Mr. Tickle wrote:Don't the majority of european countries use a different electoral system to ours? I don't have the know-how to back this up but I beleive our system favours a larger majority "control" of the body politic which does not match voting numbers throughout the country.
Yup, basically the UK, US and Canada use first past the post which involves constituencies electing single representatives by simply counting who gets the most votes. Within the structures of the UK and US party systems this tends to produce single party majorities although not always (see a brief period in the 1970s in the UK and possibly shortly after this election). In Canada it does not do so due to a slightly more diverse party system.
Australia uses alternative vote where each constituency gets one representative and you then rank the candidates in order of preference and France uses a two round system where each constituency gets one representative and then only parties getting over a certain percentage go through to the next round in each constituency which is what decides the actual election. These have the advantage of ensuring the winner gets a larger share of the vote and tend to, in my opinion, support single party majorities, but can distort the national vote even more.
Apart from those countries pretty much everywhere in Europe and the English speaking world uses some variety of proportional system.
I think there's changes afoot with our approach, at least Labour/Lib Dems have tried to put forward changes on this. Not sure what the tory opinion on these were.
Tories are dead against it - why would the turkeys vote for Christmas? They benefit from the current system which benefits them and Labour, they also like tradition and our electoral system is an old tradition.
Labour are basically playing for electoral advantage and trying to throw a bone to the Lib Dems. It's pretty close to what they did before 1997 when it wasn't clear just how big they were going to win. To be fair to them, I think that in principle they would generally support electoral reform, but would be pretty unlikely to actually carry it through because it would hurt the two party dominance of government - see turkeys voting for Christmas. In this case their proposal was for alternative vote rather than for a proportional electoral system. This would have the benefit of making sure that every MP got 50% of votes because of the preference system but could well end up less proportional in its actual results than the current one. I think they reckon more people who vote for other parties hate the Tories than hate them in which case they'd benefit from the switch. They'd certainly have been right at the last three elections, but I think that they're miscalculating badly if they're basing policy on that this time round.
The Lib Dems want a proportional system on both principled and self-interested grounds. They've backed Labour on this issue despite it not being a proportional system that's on the table. I suspect that's because they'd probably benefit most out of the three big parties from a switch to alternative vote simply by being the second choice of most Labour and Conservative voters. Myself, I didn't like that decision because I think that we'll only get one chance at electoral reform in any reasonable length of time and I don't want to switch to a system that's no more proportional.