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Strategy & Judging

Extension

An extension is a new argument or new analysis introduced by a second constructive speaker to build on their team's case - common in British Parliamentary where closing teams must extend beyond the opening team.

An extension is a new argument or new analytical angle introduced by a debater later in the round to build on their team's earlier case. The term is most important in British Parliamentary debate, where the closing Government and closing Opposition teams must add an extension that differs meaningfully from what their opening team already said.

Why Extensions Exist in BP

In British Parliamentary, two teams on each side compete against each other as well as against the other side. The closing teams need a reason for the judge to rank them above their opening teammates, and the extension is that reason. A closing team that just restates the opening team's arguments will almost always lose because they have added nothing new to the round.

What Makes a Good Extension

Good extensions are meaningfully different from the opening team's material. That can mean a new argument, a new angle on an existing argument, a new impact, or a new analytical framework. The key test: can the judge clearly point to something the closing team added that the opening team did not already say?

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