-4 "fv-autolink") point: electoral rules aren't neutral plumbing. Regimes design them, and sometimes redesign them, to advance political interests.

## Why It Matters

Multimember districts support learning objective AP Comp Gov 4.1.A, which asks you to describe electoral systems and election rules among course countries. The essential knowledge behind it (DEM-2.A.1) makes a sharp contrast. Some [regimes](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/regime "fv-autolink") structure rules to allow genuinely competitive selection of representatives, while others change rules frequently to serve political interests. Iran's multimember districts sit right at that tension. The voting is direct and district-based, but Guardian Council vetting filters the candidate pool before voters ever get a say. Knowing the term lets you describe Iran's legislative elections precisely instead of vaguely, and it sets up comparisons with the UK's single-member plurality system, Russia and [Mexico](/ap-comp-gov/review-by-country/mexico/study-guide/kBdQHh6UAoZ9orsL "fv-autolink")'s mixed systems, and pure proportional representation. Unit 4 questions love asking how district structure shapes party systems and representation, so this is foundational vocabulary.

## Connections

### [Proportional Representation (Unit 4)](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/proportional-representation)

PR systems need multimember districts to work. You can't divide seats proportionally among parties if a district only has one seat to give. So when you see a country using PR (like the party-list portions of Mexico's or [Russia](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/russia "fv-autolink")'s legislatures), multimember districts are baked into the design.

### [Plurality System (Unit 4)](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/plurality-system)

[Plurality](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/plurality "fv-autolink") (first-past-the-post) usually pairs with single-member districts, like the UK's House of Commons. The contrast is the point. Single-member plurality tends to produce two dominant parties, while multimember districts open the door to broader representation, or in Iran's case, a partyless legislature filled district by district.

### [Guardian Council (Unit 4 / Unit 2)](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/guardian-council)

Iran's multimember district [elections](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/elections "fv-autolink") are direct, but the Guardian Council vets every candidate before the ballot is printed. This is the classic AP Comp Gov move of pairing a democratic-looking procedure with an unelected filter, which is why Iran's elections are competitive in form but constrained in practice.

### [Indirect Election (Unit 4)](/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/indirect-election)

The CED contrasts Iran's directly elected Majles with China's National People's Congress, whose members are selected indirectly through layers of local and regional elections. Multimember districts only matter where voters actually cast ballots for legislators, so this pairing is a ready-made compare-and-contrast.

## On the AP Exam

Expect multimember districts in multiple-choice questions about electoral systems, usually asking you to match a course country to its election rules or to predict how district structure affects representation and party systems. The Iran details are the testable specifics. Majles members are directly elected in single-member and multimember districts, a second round of voting sometimes happens, the Guardian Council vets candidates, and there are no formal parties in the legislature. On the free-response side, the term feeds comparison questions about party and electoral systems. The 2019 conceptual analysis question, for example, asked about different types of party systems around the world, and district structure is a standard cause you can cite, since single-member plurality districts push toward two-party systems while multimember and PR arrangements allow more parties (or, in Iran, none formally). The skill the exam wants is describe-then-explain, so be ready to define the term and link it to a consequence for representation.

## multimember districts vs Single-member districts

The difference is the number of winners per district. A single-member district elects exactly one representative, so a candidate with the most votes takes the only seat (the UK model). A multimember district elects several representatives from the same district, which spreads seats across more candidates. Don't assume multimember automatically means proportional representation, either. PR requires multimember districts, but multimember districts can exist without party-list PR, and Iran proves it by filling multimember seats with individually elected, partyless candidates.

## Key Takeaways

- A multimember district elects more than one representative from the same electoral district, unlike a single-member district which elects exactly one.
- Iran is the AP Comp Gov course country to know here, because Majles members are directly elected in a mix of single-member and multimember districts, sometimes with a second round of voting.
- Iran's elections show how rules upstream shape outcomes, since the Guardian Council vets all candidates before voters choose among them and the Majles has no formal political parties.
- Proportional representation systems require multimember districts, because you can't split one seat proportionally among multiple parties.
- Multimember districts are not the same thing as PR. Iran uses multimember districts without party lists or formal parties at all.
- On the exam, this term supports LO 4.1.A, which asks you to describe electoral systems and election rules across course countries and explain their effects on representation.

## FAQs

### What is a multimember district in AP Comp Gov?

It's an electoral district where voters elect more than one representative to the legislature from the same district. In the AP course, the key example is Iran, where Majles members are directly elected in both single-member and multimember districts.

### Does a multimember district mean proportional representation?

No, not automatically. PR systems do require multimember districts to divide seats among parties, but a country can use multimember districts without PR. Iran fills multimember Majles seats with individually elected candidates and has no formal party structures in the legislature.

### How are multimember districts different from single-member districts?

Single-member districts elect one representative each, the model used for the UK House of Commons under first-past-the-post. Multimember districts elect several representatives from the same district, which allows seats to go to more than one candidate or party.

### Which AP Comp Gov course country uses multimember districts?

Iran. Per the CED, Majles members are directly elected in single-member and multimember districts, sometimes requiring a second round of voting, with all candidates vetted by the Guardian Council first.

### Are Iran's multimember district elections actually competitive?

Partly. The voting itself is direct and can require a runoff, but the Guardian Council vets every candidate before the election, so the regime filters who can compete. That mix of competitive procedure and unelected oversight is exactly the tension Topic 4.1 highlights.

## Related Study Guides

- [4.1 Electoral Systems and Rules ](/ap-comp-gov/unit-4/electoral-systems-rules/study-guide/uX7BAeHwubYnGYe4MrWc)

## Structured Data

```json
{"@context":"https://schema.org","@graph":[{"@type":"LearningResource","@id":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/multimember-districts#resource","name":"Multimember Districts — AP Comp Gov Definition & Exam Guide","url":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/multimember-districts","learningResourceType":"Concept explainer","educationalLevel":"AP® / High School","about":{"@id":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/multimember-districts#term"},"audience":{"@type":"EducationalAudience","educationalRole":"student"},"dateModified":"2026-06-11T05:53:13.354Z","isPartOf":{"@type":"Collection","name":"AP Comparative Government Key Terms","url":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms"},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Fiveable","url":"https://fiveable.me"}},{"@type":"DefinedTerm","@id":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/multimember-districts#term","name":"multimember districts","description":"Multimember districts are electoral districts where voters elect more than one representative from the same district. In AP Comparative Government, the key course-country example is Iran, where Majles members are directly elected in both single-member and multimember districts (Topic 4.1).","url":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms/multimember-districts","inDefinedTermSet":{"@type":"DefinedTermSet","name":"AP Comparative Government Key Terms","url":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms"}},{"@type":"FAQPage","mainEntity":[{"@type":"Question","name":"What is a multimember district in AP Comp Gov?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"It's an electoral district where voters elect more than one representative to the legislature from the same district. In the AP course, the key example is Iran, where Majles members are directly elected in both single-member and multimember districts."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Does a multimember district mean proportional representation?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"No, not automatically. PR systems do require multimember districts to divide seats among parties, but a country can use multimember districts without PR. Iran fills multimember Majles seats with individually elected candidates and has no formal party structures in the legislature."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"How are multimember districts different from single-member districts?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Single-member districts elect one representative each, the model used for the UK House of Commons under first-past-the-post. Multimember districts elect several representatives from the same district, which allows seats to go to more than one candidate or party."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Which AP Comp Gov course country uses multimember districts?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Iran. Per the CED, Majles members are directly elected in single-member and multimember districts, sometimes requiring a second round of voting, with all candidates vetted by the Guardian Council first."}},{"@type":"Question","name":"Are Iran's multimember district elections actually competitive?","acceptedAnswer":{"@type":"Answer","text":"Partly. The voting itself is direct and can require a runoff, but the Guardian Council vets every candidate before the election, so the regime filters who can compete. That mix of competitive procedure and unelected oversight is exactly the tension Topic 4.1 highlights."}}]},{"@type":"BreadcrumbList","itemListElement":[{"@type":"ListItem","position":1,"name":"AP Comparative Government","item":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":2,"name":"Key Terms","item":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/key-terms"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":3,"name":"Unit 4","item":"https://fiveable.me/ap-comp-gov/unit-4"},{"@type":"ListItem","position":4,"name":"multimember districts"}]}]}
```
