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by pointyhat
5435 days ago
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I think that is down to the way the votes are counted which is, statistically speaking, bollocks. The "majority" should simply be the most votes retained for a party across the entire voting populous, rather than divided up into political wards and with silly rules over the top. It's intentionally broken at the moment to favour the top two parties and always has been. Alternative vote is the same turd with a different jacket on. There should be no possibility for a coalition. |
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Your solution is problematic too though. If we simply voted for a party then we would no longer be electing local representatives which would mean that local issues would not have representation in the house of commons. It also creates the difficulty of deciding who would actually compose government - if we just voted for a party then does the party decide itself which individuals form government?
It's also important to keep in mind that the government and our elected MP's are two different things. MP's are elected to the house of commons, not to government. Whilst all members of the government are MP's the vast majority of MP's are not members of the government. Although they are constrained in voting by the whip system they do frequently address issues relating to their constituencies in the commons.