Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
My Little Green Vote
13 Answers
The Green vote has increased by more than 60% nationally.
Unfortunately that isn't represented by MP's as we're involved in an outdated voting system.
Unfortunately that isn't represented by MP's as we're involved in an outdated voting system.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It isn't an outdated voting system. It's a tried and tested system that more often than not produces strong government. The alternative (which I assume you would propose some sort of proportional representation system) would produce an almost perpetual hung Parliament and the last two years has demonstrated clearly what that means).
If yesterday's election had been held under straightforward PR the result would have been as follows:
Conservatives: 283 seats (they actually got 365)
Labour: 209 (203)
LibDem: 75 (11)
SNP: 25 (48)
Green: 18 (1)
Brexit: 13 (0)
Others: 27 (22)
You can see that the chances of a stable Coalition being formed is very remote. The Conservatives would need to garner at least 43 votes from elsewhere and could probably not rely on continued support to that level. The Labour Party would need 117 votes every time they had a Commons division. The 45% of people who voted for the Conservatives might see their votes fail to provide stable government. The combinations are endless and the shenanigans of the last two years would be replicated incessantly.
You must also bear in mind that voters do not vote for a party or a Prime Minister; they vote for an individual to represent their constituency at Westminster.
The UK had an opportunity to change the voting system in a referendum in 2011 and voted 2:1 to reject the idea. The FPTP system is not perfect but no system is if it is to ensure that government can govern.
If yesterday's election had been held under straightforward PR the result would have been as follows:
Conservatives: 283 seats (they actually got 365)
Labour: 209 (203)
LibDem: 75 (11)
SNP: 25 (48)
Green: 18 (1)
Brexit: 13 (0)
Others: 27 (22)
You can see that the chances of a stable Coalition being formed is very remote. The Conservatives would need to garner at least 43 votes from elsewhere and could probably not rely on continued support to that level. The Labour Party would need 117 votes every time they had a Commons division. The 45% of people who voted for the Conservatives might see their votes fail to provide stable government. The combinations are endless and the shenanigans of the last two years would be replicated incessantly.
You must also bear in mind that voters do not vote for a party or a Prime Minister; they vote for an individual to represent their constituency at Westminster.
The UK had an opportunity to change the voting system in a referendum in 2011 and voted 2:1 to reject the idea. The FPTP system is not perfect but no system is if it is to ensure that government can govern.