editor's blog
Not the answer!
Submitted by editor on Tue, 20/10/2009 - 16:21All-women short lists would be A solution, but not THE solution, to the shortage of women in Parliament.
Although Parliament would look more representative of the nation, it could be less representative in fact because constituency parties would have a restricted choice of candidates. Moreover, voters would have no more choice than they do now. Voters have no real choice in most seats because they are safe. At present, one person (usually a man) is foisted on them however they vote. Under David Cameron's proposal today, they would still have one person foisted on them but it might be a woman.
STV would let voters chose everywhere from which parties and which sex they wanted their MPs to come.
What is all the fuss about expenses? Are MPs really being treated fairly?
Submitted by editor on Fri, 16/10/2009 - 10:13On the one hand, MPs should not get away with claiming excessive expenses from us, the taxpayers, even if the claims are within the rules. Don’t forget MPs set their own rules. On the other hand, it is unfair if Sir Thomas Legg has simply moved the goalposts retrospectively and catches out those MPs whose claims had been agreed under past rules just because he personally thinks their claims are excessive.
It also seems unfair on MPs if their Parties unilaterally deselect them without first giving their voters a chance to decide whether their claims were excessive or, even if they were, whether the excessive claims were outweighed by the MPs’ good performance locally. If they were in most respects good MPs, Party deselection may also be unfair on their constituents because that would
Worth considering!
Submitted by editor on Mon, 12/10/2009 - 22:28What a squeak after the loud roar of the Labour Party’s manifesto in 1997 to hold a referendum on electoral reform! The media releases about Gordon Brown’s manifesto pledge in his speech on 29 September for a referendum on the Alternative Vote (AV) if Labour wins the next General Election say it all (see Vote For A Change below). Definitely not PR – for Parties or, as we prefer, for People - but perhaps a step in the right direction. After all, there are two basic principles in STV, the first being preferential voting on which AV is based, and the second, multi-member seats without which there cannot be PR of any kind.
Nevertheless real progress of a kind there has been, albeit not promising much at the moment. This is the first time in recent memory that a Prime Minister has declared that First Past The Post has deficiencies and that the voting system might have to be changed.
Some cynics, though, have even suggested that the split into two at the fringe meeting was exactly what Brown intended - to kill off within Labour's post-reform ranks any chance of the kind of real change the country needs: a split between the pragmatists (who think a referendum on AV might begin a process that would lead to PR), and the true believers (who reckon it would kill the chances of meaningful reform for a generation).
We fervently believe that STV is the best voting system for all public elections - and in many other elections too. Even so, if it is not possible to persuade Parliament to move from single member constituencies to multi-member ones, then AV is a better system that FPTP as it can more easily be converted to STV later than any of the other systems being proposed.
As Which? would say, “not our Best Buy, but worth considering”!
If you would like to know more about AV, I recommend you to visit http://www.electoral-reform.org.uk/article.php?id=55 for the Electoral
Let the voters really decide!
Submitted by editor on Wed, 30/09/2009 - 22:17In response to The Sun newspaper’s declared support for the Conservatives, the Prime Minister said the views of voters, rather than newspapers, counted at the ballot box. The BBC reported that he said, “the British people will decide the election.” Would were that true, Gordon!
Under our crazy, undemocratic and inefficient voting system, the present Government was supported by only 35% of voters at the last general election while 65% voted against it. The last Conservative Government was elected by only 42% while 58% voted against it.
Let the voters really decide!
Why not reform?
Submitted by editor on Mon, 28/09/2009 - 17:13"if the Tories got 36%, the Lib Dems 27%, and Labour 17%, the Tories would have a handsome majority, but Labour would STILL have more seats than the Libs - 132 over 120. This is why Labour will never give the Libs electoral reform. ..."
But it is also why the nation needs electoral reform and why all TRUE democrats must demand it regardless of party.
Tory MP supports reform
Submitted by editor on Thu, 10/09/2009 - 12:44“With 7 out of 10 MPs from “safe seats”, the Commons today is monumentally useless as a legislature capable of reining in the executive.”
“If every member of the Commons faced a genuinely competitive election to remain at Westminster, we would have a legislature with real verve, capable of independent-minded scrutiny of government.”
“Multi-member seats would retain the constituency link – and produce clear working majorities, not endless coalitions. It’d ensure more choice when deciding who gets to be your next MP. And more competition, not just when opening fetes and holding advice surgeries, but when vying to champion local opinion.”
These quotations are all from an excellent article by Douglas Carswell, the Conservative MP for Harwich and Clacton. I urge you to visit www.talkcarswell.com/show.aspx?id=968 and read the full article.
UKIP challenges Speaker's neutrality
Submitted by editor on Mon, 07/09/2009 - 21:20Only STV can solve this conundrum.
UKIP’s recent announcement that its Leader, Nigel Farage MEP, will challenge Speaker John Bercow in his Buckingham constituency at the next general election raises an interesting constitutional conundrum, which is unanswerable with First Past The Post elections.
On the one hand, the tradition of not opposing Mr Speaker is a valuable convention to protect his neutrality. On the other hand, the tradition virtually disenfranchises his constituents; they do not have a choice of candidates at elections and their MP cannot vote in their interests or ask questions in the House for them.
STV would solve the problem. All parties could put up candidates for the five or so seats in the multi-member constituency. To protect the Speaker’s neutrality and help his re-election, they could recommend voters to vote for the Speaker as their first choice. They could then further their own campaigns and give voters a genuine choice by asking voters to vote for the party as 2nd and 3rd choice etc. After the election, the voters would not be disenfranchised because, In addition to the Speaker, they would have about four other MPs to represent them.
STV to fight corruption
Submitted by editor on Mon, 07/09/2009 - 20:10STV would help voters to reward good MPs and punish bad ones. It would let them sack corrupt MPs without voting against their own party. Please sign the petition to the Prime Minister.
Happy birthday Jack!
Submitted by editor on Fri, 03/07/2009 - 16:35"Renewing our democracy is at the heart of our reforms" the Government claimed a year ago today but, a year later, it's still not how it's acting. The quotation comes from Jack Straw's written ministerial statement of this time last year, in which he set out the Government’s alleged progress in meeting the then one year-old objectives of the Governance of Britain programme of constitutional reform.
The full sentence is "Renewing our democracy is at the heart of our reforms, building a new relationship between citizens and government and ensuring that the rights of individuals are fully respected." What is the most basic relationship between citizens and government? It is the way the legislature is elected and the Government chosen. What has the Government done about that in the intervening year? Nothing!
In the meantime, the MPs’ expenses scandal has stimulated growing calls for electoral reform that are unlikely to go away. True, some ministers have suggested half-hearted reforms like AV and AV+, but the Government as a whole still shows no signs of introducing even either of those systems or, much better, letting the people decide in a national referendum.
STV is especially relevant to the expenses scandal because it would allow voters to express their views in the ballot box on the relative integrity of candidates; it would enable them to re-elect the honest and careful and boot out the dishonest and careless without having to vote against their own party.
Another small victory for STV
Submitted by editor on Wed, 01/07/2009 - 17:38We welcome the Northern Ireland Executive’s decision that local authorities in the province must elect their committees by STV.