Donate SIGN UP

Proportional Representation

Avatar Image
Marshwarble | 11:41 Tue 12th May 2015 | News
24 Answers
Should I support this if my constituency would probably become UKIP (who I don't support) after its institution?

It's Folkestone and Hythe, by the way.
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 20 of 24rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Avatar Image
I'm not sure why it would become UKIP under PR. In the first place a purely proportional system would do away with constituencies altogether, so in that sense Folkestone and Hythe would lose its individual representation. Your 22% of voters who voted UKIP would help to go towards a UKIP MP though. It just wouldn't be your MP in particular. I think it is...
11:50 Tue 12th May 2015
Only you can decide, it's a personal choice. And IMO UKIP will soon wither on the vine.
Depends whether you think it is right or not that a party who polled 4.000,000 votes only gained 1 seat.
i don't think it really matters whether you support it or not ... it will or won't happen regardless of wht you think of it
I'm not sure why it would become UKIP under PR. In the first place a purely proportional system would do away with constituencies altogether, so in that sense Folkestone and Hythe would lose its individual representation. Your 22% of voters who voted UKIP would help to go towards a UKIP MP though. It just wouldn't be your MP in particular.

I think it is important to support political reform not because of the particular result it might give but because it is intrinsically fairer. If a proportional system gives UKIP more influence this is only because they have enough voters supporting them to give them those seats (I think they would have got at least 50 MPs, if not 60, under pure PR). Equally, one of First Past The Post's strengths is absolutely not that it shuts out a party you don't like -- while it may suit some that the Labour party and Conservatives tend to win the maority of MPs, those ~15% of people who voted for the Green Party or UKIP have ended up with 2 MPs for their troubles. This is unfair even if you don't like those parties.

Political reform is then about making things fairer for as many people as possible. If they then vote for parties you don't like, the message is that you need to work harder to win the argument. One of the things FPTP does is lower the number of voters a party needs to win a majority to roughly 1/3 as opposed to 1/2 (after removing those who don't vote).

Long story short: you should support or reject a system because it is fairer, or not, rather than because of who it lets in or keeps out of parliament.
Marshwarble

Watching a few episodes of 'Borgen' (BBC4) kinda put me off the idea of PR for life.

Government of compromise and consensus, defined by backroom deals out of sight of the electorate.
The chances of political reform of this sort may be low, bednobs -- but they will be even lower if people keep quiet and accept the status quo. The calls for reform are coming from across the political spectrum and can't be ignored for ever.
Yep, a party that polled more than the SNP and Lib Dems put together will wither on the vine. Maybe they will, but I would suggest there are many otehr parties with less votes that will wither first.

What you support is up to you, but I would suggest you remove all political parties from the equation and see what your feelings are then. Remember you may well one day support a party that is in the position UKIP is in now!
It isn't really a matter of will a change help my party. It is what you think is a system that gives a fairer result.

4.4 million voted UKIP and they got 1 seat. An SNP seat was won with an average of 25,000 votes. Is that a fair representation of the country at large?
Jim360.

UKIP didn't get 22% of the votes. They polled 12.9% of votes.
In Folkestone UKIp polled 22.8%, gromit, which is where I was referring to.
We have two chambers, Commons and Lords.

We have calls for reform of the Lords.

We have a number of possible voting systems, but broadly they are FPTP (First Past The Post) and PR (Proportional Representation).

As I see it, an obvious solution is to continue FPTP in the Commons, populate the Lords using some kind of PR and knock the Parliament Act into shape to cope with the changes.

Maybe it's too simple, as it never seems to come up as a proposal ...
It would be better to say that there are three kinds of voting system. FPTP is essentially on its own; PR is a whole group of systems that have larger, multiple-member constituencies or even just the whole country; in the middle are single-member constituencies where a voter is free to express preferences. This includes, say, the Alternative Vote.

The flaw in FPTP is that it ends up being neither very proportional nor very fair to people who are split between two or even three parties. You are compelled to give your entire support to one party or none at all. For many people, this is hardly accurate.

The flaws in PR include that almost inevitably there will have to be deals, so that the policies on which a party campaigns are not the policies they deliver in the end, as well as the loss of constituencies.

The middle-ground has its flaws too, of course -- but it shouldn't be lumped in with PR at least and ought to be discussed as a sensible improvement to FPTP by retaining the idea of constituencies but giving voters more freedom over how they cast their vote.
Ymb,

They got on average 25,000 votes in all the Constituencies they stood in. Which is more votes than some safe Conservative seats (Boris got 22,00). There was an MP elected in N. Ireland last week with just 9,500 votes.
No one should support it. It'd result in many more hung parliaments and tie in this awful party system making it difficult (near impossible) to ever ban them in favour of a non-party bunch of genuine capable constituency reps in parliament.
Question Author
It would mean less SNP MPs which seems a good thing.
More people voted UKIP than is the entire electorate of Scotland!
Clearly this isn't fair, but the problem is it suits the incumbent government, Granted, as a concession to Nick Clegg, a referendum was held in 2010, but it was a bad-tempered, confused shambles.
Something's surely got to change - we're using a system devised in the 19th century, society and technology have changed but the way we give the mandate to govern hasn't. The solution needs careful consideration though - the thing that makes me uneasy about PR is it was the conduit for the Nazi's rise to power. We should learn from history, not replicate its mistakes.
Marshwable,

PR would favour national parties and would completely nobble the regional parties. So Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland would have less representatives. And no independents.

Sounds like Breaking up of the United Kingdom is what you want.
Question Author
So having SNP MPs means less Scots will vote for independence?
Remembering all the time, of course, that voters elect MPs and not governments.

It seems perfectly fair to me that the election to an MP should be achieved by the candidate polling the most votes and in an election with more than two candidates it is quite likely that the winner will poll less than 50%. Once the 650 souls have been elected only then does the business of forming a government begin.

Those wishing to elect a government rather than an MP are seeking ways of abolishing the constituency link and they would do well to remember that.

1 to 20 of 24rss feed

1 2 Next Last

Do you know the answer?

Proportional Representation

Answer Question >>