60seconds Sam: Should We Change Our Voting System?
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But why are we being asked to choose now?
Well, it was all part of the deal when the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats formed their coalition government last year. The Lib Dems have been calling for a change to the voting system for some time now, but the Conservatives are strongly against it. The issue's causing friction within the Labour party too. Labour Leader Ed Miliband is backing the Yes campaign, but his party aren't united - with many senior figures against AV. You can find more on what the larger parties think in this 成人快手 News guide on where the parties stand.
THE CASE FOR AV
"In a democracy you should make your MPs work harder for your vote to try and at least get majority support in their local area. That, in a nutshell, is what AV does." Nick Clegg
The main points from the are:
- Too many votes are wasted under FPTP because you only get one choice. They claim that two-thirds of our current MPs got elected with less than half the voters supporting them.
- Politicians would have to work harder under AV. They'd have to appeal to more voters in order to pick up second and third choice preferences.
- More people are likely to vote because they'll get a bigger say in picking their MP.
- AV is a tried and tested system - used in many businesses, trade unions and political parties - it's even used to pick the best film at the Oscars.
"The biggest danger right now is that Britain sleep walks into this second rate system. Waking up on May the 6th with a voting system that damages our democracy." David Cameron
The main points from the are:
- FPTP is simple and fair - one person, one vote.
- AV is complex and unfair - a candidate who comes second or third may end up elected.
- Our current system is the most widely used in the world because it generally leads to more stable governments. AV is only used in three countries - Australia, Fiji and Papua New Guinea.
- AV would lead to more hung parliaments, resulting in more 'backroom deals and broken promises'.
You can watch Young Voters' Question Time presented by Richard Bacon live on 成人快手 Three at 8pm tonight. On the panel supporting the Yes vote are Conservative MP Nick Boles, Labour MP Tristram Hunt and Constitutional Historian Dr David Starkey. Saying No to AV are Labour MP Rushanara Ali, Lib Dem MP Don Foster and New Statesman journalist and blogger Laurie Penny.
If you're on , you can join the debate online during the show - don't forget to use the hashtag #YVQT.
Find out more about the referendum on the following websites: Journalist Sam Naz presents the 60seconds news on 成人快手 Three.
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Comment number 1.
At 3rd May 2011, CrickeyBouncer wrote:"AV is complex and unfair - a candidate who comes second or third may end up elected."
This statement isn't true and overly simplistic.
A.V. is the assessment of all votes, and peoples voting preferences only come into play as soon as a candidate doesn't have 50% of the vote, i.e. the majority of the electorate. Preferences are only counted until someone reaches 50% of the vote.
It isn't complex, is simple. If you're afraid the voting mechanism will be too hard (how do I rank 50 candidates) and you don't want/cant be bothered to state your preferences, you can simple vote for your party and they will distribute your preferences along the party lines.
A democracy as stable as Australia has always had AV and there have been few issues with the voting system and certainly no calls to adopt, a FPTP system.
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Comment number 2.
At 3rd May 2011, johno wrote:will this be available in iplayer?
agree with above poster. people against av are generally 1) afraid of change 2) wanting to keep the status quo (afraid that entrenched labour or conservative candidates might lose out).
they are not really interested in the fairness of the av system over and above fptp since it is more important that their political party retains the same amount of power they have. it may be so that other smaller parties get more power, but then this reflects the actual level of support they have. this should not stop people appraising av effectively for its democratic value.
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Comment number 3.
At 3rd May 2011, Tony wrote:The response of the Great British public to the AV debate has been predictably, dismally complacent: we don鈥檛 want any new ideas here. The No Campaign has come up with any number of spurious arguments to dismiss this frightening, 鈥渇oreign鈥 idea.
We are told that the candidate who would have come third among voters鈥 first choices might win under AV amounts. Check-mate! This, of course, would only happen if more people preferred the third candidate to the first candidate. They are trying to tell us that it is better to stick with a system that all too frequently delivers one candidate when the majority of voters prefer another. How can that be right?
But won鈥檛 we lose the principle of 鈥渙ne-man-one-vote鈥? It seems to be possible to argue it both ways, so the question has little meaning in relation to AV. 鈥淥ne-man-one-vote鈥 is slogan, not a principle. It appeals to the idea that everyone鈥檚 opinions should contribute equally in an election. That is a worthy principle and AV adheres to it rigidly.
Would AV deliver more coalitions? Not necessarily. It is plurality of ideas that causes coalitions, whatever system we use. So what do we want: to avoid coalitions or to take on new ideas? People talk a lot about how first-passed-the-post delivers strong government but why do they consider a government strong if, despite having a large majority, it actually only represents 30% of the electorate? Might this just be why so many 鈥渟trong鈥 British governments collapse in exasperation because they don鈥檛 seem to be able to take the electorate with them?
As for the 鈥淏NP argument鈥, is it better that we suppress political nut-cases by rigging the voting system against them or that we face them head on and show their policies to be the dangerous non-sense that they really are?
What about the weird argument that your first vote is only 鈥渨orth the same鈥 as my fifth vote? It is not, of course, but there is balance: your fifth vote is also 鈥渨orth the same鈥 as my first vote. More importantly, my fifth vote would only ever become important if there were a very close run contest. There would have either to be a sixth strong candidate whom I am deliberately keeping well down the list because I don鈥檛 like him/her at all, or there would be several equally strong candidates and we are all having to consider them all: the fifth one would then likely be a real contender, not be an 鈥渁fter-thought鈥. In the absence of a sensible way of measuring a voter鈥檚 degree of preference, the rankings they give the candidates is about the best we can do. The first-passed-the-post system, however, implicitly makes the extreme assumption that their first choice infinitely more than they do any of their other choices 鈥 how can that ever be right?
And why on earth would AV cost 拢250 million? This is simply disingenuous: malicious mud-slinging. All AV involves is recounting a small percentage of the ballots in those seats where one candidate does not obtain the majority of votes.
AV would let in new ideas: suddenly it becomes worth voting for a small party, to register one鈥檚 interest in a new set of ideas, without feeling that one鈥檚 vote will be wasted. That is the real benefit of AV. That, I suspect, is also the really objection to it: the fear of new ideas. AV would also force politicians to appeal to ALL the voters, not just rely on the core who would never vote for anyone else. The first-passed-the-post is a simple system for simple minds. It favours the status quo so it is biased. Are we not yet grown-up enough as a nation to cope with a more sophisticated system that tackles this bias? Probably not!
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Comment number 4.
At 4th May 2011, Keeshond wrote:Exceptionally well put, Tony. I have been working for a 'Yes' result (unlikely now, I fear) since the general election and I wish I'd read your fifth vote/first vote exchange argument before. Many of us have long wrestled with this problem when trying to explain the value of voting preferences and the main 'Yes' campaign organising committee is wholly to blame for issuing bromides about safe seats and harder MPs' work rates to their hard working interns and volunteers rather than engaging with the issues that their"'grass roots'" (a term beloved of the campaign when criticised) supporters have been discovering when talking with people on the ground.
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