Where did the Lib Dem vote go? They're going to end up with fewer seats than before. Really disappointing. Either the opinion polls are bullshit (how and/or where are they held?) or people are just extremely fickle. What kind of person still hasn't made up their mind the day before an election?
The only way Labour and the Lib Dems can form a majority government is to try and bring in a host of minority parties. It's unlikely and nobody knows how this is going to pan out.
I hadn't made up my mind the day before the election because none of the parties strongly represented my views on a wide range of policy areas. In some cases I agreed with one party, in other cases with another. Therefore I have to weigh up the difference, try to work out what means more to me and what I think will be best for the country in the long run, take into account how the vote is likely to go nationally and in my constituency, and then cast the vote I think is best.
There's nothing wrong with spending more time thinking before making a decision; it seems to me preferable to just following a gut instinct of whichever party you identify with.
Well said. The question you responded to, "What kind of person still hasn't made up their mind the day before an election?", is absurd, and that absurdity stems from unclear thinking.
It's as though people think of politics as a one dimensional thing, where we could even assign numbers to different viewpoints. 0 for the hard left, 100 for the hard right; major party A is 38 and major party B is 64, and if I'm a 42 kind of guy, well, 38 is closer, so I'll vote for party A.
Ridiculous, I know, but it's the only way I've managed to explain to myself why people think and say some of the things they do.
It's not absurd. Of course there's a continuum of views, I didn't suggest otherwise, but the parties each publish a manifesto outlining their policies well in advance and it seems bizarre to only make up your mind at the last minute. People keep "waiting to hear" what the leaders have to say on crime or the economy or whatever. It's in their manifestoes and it's fairly consistent with what they've been saying for the last few years. Policies are not decided on the fly during debates or news shows.
If we pretend that there are two parties, equal in all respects, except that party A eats baby boys and party B eats baby girls, that would be a tough choice to make. I can't decide which is worse. I'd be wrestling with the choice up to the very moment of voting. Afterward, too.
That's a contrived example, of course. But for many people, no party will be satisfying, and the choices to be made will not be obvious. If your opinions happen to align almost entirely, or even mostly, with a party, good for you, but for the rest of us, the choices are difficult and vexing, even if you have a long time to think them over. And, indeed, even after several elections (I've seen them while living in three countries), I'm still not sure whom I would have preferred to see win, and not for a lack of paying attention, but because each of the choices, realistic and un-, came with a complex set of tradeoffs.
My theory is that the turnout, generally, was still low; and those not turning out have a high proportion liberal voters ("whats the point" etc.).
That and the libs didn't really capitalize on their initial success the other week.
My take? Labour will offer the Lib Dems voting reform and form a coalition with them and the SDLP - that should be enough to hold it, just.
I have to admit I was hoping for a bigger share for the Lib Dems - which would have given a more balanced coalition (whichever way they went). Now their position is weaker.
Labour and the LibDems will join together to form a government and change the rules ("electoral reform") so that with their combined 52% and a form of proportional representation the Tories will have real problems getting into power again.
Although it looks like Nick Clegg lost he will actually end up with more power and influence than anyone from his party has had for an awfully long time.
I did find the views of the SNP rather alarming - that if the Tories got in it would probably create the right conditions for them mounting a realistic campaign for independence. I have no desire to be stuck in a wee country, oil running out, with a bunch of insane socialists and RBS.
And gained 8. That’s still not good, but it’s not as bad as you’re painting it. At current standings a Conservative minority govt would have 294 seats, and a Lib/Lab coalition would have 304.
Two things :
(A) Lib Dem lost a lot of ground after the third debate, especially on Immigration - the amnesty issue.
(B) The Lib Dems almost shutout the Labour party in the final days of polling, thereby influencing the tactical voters to favour the Tories to get away from a hung parliament, obviously not enough of it.
Yes. That's a big issue every election, but is likely to be an even bigger pain point this time round. Both Labour and the Lib Dems are now calling for electoral reform (some kind of proportional representation instead of first past the post).
Yes, which is actually a good example of the system working - even if they weren't able to win many actual seats, the LibDems have managed to put themselves in a position where they can at least influence policy quite strongly.
That's democracy. It represents the people. If you fear opposing views then you should avoid democracy.
I'm not a BNP supporter by a long stretch but, if they get a significant proportion of the vote then IMO they should get representation in parliament.
I actually considered not voting, our ward is a pretty much foregone conclusion, proportional representation (in preference to first-past-the-post) makes all votes count and would encourage people to vote with their conscience rather than tactically.
Yeah, I'm not really that afraid of them either. It was more a descriptive comment, asking if, in practice, fear of fringe parties getting seats would prove to be an impediment to electoral reform. My impression is that it's been a significant issue in some countries with proportional parliamentary systems, and some (most?) have adopted variants of PR for the main purpose of keeping the fringe parties out (e.g. in Germany, you get zero seats if your total vote share is <5%, which keeps the NDP out).
It is reasonable and practical to exclude opinions whose popularity is below some threshold from the government; otherwise the number of these insignificant opinions will make government an awful lot harder.
You want to be careful of plain old proportional representation. We have that here in South Africa and the result has been MPs who toe the party and line and have no ties to constituencies (I asked a couple of parties which MPs they assigned to my area, they either didn't know or just didn't reply).
That said PR is still a better system for representing minorities and forming governments - so personally I favour a hybrid model, possibly with a different house for each system.
Conservatives: South, land owners
Labour: North, working class
Libdem: Students all over the country spread thinly
Maybe libdem should claim wales as their own and relocate all the libdem supporters there.
For all the noise made about libdem in the run up to this election it was surprising just how badly they did. Even their share of the vote was only up 1%.
Regardless, the winner however you cut it, is the Conservatives. IMHO they should be allowed to form a government.
Also, lib dems lost 13 seats they formerly held. If Lib Dem support really was solid, you'd expect them to at least hold on to their seats. They didn't.
I can think of many ways to cut it that result in either the Conservates not being the winner, or the winner being unknown with the data we have.
The obvious one given the recent excitement around the 3rd party is the question "How many people wanted to vote Lib-Dem but thought that would be a wasted vote or worse would only help a party they really didn't want to win (note this works whether the hated party is Labour or Conservative).
Labour presumably also has strong support from people employed by the state - most of whom I would not describe as "working class". I suspect that this explains why the Labour share of the vote seems to have grown strongly in Scotland.
Almost every one of my friends and family in Scotland work in some part of the public sector - NHS, education, local government etc. I'm unusual in being self-employed/private sector.
Scotland has become a socialist country almost by stealth - a combination of government investment/bribery (Labour wanting to ensure a healthy majority north of the border, to keep the nationalist vote down) and death of traditional industries.
In Edinburgh you might see more jobs in the financial, media and other sectors, but that is not the case for much of Scotland.
The shift to Labour in Scotland is due to tactical voting against a Conservative majority. If Labour was expected to win easily overall then Lib-Dems and the Scottish Nationalist Party would have done much better.
Basically you can't look at votes which were cast with some understanding of how the system works, and pretend they were cast without that knowledge.
The way it works in the UK is that you vote for the person you want to represent you - your MP - and the party with the majority of MPs forms the government. Your MP represents your constituency - your local area.
PR is a bad system because it decouples the government from local representatives. Instead you get a list of people none of whom may have any knowledge of or interest in issues that affect your local area.
In my country (Uruguay) we have proportional representation by region - each region has a number of allotted representatives, and they are assigned with proportional representation. So they have knowledge of issues in the (broad) area.
OK, but how big is a "region"? My constituency is the town I live in.
The point of the UK system is that a local level you are voting for the individual person you want to represent you. Sure they are usually a member of a party, but they don't necessarily have to have a history of toeing the party line. This does create some dilemmas (e.g. if you like your local Labour candidate but hate Gordon Brown, which seems to be a common theme). But on the whole, the local link is important. The candidate from any local area is likely to be just like the citizens who live there. That's how to get true representation.
Except if you voted for anyone else but the guy who got in. So what if I have a Conservative local candidate, if I voted LibDem? I'm represented by nobody.
We have this same problem in Canada, and it frustrates me to no end. (Our Greens represent 10% of the country and have 0 seats. That's 3 million Canadians with NO representation at all.)
No, you are still represented by your MP! That is the beauty of it. But don't take my word for it: show up to a surgery, tell him or her you voted LibDem and ask them :-)
An MP is a delegate from a constituency - and their legitimacy is only that they represent their constituents.
I can't make much sense of that - in what sense are they representing me if they side with their party, or on the other hand why are they a member of a party if they don't side with it, but instead take a view which includes that of the constituents who voted against them?
If whoever is elected represents you, why aren't they all classed as 'independent'?
In the sense that you can show up to their surgery and say, I think X about Y and you should do Z. They don't have to do it, of course, but you've as much right to speak to them regardless of whether you voted for them.
And how large is you local area? 646 MPs and ~60 million citizens gives about 100000 people per MP, and with first-past-the-post you can then easily have ~50000 people with no representation because they didn't vote for the majority.
(Yes, yes, I get your later point how the one elected is everyone's representative, but come on, in reality they're gonna follow their party line most of the time and if that's the opposite of what you think, you are shit out of luck)
I live in Stockholm city which has almost 600k voters and 27 mandates instead of just one. I voted for a smaller party, and they still got two members from my area, so I am represented in our parliament by someone that is both from my area and shares my political views. And so is almost everyone else, regardless of who they voted for.
In my opinion, this system is better because you have almost the same benefits as your system with smaller constituencies, but the proportional system doesn't punish smaller parties like yours does. If a party gets 20% of the total vote, they will have about 20% of the seats in parliament as well, which is as it should be.
The single member plurality system used in the United Kingdom to elect the Members of the Parliament has its obvious drawbacks, however it has one important advantage: it keeps extremism out of the Parliament. Rest assured the if there was a party-list proportional representation system in place, parties such as BNP would have an appallingly large number of seats. I believe a good compromise would be a mixed system where a portion of the seats are elected with the usual "first past the post" constituency system and the rest was elected by using national and/or regional party lists.
Keeping extremism out of the Parliament when it is present in the populace has a disadvantage too though, people tend to discount it as 'not being viable' until it is too late.
Better to get it out in the open in an early stage.
"it keeps extremism out of the Parliament", i understand this but would it not be better to have these parties play by the rules in the system rather than be out of it and make things up as they go along. There are quite a few examples of extremist parties coming into Parliament and then having to tone-down the rhetoric or getting rejected by the public.
"Rest assured the if there was a party-list proportional representation system in place, parties such as BNP would have an appallingly large number of seats" - i very much doubt this.
I'm guessing you are referring to the Swedish Democrats ( 2,93% in the last election) as the extremists, but I really don't think (against the popular opinion) it's a an accurate description of them. Yes they are nationalists, very conservative, have a twisted idea of how an older Sweden was, picturing some kind of peaceful core-family where everyone is happy in the country side.
They strongly believe that Sweden is loosing its cultural identity and don't agree with the notion of a multi-cultural country, thinks immigration in general is a bad idea and when it happens it should aim for cultural assimilation (language tests, living here for 10 years etc..), these are all things you can have a serious discussion about. Maybe it's true that we are loosing our national identity, and there are points to be made why that might be a bad thing. None of that is undemocratic (as opposed to fringe revolutionist communist groups), they aren't blatantly racist (as opposed to the National Democrats with 0,06% in the last election that has a program about for a white ethnic Sweden and the destruction of non-Christian religious buildings), they aren't violent (as opposed to some fringe Anarcho-syndicalist groups) or saying we should throw out all the immigrants out of the country, but since we have no debate about those issues and have a national implicit policy of not engaging the Swedish Democrats they just seem that way. There are a fair many countries that have nationalists and real conservatives in government like that. In fact in a fair many countries it's not weird to be proud of your culture and openly express it.
Now I happen to disagree with every single thing they stand for even though I agree that we are becoming a more heterogeneous society, and my own views is that we should increase globalization, increase immigration, give more power to the EU and just generally disagree with the notion of the type of cultural conservatism that conservatives speak isn't an achievable goal. These are all views you can engage and make points for and against.
Second to them in size there's the pirate party (0,63% in the last election), which I don't think anyone really thinks its necessary to not give seats, since they aren't more extreme than the left party (reformist communists), the green party or the more free-market bent Moderates (European type liberal-conservatives) in any event. Then the Christian Democrats might not make the 4% after the next election loosing all their seats, and while I strongly disagree with the very foundation of their platform, I certainly don't think they are extremists (we don't exactly have overzealous religious people in this country).
So I don't at all understand who our so called extremists are and what makes them so dangerous that they will taint the majority rule of parliament to some extreme degree. We've had a reformist communist party allied with our usually-ruling Social Democrats for as long as I can remember. They've been in parliament itself since before WWII and yet I don't think we have overreaching socialism compared to other Scandinavian countries or say Canada.
People relate to the minority parties as they do to homeopathy, like they'll have some absurd position of power if they go in as a function of dilution. None of our current parties broadly support the policies of the Swedish Democrats, even if there's some overlap between them and the Peoples Party (European type liberals) and the Christian Democrats.
In this years election it also looks like the Swedish Democrats are going to go over 4%, what are we going to do then.. raise the bar? All this boils down to the majority censoring the minority. The worst part of it is that voting on a minority party is almost equivalent to throwing your vote away, since we don't roll to votes we deem as to small to count over onto peoples second choice so some people simply end up having no representation by design.
In the Netherlands they have proper proportional voting which is considered a good thing.
> In the Netherlands they have proper proportional voting which is considered a good thing.
We do but we only have 150 seats, not 510, so you need more votes to get a single seat (this acts as a barrier of 2/3%). However, it is true that you get many small parties in the parliament. Small extremist parties in the parliament is not a problem, as far as I know. Even if there were they can only talk, they can't do anything extremist. Some politicians are pushing to reduce the number of seats to 100.
I should have been clearer, in your initial comment , you said "an appallingly large number of seats" , 6 is not an appallingly large number of seats - yes, six more than what they have now but i would not class that as appallingly large.
My main point though is attempting to stifle extremist views when they do exist is just not conducive to a healthy democracy, bring it out in the open, let them play by the rules and then let's see how it really pans out.
Im not sure that's a good thing. Reform to PR would almost certainly lead to a very strong Lib/Lab coalition. The conservatives would, essentially, be out of the picture for decades in all probability.
I prefer this way where it could go either way (Lib/Con or Lib/Lab).
In EVERY electoral system, it is possible for seats in the national legislature not to match the party proportions in the general national vote. No one even asks about the overall national vote between Republicans and Democrats in the United States elections for Congress.
Sure, but a 6.4 pp difference in votes counts for 201 of 510 seats?! In a reasonable system this is not possible. US Congress is formed by a similarly stupid process (but of course it's a better than voting 100% per district), so I would hardly use that as an example of a good system.
I find it ironic that the result of democracy (in the abstract sense: the diversity of opinion) is a non governable country. It kind of shows what type of people we have in politics: stubborn opiniative people who don't even know how to listen to other peoples' point of view.
Elections in a democracy only seem to work when there's not a democratic parliament. Or maybe we are just not used to this and need some time to get used to the idea of different point of views other than the two main parties.
Which result would mean a governable country? There are possible coalition governments or even a minority government. Possibly, they won't be as strong as a single party majority government would be, but they are definitely workable. I'd rather see this as a strength of democracy where you can have some kind of government even if there are many different opinions without single prevailing political force (without having to kill all opponents).
Maybe you didn't understand what I said or I didn't explain myself properly but it's very rare for a government without a majority to not fall after some months/few years. I'm blaming it on the politicians who can't form a strong government from coalitions.
In a perfect world (utopia), there would be no need for coalitions, they would just vote accordingly to the interests of the people they represent.
In a not so perfect world but still a pretty good one, a coalition should be enough for a strong government and majority governments would be rare for our own good.
Depending on your view on the role of government this is not necessarily a bad thing. Canada has had a series of minority governments over the past few years, and that has not been a factor in the recent economic crises.
Its not necessarily a bad thing , the issue here is none of the other smaller parties have anything in common with the Tories,who look unlikely to form a govt. on their own.
Of course, a rag-tag coalition ideologically opposite of each other might still work but not very well, i suspect.
I don't mind a rag-tag coalition , my problem is with the stability of it.
Its probably better for parties with at least a common minimum program to work together than two parties that have nothing in common trying to stick together and run a government for 5 years.
I guess the problem with Great Britain is that there are no recent historical accounts of it working combined with the fact that the economic crisis requires immediate, resolute action.
Having the Lib-Dems be the king-makers at every election might be a weird case---assuming that no other popular parties begin emerging.
Conservatives in power (right), Liberals in opposition (left/center) hold the bulk of the seats, NDP (left) and Bloc (left/separatists) hold the remainder.
The NDP doesn't have enough seats to help the Cons on their own, and being propped up solely by separatists is seen as distasteful so support for a vote must come from either both smaller parties, or from the Liberals abstaining (the opposition looks bad when voting with the gov't!).
Yet here we are, years later and for the most part it has worked ok. The biggest problem is that parties are always in semi-campaign mode as whenever a money vote is lost by the gov't we'll have an election. This has resulted in some stupidities like targeted tax credits for specific groups (ex: families with kids in sports) that are not good policy, but simply vote buying.
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 176 ms ] threadThe only way Labour and the Lib Dems can form a majority government is to try and bring in a host of minority parties. It's unlikely and nobody knows how this is going to pan out.
There's nothing wrong with spending more time thinking before making a decision; it seems to me preferable to just following a gut instinct of whichever party you identify with.
It's as though people think of politics as a one dimensional thing, where we could even assign numbers to different viewpoints. 0 for the hard left, 100 for the hard right; major party A is 38 and major party B is 64, and if I'm a 42 kind of guy, well, 38 is closer, so I'll vote for party A.
Ridiculous, I know, but it's the only way I've managed to explain to myself why people think and say some of the things they do.
That's a contrived example, of course. But for many people, no party will be satisfying, and the choices to be made will not be obvious. If your opinions happen to align almost entirely, or even mostly, with a party, good for you, but for the rest of us, the choices are difficult and vexing, even if you have a long time to think them over. And, indeed, even after several elections (I've seen them while living in three countries), I'm still not sure whom I would have preferred to see win, and not for a lack of paying attention, but because each of the choices, realistic and un-, came with a complex set of tradeoffs.
That and the libs didn't really capitalize on their initial success the other week.
My take? Labour will offer the Lib Dems voting reform and form a coalition with them and the SDLP - that should be enough to hold it, just.
I have to admit I was hoping for a bigger share for the Lib Dems - which would have given a more balanced coalition (whichever way they went). Now their position is weaker.
Although it looks like Nick Clegg lost he will actually end up with more power and influence than anyone from his party has had for an awfully long time.
I did find the views of the SNP rather alarming - that if the Tories got in it would probably create the right conditions for them mounting a realistic campaign for independence. I have no desire to be stuck in a wee country, oil running out, with a bunch of insane socialists and RBS.
All money is on Cameron being our next PM.
I'm not sure Clegg actually has that much power, his party has lost 13 seats so far.
Singular; it's the highest since 1997.
Initially it seemed very high; but the morning it looks fairly low again. 65% ish.
Two things : (A) Lib Dem lost a lot of ground after the third debate, especially on Immigration - the amnesty issue. (B) The Lib Dems almost shutout the Labour party in the final days of polling, thereby influencing the tactical voters to favour the Tories to get away from a hung parliament, obviously not enough of it.
People will say anything you want to keep power/money, etc.
I'm not a BNP supporter by a long stretch but, if they get a significant proportion of the vote then IMO they should get representation in parliament.
I actually considered not voting, our ward is a pretty much foregone conclusion, proportional representation (in preference to first-past-the-post) makes all votes count and would encourage people to vote with their conscience rather than tactically.
That said PR is still a better system for representing minorities and forming governments - so personally I favour a hybrid model, possibly with a different house for each system.
For all the noise made about libdem in the run up to this election it was surprising just how badly they did. Even their share of the vote was only up 1%.
Also, lib dems lost 13 seats they formerly held. If Lib Dem support really was solid, you'd expect them to at least hold on to their seats. They didn't.
The obvious one given the recent excitement around the 3rd party is the question "How many people wanted to vote Lib-Dem but thought that would be a wasted vote or worse would only help a party they really didn't want to win (note this works whether the hated party is Labour or Conservative).
Almost every one of my friends and family in Scotland work in some part of the public sector - NHS, education, local government etc. I'm unusual in being self-employed/private sector.
Scotland has become a socialist country almost by stealth - a combination of government investment/bribery (Labour wanting to ensure a healthy majority north of the border, to keep the nationalist vote down) and death of traditional industries.
In Edinburgh you might see more jobs in the financial, media and other sectors, but that is not the case for much of Scotland.
Basically you can't look at votes which were cast with some understanding of how the system works, and pretend they were cast without that knowledge.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D%27Hondt_method http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sainte-Lagu%C3%AB_method
PR is a bad system because it decouples the government from local representatives. Instead you get a list of people none of whom may have any knowledge of or interest in issues that affect your local area.
BNP are not extremists. They're not blowing up Brussel to get UK out of EU.
It's democracy and free speech after all.
The point of the UK system is that a local level you are voting for the individual person you want to represent you. Sure they are usually a member of a party, but they don't necessarily have to have a history of toeing the party line. This does create some dilemmas (e.g. if you like your local Labour candidate but hate Gordon Brown, which seems to be a common theme). But on the whole, the local link is important. The candidate from any local area is likely to be just like the citizens who live there. That's how to get true representation.
We have this same problem in Canada, and it frustrates me to no end. (Our Greens represent 10% of the country and have 0 seats. That's 3 million Canadians with NO representation at all.)
An MP is a delegate from a constituency - and their legitimacy is only that they represent their constituents.
If whoever is elected represents you, why aren't they all classed as 'independent'?
(Yes, yes, I get your later point how the one elected is everyone's representative, but come on, in reality they're gonna follow their party line most of the time and if that's the opposite of what you think, you are shit out of luck)
Contrast that with Sweden where the constituencies and their mandates look like this: http://www.val.se/tidigare_val/val2006/mandatstat/mandfstat_...
I live in Stockholm city which has almost 600k voters and 27 mandates instead of just one. I voted for a smaller party, and they still got two members from my area, so I am represented in our parliament by someone that is both from my area and shares my political views. And so is almost everyone else, regardless of who they voted for.
In my opinion, this system is better because you have almost the same benefits as your system with smaller constituencies, but the proportional system doesn't punish smaller parties like yours does. If a party gets 20% of the total vote, they will have about 20% of the seats in parliament as well, which is as it should be.
Better to get it out in the open in an early stage.
"Rest assured the if there was a party-list proportional representation system in place, parties such as BNP would have an appallingly large number of seats" - i very much doubt this.
They strongly believe that Sweden is loosing its cultural identity and don't agree with the notion of a multi-cultural country, thinks immigration in general is a bad idea and when it happens it should aim for cultural assimilation (language tests, living here for 10 years etc..), these are all things you can have a serious discussion about. Maybe it's true that we are loosing our national identity, and there are points to be made why that might be a bad thing. None of that is undemocratic (as opposed to fringe revolutionist communist groups), they aren't blatantly racist (as opposed to the National Democrats with 0,06% in the last election that has a program about for a white ethnic Sweden and the destruction of non-Christian religious buildings), they aren't violent (as opposed to some fringe Anarcho-syndicalist groups) or saying we should throw out all the immigrants out of the country, but since we have no debate about those issues and have a national implicit policy of not engaging the Swedish Democrats they just seem that way. There are a fair many countries that have nationalists and real conservatives in government like that. In fact in a fair many countries it's not weird to be proud of your culture and openly express it.
Now I happen to disagree with every single thing they stand for even though I agree that we are becoming a more heterogeneous society, and my own views is that we should increase globalization, increase immigration, give more power to the EU and just generally disagree with the notion of the type of cultural conservatism that conservatives speak isn't an achievable goal. These are all views you can engage and make points for and against.
Second to them in size there's the pirate party (0,63% in the last election), which I don't think anyone really thinks its necessary to not give seats, since they aren't more extreme than the left party (reformist communists), the green party or the more free-market bent Moderates (European type liberal-conservatives) in any event. Then the Christian Democrats might not make the 4% after the next election loosing all their seats, and while I strongly disagree with the very foundation of their platform, I certainly don't think they are extremists (we don't exactly have overzealous religious people in this country).
So I don't at all understand who our so called extremists are and what makes them so dangerous that they will taint the majority rule of parliament to some extreme degree. We've had a reformist communist party allied with our usually-ruling Social Democrats for as long as I can remember. They've been in parliament itself since before WWII and yet I don't think we have overreaching socialism compared to other Scandinavian countries or say Canada.
People relate to the minority parties as they do to homeopathy, like they'll have some absurd position of power if they go in as a function of dilution. None of our current parties broadly support the policies of the Swedish Democrats, even if there's some overlap between them and the Peoples Party (European type liberals) and the Christian Democrats.
In this years election it also looks like the Swedish Democrats are going to go over 4%, what are we going to do then.. raise the bar? All this boils down to the majority censoring the minority. The worst part of it is that voting on a minority party is almost equivalent to throwing your vote away, since we don't roll to votes we deem as to small to count over onto peoples second choice so some people simply end up having no representation by design.
In the Netherlands they have proper proportional voting which is considered a good thing.
TL;DR We have no extremists th...
I just meant that 4%, or some other limit, seems sensible to keep the BNP and other such parties out in the UK.
We do but we only have 150 seats, not 510, so you need more votes to get a single seat (this acts as a barrier of 2/3%). However, it is true that you get many small parties in the parliament. Small extremist parties in the parliament is not a problem, as far as I know. Even if there were they can only talk, they can't do anything extremist. Some politicians are pushing to reduce the number of seats to 100.
I prefer this way where it could go either way (Lib/Con or Lib/Lab).
Fingers crossed.
Personally I think we should be concentrating on more pressing issues than electoral reform.
If Lib Dems had gained seats, or at least not lost so many of their own seats, they would have had a much bigger chance of getting reform.
Proportional representation is more correct, but certainly not more stable or efficient.
Update: that image is only HALF of the represented parties and seats!
Elections in a democracy only seem to work when there's not a democratic parliament. Or maybe we are just not used to this and need some time to get used to the idea of different point of views other than the two main parties.
In a perfect world (utopia), there would be no need for coalitions, they would just vote accordingly to the interests of the people they represent.
In a not so perfect world but still a pretty good one, a coalition should be enough for a strong government and majority governments would be rare for our own good.
In our world, this still doesn't happen.
I don't mind that more than 35% of the British people are represented in government.
Its probably better for parties with at least a common minimum program to work together than two parties that have nothing in common trying to stick together and run a government for 5 years.
Having the Lib-Dems be the king-makers at every election might be a weird case---assuming that no other popular parties begin emerging.
Conservatives in power (right), Liberals in opposition (left/center) hold the bulk of the seats, NDP (left) and Bloc (left/separatists) hold the remainder.
The NDP doesn't have enough seats to help the Cons on their own, and being propped up solely by separatists is seen as distasteful so support for a vote must come from either both smaller parties, or from the Liberals abstaining (the opposition looks bad when voting with the gov't!).
Yet here we are, years later and for the most part it has worked ok. The biggest problem is that parties are always in semi-campaign mode as whenever a money vote is lost by the gov't we'll have an election. This has resulted in some stupidities like targeted tax credits for specific groups (ex: families with kids in sports) that are not good policy, but simply vote buying.