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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 13:44:36 GMT
2010 election result being something like this for the 3 main parties:
CON 271 LAB 270 LDEM 60
What would've happened in 2015 if there'd been a LIB-LAB coalition?
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Post by rivers10 on Mar 9, 2018 14:16:40 GMT
The political landscape today would be utterly unrecognisable. In a nutshell it would have went something like this...
Coalition agreement would have stipulated that Brown had to go and the UK had to introduce PR (no referendum on the issue) the ensuing Lab leadership (and by default Prime Ministerial) contest would have opened up some big internal left/right wounds within the Lab party. Not sure who would have won and ultimately became PM but it doesn't really matter.
Follow a few years of spending cuts (note austerity wouldn't have been much different, one of the Tories greatest acts of spin was abandoning their own deficit reduction plans after they plunged us back into recession and then re-branded Labours plans as their own plan all along) and the introduction of PR rifts within Labour would be growing...
This would have been nothing compared to the divisions within the Tories, Cameron and his modernisation strategy would have been seen as a failure (he would have resigned as Tory leader) and his successor would have almost certainly been unable to reconcile left and right within their own party. With the crisis in the EU, and the introduction of PR UKIP's rise would have been even more prevalent aided by the real prospect of winning large numbers of seats (there would have been dozens of Tory defectors to UKIP me thinks)
Meanwhile similar divisions within Labour would eventually lead to the coalitions collapse as factions within the Labour left (almost certainly led by John McDonnell with Corbyn in tow) breaking away disgusted at their own parties imposition of austerity and further moderated by the Lib Dems.
With the grievances over the EU and immigration still going strong the strongest faction going into an early election would undoubtedly be the much larger and stronger UKIP.
Where things go from that point on who knows???
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mboy
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Post by mboy on Mar 9, 2018 14:45:59 GMT
Not close.
* Labour would have insisted on a referendum on PR, and the Lib Dems would have agreed that. The referendum would have been lost. * There was never a double-dip recession under the Coalition. * The Lib Dems would still have been slaughtered at the 2015 election.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 14:54:34 GMT
I agree the Lib Dems would still have been annihilated.
Although Clegg would’ve held on far more easily due to the demographics of his seat.
Seats like Cambridge and Leeds NW would’ve been interesting because these had considerable Tory vote shares in 2010. But probably would’ve been lost to Labour with the LDs falling to 3rd.
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Post by timrollpickering on Mar 9, 2018 15:19:33 GMT
Not close. * Labour would have insisted on a referendum on PR, and the Lib Dems would have agreed that. The referendum would have been lost. Indeed the Lib Dems, ERS and other parts of the constitutional change sector had spent much of the past dozen years attacking Labour for not holding a referendum on the Jenkins Report or the voting system in general and would have found it very difficult to argue against having one. (This was part of the general strategy fail of the 2000s that led to the mess of the AV referendum.) Incidentally the figures in the first post imply a Commons with 49 "others". Assuming none of the Northern Ireland parties are included in the big three figures (and in a hung parliament that's not necessarily automatic, particularly as the SDLP's inclusion or not could affect which was the biggest party), that leaves 31 others. The Speaker, 1 Green, maybe 4 Plaid Cymru (assuming they hadn't regained Ceredigion), perhaps Dr Taylor... but it becomes a hard stretch to envisage either 24 SNP or a Ukip breakthrough in 2010.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 15:21:55 GMT
If there wasn't a referendum Labour MPs would have revolted and it would have probably failed. I reckon David Miliband probably would have become PM.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 9, 2018 15:37:24 GMT
Not close. * Labour would have insisted on a referendum on PR, and the Lib Dems would have agreed that. The referendum would have been lost. Indeed the Lib Dems, ERS and other parts of the constitutional change sector had spent much of the past dozen years attacking Labour for not holding a referendum on the Jenkins Report or the voting system in general and would have found it very difficult to argue against having one. (This was part of the general strategy fail of the 2000s that led to the mess of the AV referendum.) Incidentally the figures in the first post imply a Commons with 49 "others". Assuming none of the Northern Ireland parties are included in the big three figures (and in a hung parliament that's not necessarily automatic, particularly as the SDLP's inclusion or not could affect which was the biggest party), that leaves 31 others. The Speaker, 1 Green, maybe 4 Plaid Cymru (assuming they hadn't regained Ceredigion), perhaps Dr Taylor... but it becomes a hard stretch to envisage either 24 SNP or a Ukip breakthrough in 2010. Okay Let’s call it CON 281, LAB 280, LDEM 60
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Post by greenchristian on Mar 12, 2018 20:55:33 GMT
Not close. * Labour would have insisted on a referendum on PR, and the Lib Dems would have agreed that. The referendum would have been lost. Why so certain that a referendum on genuine PR would have been lost?
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mboy
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Post by mboy on Mar 12, 2018 20:58:55 GMT
For all the reasons that the AV referendum was crushed. The idea that there's a huge number of people out there (and it would need to be a huge number of people) who were in favour of PR but voted against AV is utter bunk.
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Post by Davıd Boothroyd on Mar 12, 2018 21:05:16 GMT
I supported AV but would vote against PR.
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Post by greenchristian on Mar 12, 2018 21:12:30 GMT
For all the reasons that the AV referendum was crushed. The idea that there's a huge number of people out there (and it would need to be a huge number of people) who were in favour of PR but voted against AV is utter bunk. I think the pro-PR vote could easily have been a lot higher than the pro-AV vote was, for reasons not directly related to the change from AV to PR. Firstly the pro-PR campaign would have been able to put out a much stronger message. The campaign's organisation and strategy would still have been utterly abysmal, but we'd have had a clearer and easier message - instead of "make them work for you" it would be something along the lines of "make everyone's vote count". And the message couldn't have been undermined by the "grubby little compromise" thing, or the way that AV was clearly presented as nobody's favourite system. Secondly, there was also a notable "punish Clegg for propping up the Tories" thing going on with some sections of the electorate. Those voters would most likely have switched, and the kind of voter who voted in favour of AV but would have wanted to punish the Lib Dems for propping up Labour is almost certainly a lot smaller.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 12, 2018 21:13:53 GMT
I wasn't old enough but probably would have voted against it. I'm not sure now but I'm favour of AV+
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thetop
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Post by thetop on Mar 12, 2018 22:29:28 GMT
For all the reasons that the AV referendum was crushed. The idea that there's a huge number of people out there ( and it would need to be a huge number of people) who were in favour of PR but voted against AV is utter bunk. Not really, when you consider the turnout. It certainly had more likelihood of passing: the same polling showing AV trailing by 10% had the option of PR reducing the lead to 3%. I don't think there was much enthusiasm for AV even amongst those who care about electoral reform, nor did it offer much to unhappy Conservative/Labour voters who'd like to splinter. There was also a temptation to give Clegg a kicking that was unhelpful to its chances.
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Post by greatkingrat on Mar 12, 2018 23:46:25 GMT
The problem is there is no such system as "proportional representation" so the polls overstate the support. People may say they are vaguely in favour of a more proportional system, but they don't all agree what that system should be. Once you pick a specific system (whether it is AV, STV, party lists or anything else), you inevitably lose some of the support for "PR" in general.
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Post by timrollpickering on Mar 13, 2018 10:04:01 GMT
For all the reasons that the AV referendum was crushed. The idea that there's a huge number of people out there ( and it would need to be a huge number of people) who were in favour of PR but voted against AV is utter bunk. Not really, when you consider the turnout. It certainly had more likelihood of passing: the same polling showing AV trailing by 10% had the option of PR reducing the lead to 3%. I don't think there was much enthusiasm for AV even amongst those who care about electoral reform, nor did it offer much to unhappy Conservative/Labour voters who'd like to splinter. There was also a temptation to give Clegg a kicking that was unhelpful to its chances. You'd need either another 7 million or to switch 3.5 million (more if David is representative of a sizeable pro AV anti "PR" block). That's a pretty huge number. The turnout strongly suggests that it was almost entirely the politically interested who came out to vote. The idea that there was a significant block of voters who didn't show up for AV but would have come for "PR" is fanciful. Do you honestly think a PR system would have been immune to criticism of confusion? In the run-up to the referendum on the old forum I wrote a post explaining how surpluses work in STV in Northern Ireland (in the thread on the Republic's election that year if anyone's got access). The response was that even a lot of PR supporters had gone off STV. Or the arguments about the cost of implementing it or the time it takes to count? Remember 2010 was the year Parliament legislated to guarantee declarations in the small hours so spending more for a quicker outcome was established.
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Post by greenhert on Mar 13, 2018 10:47:22 GMT
Do people not seem to realise that in parts of Britain, PR is already in force?
Specifically, the London Assembly, the Welsh Assembly, and the Scottish Parliament all use PR for their elections. Their PR system-AMS works very well by allowing both constituency votes and list votes, and it avoids the very long counts associated with STV. PR campaigners need to highlight those bodies first and foremost when campaigning for PR in the House of Commons, and how FPTP is bad for both sides of the political coin depending on location.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 13, 2018 11:02:36 GMT
Do people not seem to realise that in parts of Britain, PR is already in force? Specifically, the London Assembly, the Welsh Assembly, and the Scottish Parliament all use PR for their elections. Their PR system-AMS works very well by allowing both constituency votes and list votes, and it avoids the very long counts associated with STV. PR campaigners need to highlight those bodies first and foremost when campaigning for PR in the House of Commons, and how FPTP is bad for both sides of the political coin depending on location. i think we should have stvfor local elections
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Post by timrollpickering on Mar 13, 2018 11:13:14 GMT
In London most people barely register the existence of the London Assembly. When the GLA was set up all the emphasis was on the Mayor. It's continued that way with the constituency members a very distant second and the list just a strange ballot paper you get every four years that some voters think is a second preference and certain parties play on that.
And there's criticism aplenty of the AMS system - "two votes", turf wars, "losers can be winners" (e.g. Clwyd West), disproportionate results that require explanation, to say nothing of how it's been exploited abroad by devious politicians (hello Silvio Berlusconi).
Finally the AV referendum was held on the same day as Northern Ireland had a preferential voting election. It still lost there. Don't assume just because some politicians have imposed a system (or bundled it into a package referendum) that voters automatically understand and like it and want it for Westminster.
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The Bishop
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Post by The Bishop on Mar 13, 2018 11:14:27 GMT
For all the reasons that the AV referendum was crushed. The idea that there's a huge number of people out there ( and it would need to be a huge number of people) who were in favour of PR but voted against AV is utter bunk. Not really, when you consider the turnout. It certainly had more likelihood of passing: the same polling showing AV trailing by 10% had the option of PR reducing the lead to 3%. I don't think there was much enthusiasm for AV even amongst those who care about electoral reform, nor did it offer much to unhappy Conservative/Labour voters who'd like to splinter. There was also a temptation to give Clegg a kicking that was unhelpful to its chances. And that was greatly aided by his previous dismissal of AV as a "miserable little compromise".
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Post by timrollpickering on Mar 13, 2018 11:28:56 GMT
There's a lot of assumption here that the referendum would have been on something other than AV. But this seems to pander to the myth that it was only AV because of an offer in the coalition talks and Clegg being a shit negotiator. This insider account of the constitutional change sector suggests otherwise: www.libdemvoice.org/what-part-of-yes-do-you-not-understand-26100.html( My emphasis. I'll leave it to others to explain the Meadowcrof-Russell wars.) Some comments and replies from that thread: This strongly suggests a Labour-Lib Dem coalition would have gone for an AV referendum as well. In reality the offer of such a referendum, far from outfoxing the Lib Dems, was the Conservatives merely bidding at the going rate.
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