Since it usually means the party in government has a) a majority of seats and b) enough of the popular vote to justify being in government. See the USA, a two-party system which effectively has weighted FPTP in the electoral college.
You also need to have some areas that support party 1 and some that support party 2, with a few marginal constituencies which switch allegiances every so often. Otherwise you get situations like what happened in Lesotho in 1998, where one of the parties got 24.5% of the vote but only 1 seat out of 80 – this started a mini civil war which ended in a form of mixed PR being introduced.
The problems arise when party number three starts being taken seriously. You're seeing that happen now – you're probably used to it in countries where they let lots of little parties in, but it's a bit of a novelty for us.
Now, as a classroom exercise, design an electoral system where seats are allocated fairly according to how many votes each party gets, but where extremist parties like the BNP find it very hard to get seats, and where it's actually possible for someone to form a government without ending up with a coalition that nobody voted for. Answers on a postcard to Nick Clegg, who'll give a knighthood to whoever can find a solution.
You also need to have some areas that support party 1 and some that support party 2, with a few marginal constituencies which switch allegiances every so often. Otherwise you get situations like what happened in Lesotho in 1998, where one of the parties got 24.5% of the vote but only 1 seat out of 80 – this started a mini civil war which ended in a form of mixed PR being introduced.
The problems arise when party number three starts being taken seriously. You're seeing that happen now – you're probably used to it in countries where they let lots of little parties in, but it's a bit of a novelty for us.
Now, as a classroom exercise, design an electoral system where seats are allocated fairly according to how many votes each party gets, but where extremist parties like the BNP find it very hard to get seats, and where it's actually possible for someone to form a government without ending up with a coalition that nobody voted for. Answers on a postcard to Nick Clegg, who'll give a knighthood to whoever can find a solution.
Make it a parliament with 349 seats, add a 4% cut-off point where parties smaller than that are excluded from parliament. then distribute the seats with due respect to the votes (after all the irrelevant votes has been thrown away). Then the social democrats will win each and every time, and have the support of the lefties and the greenies, because the leftist can't stand the moderates, and the greenies can't stand the christian democrats. Neither the leftists or the greenists will have any say in the politics, though. They just act supporters. On occasion, this will fail, but then you get an coalition of moderates, Christian democrats, libbies, and centrists. This coalition will never rule more than 4 years though, because they tend to actually implement their election platforms when elected, and that is highly unpopular.
You think Clegg might try to implement that?
"People think it must be fun to be a super genius, but they don't realize how hard it is to put up with all the idiots in the world" - Calvin.
British politics is ... like a basket of crazy muffins. But they taste nice.
26/04/2010 09:34:57 AM
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British politics or muffins taste nice? Or both?
26/04/2010 10:52:35 AM
- 503 Views
Both
26/04/2010 05:11:54 PM
- 674 Views
Indeed
26/04/2010 11:01:30 AM
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Re: Indeed
26/04/2010 11:06:10 AM
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Didn't mean to put the effectively in there
26/04/2010 11:17:20 AM
- 449 Views
That makes more sense
26/04/2010 11:24:33 AM
- 585 Views
Yeah, I follow elections in lots of countries.
26/04/2010 11:11:28 AM
- 616 Views
Re: Yeah, I follow elections in lots of countries.
26/04/2010 05:17:55 PM
- 554 Views
It's all very entertaining.
26/04/2010 01:46:25 PM
- 544 Views
It works alright when you have a two- or 2½-party system with support divided geographically.
26/04/2010 04:40:31 PM
- 466 Views
Oh, it is easy.
26/04/2010 04:54:43 PM
- 602 Views
Would it really be so bad if the BNP gained seats?
26/04/2010 05:03:06 PM
- 578 Views
I don't have a problem with it as such (I dow ith the fact that people want to vote for them)
26/04/2010 05:15:02 PM
- 612 Views
Re: It works alright when you have a two- or 2½-party system with support divided geographically.
26/04/2010 06:14:44 PM
- 492 Views
Big fucking deal. Coalitions of less than 5 parties = LAME *NM*
28/04/2010 12:03:36 AM
- 214 Views
Rather a bigger deal when it happens in a first past the post system. *NM*
28/04/2010 08:20:42 AM
- 355 Views