UK election result if we had proportional representation

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 4. 07. 2024
  • British Parliament would look very different if votes cast in the 2024 election were directly translated into seats.
    [Subscribe: bit.ly/C4_News_Subscribe]
    But is proportional representation really more democratic than first past the post?
    And do the British public actually want to change our voting system?
    -------
    Get more news at our site - www.channel4.com/news/
    Follow us:
    TikTok - / c4news
    Instagram - / channel4news
    Twitter - / channel4news
    Facebook - / channel4news

Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @michaelrch
    @michaelrch Před 14 dny +3672

    Labour 2019: 10.3 million votes. 32.4% vote share. Result. 220 seats and the leader resigns.
    Labour 2024: 9.6 million votes. 33.7% vote share. Result: 412 seats and a landslide victory.
    This voting system is absolutely absurd.

    • @elliottcovert3796
      @elliottcovert3796 Před 14 dny +419

      What does this reply even mean? The point of the original post is that wildly different results based on the same performance is unfair, unrepresentative and illogical. The attempt to analogize it to different sports makes no sense because the post is about what the rules ought to be for competitive elections.

    • @marcusorlandi8054
      @marcusorlandi8054 Před 14 dny +56

      ​@@elliottcovert3796well said

    • @michaelrch
      @michaelrch Před 14 dny +123

      @@Objectivebeatz I see you don't understand what representative democracy is....

    • @michaelrch
      @michaelrch Před 14 dny

      @@Objectivebeatz tactical voting indicates a failure of the system.

    • @ris1989
      @ris1989 Před 14 dny +87

      ​@@Objectivebeatzshouldn't the option be to vote for the party you support instead of against the party you don't want to win?
      With FPTP system many don't really have the option to vote for who they want for government and instead are "forced" to vote tactically to prevent candidates from getting into parliament, it's basically forcing people to choose the least bad option instead of the option they really want.

  • @isolationnationn
    @isolationnationn Před 14 dny +2868

    “But coalitions are bad” - Parties having to work together and compromise is what democracy should be.

    • @kingflynxi9420
      @kingflynxi9420 Před 14 dny +28

      Our current system is basically PR, except the smaller parties are brought under one umbrella by the system, labour is a coalition of centre left and left wing parties.

    • @isolationnationn
      @isolationnationn Před 14 dny +112

      @@kingflynxi9420 An engine is made of many parts, does it mean I have multiple engines? No. There’s still just 1.
      Just a hint, if you have to warp and change the meaning of words to try and construct a point, stop and think. You’re probably chatting sh*t.

    • @42earthling
      @42earthling Před 14 dny +12

      That is what is being missed here yes, parties need to form a coalition and cooperate and that means there isn't a sole party with all the power like with fptp in current UK.

    • @reformCopyright
      @reformCopyright Před 14 dny +7

      I find it interesting that the UK hasn't devolved into a pure two-party system, like the USA. That would otherwise be the "best" way to avoid coalitions.

    • @bzuidgeest
      @bzuidgeest Před 14 dny +20

      @@reformCopyright the US is two party, because in such a large country is just too expensive to play third or fourth fiddle. The UK is reasonably small.
      US politics is all about money. They even rate your electoral chance based on how much donations you can collect. Not on how good you are.
      Money, means ads, promotions, more travel, bigger shows and buying more votes with gifts.

  • @arthurschildgen5522
    @arthurschildgen5522 Před 14 dny +955

    The Labour Party conference backed proportional representation. Don't let them forget this so easily, Britain.

    • @567secret
      @567secret Před 14 dny +20

      The Labour NEC has totally ignored many of the conference policies :(

    • @johnwayne6646
      @johnwayne6646 Před 13 dny +11

      lol that reminds me Canada/Trudeau did the same fucking thing

    • @theworldaccordingto4555
      @theworldaccordingto4555 Před 13 dny +35

      We had a referendum on changing the voting system in the UK during the early days of the Cameron/Clegg coalition parliament (2011), but the public voted against it.
      If we have another referendum on PR, then we can have another referendum on reversing Brexit and re-joining the EU.

    • @Anonyomus_commenter
      @Anonyomus_commenter Před 13 dny

      You think they will throw away almost half their seats?

    • @malcolmabram2957
      @malcolmabram2957 Před 13 dny +10

      We need to recall the referendum on PR in 2011 (UK). 68% of those voted said ,'No.' In a large population, 68% to 32% is an overwhelming statistical bias. Personally I like PR, but there we have it. In 2011 the population said a resounding no.

  • @purplerings1969
    @purplerings1969 Před 14 dny +478

    Maybe voting turn out will be higher if everyone's vote actually counted.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +38

      Or it was compulsory. There should be a "None of the Above" box for dissenters. If "None of the Above" wins, there should be a new vote with entirely different candidates.

    • @Ry_TSG
      @Ry_TSG Před 12 dny +11

      @@markaxworthy2508 Or they could just change the voting system so that you don't need to vote for none of the above

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 12 dny +8

      @@Ry_TSG Even PR doesn't produce a 100% turn out, so the dissatisfaction of the disillusioned should still be registered and have an influence.

    • @jack2453
      @jack2453 Před 12 dny +4

      Bring on compulsory voting. If you don't vote you can't complain.

    • @birchplywood8464
      @birchplywood8464 Před 12 dny +4

      ​@@Ry_TSG Or they could do both? Having a PR voting system doesn't mean it's not worth having a way for people to clearly and unambiguously reject all the candidates available. Currently all non voters are lumped into the "too lazy or too stupid to bother voting" camp, when a great many people actually stay home because they don't want to support any of the parties or candidates available. Yes , currently it's possible to spoil your ballot, but often people assume those will just be ignored.
      Giving people the option to send that clear message that they feel that none of the candidates are suitable is valuable for greater democracy.
      PR doesn't guarantee decent candidates, but a "none of the above" option would help with that.

  • @BJWT1047
    @BJWT1047 Před 14 dny +2127

    Anyone still saying FPTP gives stable governments after the last 14 years, and since Brexit in particular, is totally deluded.

    • @William26002
      @William26002 Před 14 dny +56

      not defending FPTP but in the 2011 referendum 70% of voters voted in favour of FPTP

    • @ChickenNugNugz2
      @ChickenNugNugz2 Před 14 dny

      I think just adding an instant ranked run off would be a better fix. No candidate wins until they reach 50% and would allow voters to tactically rank their choices to prevent essentially the nazi party winning 93 seats

    • @giantWario
      @giantWario Před 14 dny +119

      @@William26002 The alternative that was offered in that referendum wasn't PR though. It was AV. Which is even stupider than FPTP.

    • @tarqinquentinsson-obviousl957
      @tarqinquentinsson-obviousl957 Před 14 dny

      @@William26002 on a turnout of like 40% and with AV as the only offered alternative

    • @camicus-3249
      @camicus-3249 Před 14 dny +19

      @@giantWario how can AV be worse than FPTP?

  • @ImperfectionGuaranteed
    @ImperfectionGuaranteed Před 14 dny +560

    In the current system there are far too many votes thrown away, being votes _against,_ rather than _for!_

    • @yucol5661
      @yucol5661 Před 14 dny +3

      Hopefully you could vote for both. There are ways to punish extremely unpopular hated parties through other voting systems. Ranked voting for example

    • @GavinGas
      @GavinGas Před 13 dny

      Amen

    • @InvisibleTower
      @InvisibleTower Před 13 dny +2

      And votes that are just completely wasted in general. If you vote for any other party except the one that wins your seat, your vote counts for literally nothing. Even if you vote for the winning MP, any votes above what they needed to beat the candidate in 2nd place are totally pointless too. It has to change.

    • @davidorourke5795
      @davidorourke5795 Před 12 dny +2

      When there is nothing on offer to vote for the only alternative is to vote against!

    • @themasqueradingcow91
      @themasqueradingcow91 Před 11 dny +1

      Can see from the super negative campaigning. Nothing about 'what we can do for you', but 'Look, the other guys will be bad for you'

  • @marcoose777
    @marcoose777 Před 14 dny +50

    Tory's and Labour love FPTP, it gives them absolute power when their side wins, and as we all know: power corrupts.

    • @andrewoliver8930
      @andrewoliver8930 Před 14 dny

      Farage never called for PR when he was a Conservative member...

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před 13 dny

      Don't forget that it was Labour in February 2010 who pushed through the AV Referendum, which then took place in 2011 (after Labour lost the May 2010 election). The electorate, for reasons I still cannot fathom, resoundingly said "no".

    • @andrewoliver8930
      @andrewoliver8930 Před 13 dny +1

      @RCassinello The parties who don't benefit from it, didn't promote it.

    • @marcoose777
      @marcoose777 Před 13 dny

      @@RCassinello They sound no because the offer on the table (AV: ranked choice) was absolute garbage. A part of the Conservatives (successful) scheme to discredit the Liberal Democrats. Labour were 'neutral' with no official position -- turnout was 42.2%. It was the appearance of a referendum without actually offering a credible alternative to the status quo

    • @isoroxuk
      @isoroxuk Před 11 dny +3

      @@RCassinellono Labour did not push through the av referendum,, it was a requirement of the coalition agreement.

  • @kostas0352
    @kostas0352 Před 13 dny +248

    14% of the vote and 0.6% of the seats is CRAZY

    • @thomasjosullivan9179
      @thomasjosullivan9179 Před 13 dny +16

      Shin Fein got 0.7% and 7 seats !!! LOL and they would not darken the door there

    • @Cannon952
      @Cannon952 Před 13 dny +4

      it's not crazy. For all other constituencies, they did not win the largest share of the votes. Even with STV, they wouldn't get a proportional result nationally because their vote is spread throughout the entire country. It would be locally unrepresentative for them to win seats in constituencies where they don't have the highest share of votes.

    • @sirbarringtonwomblembe4098
      @sirbarringtonwomblembe4098 Před 13 dny

      ​​@@thomasjosullivan9179Are you saying that result is not leg-it? 😅 It is Sinn Fein.

    • @Slayrid
      @Slayrid Před 12 dny +14

      ​@@Cannon952it kinda is, 14% of the popular vote and not even 1% of the seats?

    • @Cannon952
      @Cannon952 Před 12 dny +2

      @@Slayrid yes, that's what happens when their votes are spread throughout the country. They receive a small % of the vote for almost every constituency

  • @lyndacrosfill6340
    @lyndacrosfill6340 Před 14 dny +312

    Labour and conservatives aren't going to change anything it's in their interest not the public's.

    • @graynz
      @graynz Před 14 dny +17

      Labour and National ( conservatives ) in NZ under a ffp system changed it to MMP in 1996, after a referendum in 1993. They bowed to the will of the people. If the people of UK want a change, just push for it.

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 14 dny +3

      Humorously, the Tories actually lost out compared to PR this time, just as Labour lost out in 2019.

    • @armelfrancois7009
      @armelfrancois7009 Před 13 dny +3

      but Starmer said country before party :/

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 13 dny +8

      @@armelfrancois7009 It's only legally binding if he writes it on the side of a bus...

    • @philjameson292
      @philjameson292 Před 12 dny

      In the 2012 AV referendum it was the Tories and the right wing press that actively campaigned for a No vote. Labour took a neutral position

  • @tazman5001
    @tazman5001 Před 14 dny +353

    There's only two countries in europe that use FPTP system, us, and Belarus.

    • @allthenewsordeath5772
      @allthenewsordeath5772 Před 14 dny

      To be fair to Belarus, their actual president is Vladimir Putin, the other guy is just a puppet.

    • @connorthompson66
      @connorthompson66 Před 14 dny +28

      I get your point, but it's unfair to compare British democracy to Belarusian democracy because Belarus isn't a democracy in the first place.

    • @jurassiccraft883
      @jurassiccraft883 Před 14 dny +109

      @@connorthompson66 that is why its so bizarre we use such an antiquated and outdated system

    • @mrsupremegascon
      @mrsupremegascon Před 14 dny +20

      We have a 2 round system here in France, it's only slightly better.
      Although we had proportional voting once, during the 4th republic between 1946 and 1958. Needless to say, it didn't ended well. The parliament was too unstable almost created a civil war.

    • @alexjeffrey3981
      @alexjeffrey3981 Před 14 dny +39

      ​@@mrsupremegasconI suspect that's more to do with the circumstances of the time than proportional representation.

  • @jonistan9268
    @jonistan9268 Před 12 dny +13

    In Switzerland, we have proportional representation for most things which leads to a very diverse political landscape. Despite this, our elections are somewhat local. The system is a bit complicated, but people seem satisfied, the country is stable and there's no major party deciding everything. We don't even have a "government" and an "opposition" like most countries, but instead everyone works together, as per our national motto written inside the parliament building: "omnes pro uno, unus pro omnibus". With our system, you also don't get a rapid change of government after an election, because the changes are much smaller and nobody has a majority anyway.
    The party that does the least amount of constructive work and instead focuses on trying to be an "opposition" to anything is actually our conservative party which is also the largest party by number of voters. But they can't really do much on their own as long as nobody else agrees with them. With the same behaviour of voters but a UK-style system, Switzerland would be a radical conservative hellhole instead of what it is now.
    What also helps is that we get to vote on things several times a year rather than just vote for people who then decide everything. There is a downside to this system though: Things tend to just take forever because so many people get to say something. But that's a price I'm willing to pay for all the advantages. Other countries also have a constant back and forth when it comes to policies, because one side wins, four years later the other one takes over and pulls in the other direction...

    • @mikeb7379
      @mikeb7379 Před 7 dny

      Intersting. The NZ system might be the one to adopt? I'm trying to learn about PR and understand the options. Thankyou for this insight.

    • @nicolasinvernizzi6140
      @nicolasinvernizzi6140 Před 6 dny

      @@mikeb7379 here in Uruguay we have a form of PR. each party is made of Party Factions, each faction chooses a candidate for an internal non mandatory election open to all citizens. most parties have a bunch of possible candidates until that point. then once the formal candidate of each party has been elected each party faction creates a list of candidates for parliament. then 6 months of campaigning later every adult citizen has to vote on the general election. you can choose any faction list of any party and the votes are taken into account to create the parliament. so if an internal faction has only enough votes for 3 seats they get the first 3 names on their list into parliament.
      if no party as a whole has more than 50 percent of votes we hold a second round with the two presidential candidates that got more votes on the first round. both rounds are mandatory for the citizens to vote in. only the first round is taken into account to form the parliament.

  • @UFORevelation0999
    @UFORevelation0999 Před 14 dny +50

    Sickening state of UK politics I can see why many don't bother voting.

    • @JohnnyMaverik
      @JohnnyMaverik Před 6 dny

      It's always been that way. Instead of throwing a quiet tantrum we need to demand change because change is possible. We had a referendum on this very issue back in 2011 and unfortunately 67.9% of people voted no. In the mean time, feel free to continue to exercise your right to not vote and don't let anybody try to gas light you into agreeing that in so doing you forfeit your right to representation, however do not be afraid to make your voice heard as change is possible but we won't get action unless people speak up and make it clear it's something they feel is important.

  • @madcowgimbo
    @madcowgimbo Před 14 dny +472

    Coalition governments force politicians to work across party divides. People get to vote who they want. Labour state this is the time for change so walk the talk and change it. PR now!

    • @agustinarcusa7696
      @agustinarcusa7696 Před 14 dny +3

      In fptp the coalision are inside the big parties. Really both the labour and the tories show it every other day by their internal fights

    • @shaunmulligan8717
      @shaunmulligan8717 Před 14 dny +10

      Preferential voting and proportional representation is not in the interests of the current elected dictatorship.

    • @greyvoice7949
      @greyvoice7949 Před 14 dny +1

      Put the politicians out of a job , Direct democracy! No corruption!

    • @GK-qc5ry
      @GK-qc5ry Před 14 dny +1

      The only thing in coalitions are small parties can have a big say especially if they are key to having a majority for the bigger party so there's a democratic deficit there. And if they exit the govt it collapses and you can get frequent elections.

    • @eamonryan2198
      @eamonryan2198 Před 14 dny +2

      ​@@GK-qc5ry Have a look at how we work PR in Ireland, incidentally a system that was a non negotiable part of our independence treaty settlement with the UK, being a requirement of the UK side. We get along fine and have stable government, most of which in recent times have lasted their full term.

  • @mattdawson3017
    @mattdawson3017 Před 14 dny +889

    A serious democracy shouldn't be handing out massive majorities with 30% or 40% of the vote.
    The result suits me as I hate the Tories but the system isn't fit for purpose and needs to be reformed.

    • @nikeshpatel7982
      @nikeshpatel7982 Před 14 dny +56

      You got the red tories lol

    • @tubey84
      @tubey84 Před 14 dny +35

      The percentage of the vote doesn't matter, it's the representation of constituencies. People don't understand the strengths of FPTP - it acts as mini-elections for each region with a winner take all, it's a perfectly valid way to do it. It also means we don't get constant coalitions and open the door to extremists.
      FPTP is an acid test for actual electability by demanding widespread AND strong support in multiple areas, instead of PR which allows power even if your popularity translates to 3rd place or whatever across the country. That's literally how the NSDAP came to power in the 1930s, because PR is wide open to populism.

    • @lifewithtrip2054
      @lifewithtrip2054 Před 14 dny +1

      Do you really believe that some cockneys are allowed to affect the country under a caste British society? There is no democracy. Ordinary people have no power.

    • @allthenewsordeath5772
      @allthenewsordeath5772 Před 14 dny +43

      @@tubey84
      Wow, not even three comments in and you already invoked Godwin’s law, that has to be a record.

    • @tubey84
      @tubey84 Před 14 dny +33

      @@allthenewsordeath5772 It's a discussion about voting systems and the weaknesses of PR - if you can't mention the most blatant example of the weakness of PR just because of an internet meme then there's no point discussing it at all.

  • @snakey934Snakeybakey
    @snakey934Snakeybakey Před 13 dny +75

    Reform UK. 14.5% of the vote. 1% of representation.

    • @markbriten6999
      @markbriten6999 Před 12 dny

      Oh dear how sad never mind. Fartage was happy enough with fptp when Bozo won big now it's not fair. Boo f ing hoo

    • @primeattack
      @primeattack Před 12 dny

      And that is still too much for a party that had no real plans or design for government, that listed many paper candidates just to get on the ballet, created a wish list of ideas and were for many a call for change rather than an actual vote of support for Farage and his little hate group

    • @clivejungle6999
      @clivejungle6999 Před 12 dny

      This is why it shouldn't be a right/left issue. The Greens were also cheated out of their true number of seats.

    • @keithwilkins1437
      @keithwilkins1437 Před 11 dny +3

      When you consider the proportion of the vote over England only the representation is even worse .

    • @dm121984
      @dm121984 Před 11 dny +9

      Whilst I think Reform UK are terrible, they did get partcularly underrepresented compared to their vote share. It is ridiculous how poorly parliament ends up representing the people's actual votes.
      The one thing that annoys me is we had at least 2 Tory governments with massively inflated representation in parliament, and not a word in the media said about it ... right until a labour government gets in and then suddenly a ton of attention is on the voting system.
      Whilst I hate the voting system, it is noticable how suddenly the FPTP system went from a non-issue in the media to being a talking point suddenly.

  • @quackywhackityphillyb.3005
    @quackywhackityphillyb.3005 Před 14 dny +86

    we have the essentially the same system in Canada, and it sucks. the liberal party won the last two elections without even getting the popular vote.

    • @ronbock8291
      @ronbock8291 Před 14 dny +7

      Do you live in the same Canada I do? The Liberal Party has been in a minority government twice now, with the support of the NDP in the Canada I live in.

    • @quackywhackityphillyb.3005
      @quackywhackityphillyb.3005 Před 14 dny +3

      @@ronbock8291 but they still won the elections? I didnt say anything about majoirities...

    • @bobthebuilder9275
      @bobthebuilder9275 Před 13 dny +9

      Back in 2015 Liberals in Canada promised us that we will ditch first past the post and know in 2024 we still have have first pass the post

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +2

      NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @GeneralGrievousCIS
      @GeneralGrievousCIS Před 13 dny

      I agree, though I think it's worth noting that if you're supporting a change because you feel the Conservatives would've won, that's misguided. Under PR, the Conservatives would've gotten the most seats in those elections but still a minority... well less than the combined NDP and Liberals. Cons + PPC would still fall short of Lib + NDP + Green. Left gets more votes, so what you'd likely get is a broad left-wing coalition which would massively empower the NDP relative to now at the expense of the Liberals. Not saying that's bad, just saying that kind of deflates the main argument I've seem for Conservative supporters that PR would've been good for them, lol

  • @fredhayward1350
    @fredhayward1350 Před 14 dny +464

    In New Zealand we have proportional voting and it works...the UK should not just try it, but needs it.

    • @allthenewsordeath5772
      @allthenewsordeath5772 Před 14 dny

      Hasn’t New Zealand been overrun by woke communists?

    • @K_j_M
      @K_j_M Před 14 dny +8

      Hardly anyone lives in NZ though

    • @drpatrickmorbius5966
      @drpatrickmorbius5966 Před 14 dny +26

      @@K_j_Mno reason why AMS couldn’t work in the UK. Like literally 0 reason as to why it’s not actionable

    • @jackdubz4247
      @jackdubz4247 Před 14 dny

      NZ is a white settler colony that stole land from the native population. Anyone from NZ lecturing people on better ways to govern is doomed to fail. Get your own house in order first.

    • @joanneburford6364
      @joanneburford6364 Před 14 dny +31

      ​@@K_j_Mignorant comment. Australia has mandatory preferential voting and it works. Only 66% of you Brits bothered to vote, a bit like the yanks 🤷‍♀️

  • @jebbo-c1l
    @jebbo-c1l Před 14 dny +733

    FPTP is garbage, proportional is the way to go

    • @adamgrimsley2900
      @adamgrimsley2900 Před 14 dny +9

      Nah

    • @henwood122
      @henwood122 Před 14 dny

      Look up CGP grey STV it’s much better

    • @SlimeTheHow
      @SlimeTheHow Před 14 dny +4

      The stark bollock naked reality is, it’s here for the foreseeable and this has resulted in a scrumdiddlyumptious result for Labour

    • @zakzanotti5868
      @zakzanotti5868 Před 14 dny +15

      @@adamgrimsley2900great debate 😂

    • @kc_1018
      @kc_1018 Před 14 dny +6

      What about a mixture of both FPTP and PR? 325 seats elected from single district constituencies using FPTP while the other 325 seats are elected through open list proportional representation.

  • @toddb9313
    @toddb9313 Před 14 dny +81

    What the UK would look like if it was an actual democracy.

    • @Robert-cu9bm
      @Robert-cu9bm Před 14 dny +4

      It is

    • @CeruleanSword
      @CeruleanSword Před 14 dny +10

      @@Robert-cu9bm
      It’s hilarious that you believe that.

    • @Cherrytune386
      @Cherrytune386 Před 14 dny

      When it suits you!

    • @jameswright4236
      @jameswright4236 Před 14 dny +4

      The entire concept of democracy has been poisoned and twisted over the past 150 years.
      The Greeks at least put people in governmental positions having had no prior experience or particular interest in the field, so you did it as a service to your community and not for any career gain or self-interest.

    • @GavinGas
      @GavinGas Před 13 dny +1

      ​@@Robert-cu9bm it's really not

  • @MrSimonLiu
    @MrSimonLiu Před 14 dny +9

    Why wasn't Scotland mentioned, but Northern Ireland was? As well as other countries. It has been using PR since devolution.

  • @dondoodat
    @dondoodat Před 14 dny +518

    If we had PR instead of FPTP people wouldn't necessarily have voted the way they did.
    So directly transposing the results of a FPTP system nto a PR result doesn't give an accurate picture of how a PR result would have turned out.
    But I do understand the point being made.

    • @epistulaexmortuus
      @epistulaexmortuus Před 14 dny +24

      Exactly
      You would have alot less of the ooh look at the evil other party type campaign too

    • @aquaticpears3183
      @aquaticpears3183 Před 14 dny +42

      That point is covered at the end of the video

    • @titteryenot4524
      @titteryenot4524 Před 14 dny

      Huh? That makes no sense. It’s mental isn’t it? We (allegedly) live in a democracy, but we don’t _really_ live in a democracy. For example, how do the Lib Dems get 71 seats with 12.2% but Reform only get 4 seats with 14.3%? That’s not democracy. You can try and spin this any way you want but if 14.3% gains 4 seats and 12.2% gains 71 seats, how can you call that ‘democracy’? 🤔

    • @dondoodat
      @dondoodat Před 14 dny +24

      @@aquaticpears3183
      My point is that EVERYTHING would be different, from rhetoric to tactical voting, let alone that people would be working towards coalitions instead of single party majorities.
      So like I said, I get the point of the video but the actual result shown would bear no resemblance to any PR election.

    • @titteryenot4524
      @titteryenot4524 Před 14 dny +9

      @@dondoodat ⁠But we had the ‘actual result’. 2% more people voted for Reform more than they did the Lib Dem’s, yet they have 18x fewer seats?! What ‘democracy’ are you upholding here? 🤔

  • @ohheyitskevinc
    @ohheyitskevinc Před 14 dny +37

    PR would be better, but using numbers from yesterday to prove any point on PR is pointless. Voters knew PR wasn’t a thing yesterday, so many vote tactically. For example - you live in a constituency where you want to vote Labour but you know Labour won’t win. You want the Tories out and Lib Dems are the next best option, so you vote Lib Dem. With PR, that same person would have voted Labour and not bothered thinking about it.

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 14 dny +2

      True, of course, but it's likely that that has skewed the Labour vote higher, making the disproportionate result even worse.
      Labour weren't out there campaigning for... Whatever their policies are... They campaigned as "the credible alternative to tory chaos".
      Most people voting Plaid or SNP did so because they believe in greater devolution/independence. People voting Green generally did so because they are concerned with pollution and the climate.
      Meanwhile, a poll on why people planned to vote Labour had only one or two results of "I like Starmer" or "I agree with their policies" versus an avalanche of "get the Tories out", "I hate Sunak" and "We need change". I genuinely think that actual support for Labour may be as low as the support for the Tories, it's just that there's a massive undecided group that picked the best alternative to Tory rule in a broken electoral system (and not all Left-wing and Central people, there's bound to be people who were deciding between Labour and Reform because they align roughly with the Tories politically, but are tired of the incompetence and corruption the current batch have shown and want to punish them).
      Sure, left wing people (who wouldn't vote Reform or Tories in a million years) who had also rejected Labour due to their shift Right, their abandoning of Corbyn or their stance on Gaza may have voted tactically between Lib Dems, Greens and SNP/Plaid, but considering all those parties support electoral reform, which one the person truly supports is a bit of a mute point.

    • @rogercantwell3622
      @rogercantwell3622 Před 13 dny +1

      Thst's rxactly what happened in the rural contituencies of the SW. People knew the LibDems couldn't form a govt but used them to winkle out the Tories.

    • @mattc3581
      @mattc3581 Před 12 dny +1

      @@kieranharwood7186 The point is though, whichever way it impacts it, people were voting using the system in place, you can't take those votes and assume they would have been the same if people had been voting under a PR system. Any article saying what the house would have looked like under a different system is fishing for views rather than being a serious review.
      This is the same inane conclusion that has so many in the US quoting, who won the 'popular' vote, as if there was a popular vote at any point.

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 12 dny

      @@mattc3581 But the other point is that tactical voting will nearly always favour the bigger parties. No-one "tactically" votes for the person in fifth. Tactical voting is either for first place to fight off second (who you hate) or voting for second to try and topple the incumbent (who you hate).
      Thus, the reality of PR would be that it would favour the smaller parties even more than the results show.
      There will be loads of people who would vote Green if they thought that it would have an effect.
      There will be loads of people that voted Labour simply to ensure that the Tories lost.
      There will be people that voted Tory/Reform simply to try and reduce the chance of Labour getting a super majority.
      And all this makes Labour's "landslide" even worse, they already lost half a million votes compared to the "disastrous" result in 2019, and the polls suggest that the vast majority of Labour's voters were simply voting "not tory" this time, whereas 2019 showed a their vote base was much more inspired by the Labour position.

    • @mattc3581
      @mattc3581 Před 12 dny +1

      @@kieranharwood7186 Tactical voting works by constituency though doesn't it, in an area where Lib Dem is the best challenger to Tory then Labour voters will vote Lib Dem. So tactical voting may be for only the two leading parties, but it is the two leaders in each seat which varies.
      Overall I'm not saying that labour may not have benefitted the most though, I was just saying that you can't assume what the results would have been under PR given we know there will have been tactical voting.

  • @insuretec
    @insuretec Před 14 dny +36

    First past the post in not any form of Democracy. It makes a mockery of it.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +4

      In that case no electoral system is any form of Democracy. NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @V01DIORE
      @V01DIORE Před 12 dny +2

      It is literally a form of democracy it just adds extra measures against extremist parties.

    • @OnafetsEnovap
      @OnafetsEnovap Před 10 dny

      Little more than a 2-horse race... and there are more than 2 horses in this stable.

  • @jordanbeagle5779
    @jordanbeagle5779 Před 13 dny +5

    What people don’t take into account is that the parties would fight the election very differently under a proportional representation system, therefore it’s not really fair to compare what the result would have looked like.

    • @brunoparga
      @brunoparga Před 6 dny

      I hear you, but it is a decent approximation. The general gist is that there's no way Labour would have won 63.8% of the vote - many people don't love them, they just hate the Tories.

  • @maartenaalsmeer
    @maartenaalsmeer Před 14 dny +178

    So FPTP helps stable governing? You could have fooled me, UK.

    • @RJALEXANDER777
      @RJALEXANDER777 Před 14 dny

      Closer to schizophrenic governing really.

    • @drkstrong
      @drkstrong Před 14 dny

      PR - All I have to say is Italy!

    • @larslundandersen7722
      @larslundandersen7722 Před 14 dny +8

      @@drkstrong Well the instability of Italian governments from 1945 onwards has a lot to do with Italian Political culture. Just like the instability of Weimar Germany had a lot to do with German political Culture between the wars. It's not down to any inherent instability in PR. The instability of Italian politics between 1945 and 1990 also had a lot to do with the hoops being jumped through to keep the Italian Communists from power at all cost. The Christian Democrat governments after elections where the Communists performed well were particularly unstable

    • @tragictragedy6212
      @tragictragedy6212 Před 13 dny +9

      FPTP does tend to produce more stable governments. That is, as long as the party in government is stable. That's its major advantage and we don't have to deny that it does exist to say that FPTP still sucks.
      That being said, I don't think pure PR has no drawbacks either. Aside from inherent instability (which can only be amended through "rationalised parliamentarianism" or political culture), PR systems empower parties to impose their own candidates on the electorate without restriction - this encourages favoritism and purges within parties, MP party switching and so on. There's a reason why Italian electoral systems always have "blocked lists" where the elector cannot express a preference, so that the party always decides which of their members they send to which house. Another drawback is the increased distance between the national and local level. Local issues are not brought up in PR systems unless they are of national significance or significant to a party. You cannot "call your MP" because you don't have one.
      The point is not that I oppose PR (it's better than FPTP) but that the type of PR implemented matters. Pure, national level or large constituency PR has significant drawbacks. What I personally see as a good fit for the UK is STV (Single Transferable Vote) with constituencies that elect 5 MPs. Without getting into detail, this is a form of PR that allows for a more detailed choice and keeps the constituency aspect that's been historically associated with the house of commons. It's already in use in Ireland and Australia and, for my money's worth, a better alternative to FPTP than national level PR.

    • @blueangel2466
      @blueangel2466 Před 13 dny +2

      Strange comment following two elections where a clear majority was given to the winning party. You are confusing "stable" with "what I want"

  • @KrzysztofSzkodaGames
    @KrzysztofSzkodaGames Před 14 dny +58

    Every vote counts, so let's bring proportional representation since UK and Belarus are the only countries in Europe that don't use it

    • @uOkae
      @uOkae Před 14 dny +1

      France also doesn't use it, however some of the French opposition parties are advocating for PR.

    • @KrzysztofSzkodaGames
      @KrzysztofSzkodaGames Před 14 dny +5

      @@uOkae France does use it as it's part of the EU Parliament to use PR

    • @verandisoldusty6834
      @verandisoldusty6834 Před 14 dny +11

      @@KrzysztofSzkodaGames Correction: The EU Parliament uses PR but France does not use PR for ITS NATIONAL elections. There's a world of difference between the two.

    • @jameswright4236
      @jameswright4236 Před 14 dny

      Only difference is that Belarus hardly has fair and free elections.
      Though saying that it wouldn't surprise me if someone came knocking late at night to make sure you vote a certain way, given the way things are going.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +3

      NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

  • @ray.shoesmith
    @ray.shoesmith Před 14 dny +6

    lol, Tories winning with the same system for 14 years: *crickets
    Labour wins: 🤯

    • @pliat
      @pliat Před 13 dny

      It was a problem when the tories were winning and it’s a problem now.

  • @barry63196
    @barry63196 Před 9 dny +1

    "Don't have to go into coalition with smaller parties"
    And that's the problem. More than half of the UK will be unrepresented at a time

  • @downix
    @downix Před 14 dny +35

    A solution to this would be Single Transferable Voting. Get the direct representation of a FPTP while still having an elected official you share values with like proportional representation.

    • @frightday13dragon94
      @frightday13dragon94 Před 14 dny +11

      Plus have the Lords as a delocalised PR for better scrutiny.

    • @AmandaSamuels
      @AmandaSamuels Před 14 dny +6

      @@frightday13dragon94That’s the combination we have in Australia and it works.

    • @philwhitelaw3111
      @philwhitelaw3111 Před 13 dny +4

      I doubt most people would understand how to apply the STV, they barely comprehend putting a cross in a box as it is.

    • @AmandaSamuels
      @AmandaSamuels Před 13 dny +3

      @@philwhitelaw3111 Australians manage to vote in our more complex system. There’s effort put into educating people how to vote. If Australians can do it, why don’t you think that Britons can as well?

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Před 13 dny +1

      ​@@philwhitelaw3111voting under STV is still easy to understand, you number candidates in order of preference. Yes this means you need to look into the candidates more to be able to rank them more carefully, but you don't need to look at polling to try to guess how others will vote to vote tactically. I would much rather focus my election research on the candidates instead of other people's opinions.

  • @Jay-vm7xr
    @Jay-vm7xr Před 14 dny +108

    We definitely need change to PR asap.

    • @greyvoice7949
      @greyvoice7949 Před 14 dny +1

      Direct democracy , PR is flawed too... Any system with representatives is flawed and very open to corruption!

    • @henryburton6529
      @henryburton6529 Před 14 dny +5

      Definitely not. Our current system protects against extremism.
      Given the recent results here and abroad I’d say that’s a good thing

    • @jebbo-c1l
      @jebbo-c1l Před 14 dny +12

      ​@@henryburton6529 have you seen the extremist conservative governments we've had in the last 14 years?

    • @kiwi235kiwi
      @kiwi235kiwi Před 14 dny +13

      ​@@henryburton6529how does it protect against extremism? If you look at countries like New Zealand, are you saying it has extremism in politics due to proportional voting?

    • @jakewynn
      @jakewynn Před 14 dny

      @@jebbo-c1l better than reform (brexit party)

  • @andycarr4354
    @andycarr4354 Před 14 dny +8

    Getting PR through parliament would be like asking turkeys to vote for Christmas 🎄

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před 13 dny

      Labour already tried - we had a referendum about it in 2011. It was the people who said "no" in the end.

    • @yorkshirebrit6317
      @yorkshirebrit6317 Před 12 dny

      @@RCassinellowhy do people peddle this myth, the referendum was on the complicated Alternative Vote system not PR

    • @AnthonyFlack
      @AnthonyFlack Před 10 dny

      @@markaxworthy2508 - we already heard you the first five times you cut and pasted this response.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 10 dny

      @@AnthonyFlack 1) If something is worth saying once, it is worth repeating. Why recompose and paraphrase the same thing if you don't have to?
      2) I am not advocating any electoral system. My point is that every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.
      3) As an example, NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In all bar one not a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Is that not true? If not, why not?

  • @keithsewell8389
    @keithsewell8389 Před 8 dny +1

    "First Past the Post" is an excellent way of racing horses, but an abysmal way of voting for representative legislatures.

  • @FullaEels
    @FullaEels Před 14 dny +70

    We enjoy PR for the Holyrood elections up here in scotland. would be nice to have it UK wide

    • @jackdubz4247
      @jackdubz4247 Před 14 dny +2

      Even that system is flawed. The List MSP part allows numpties to cling on to power without any democratic accountability - people like the Tories' Douglas Ross and "Scottish" Labour's Anas Sarwar.

    • @arod9998
      @arod9998 Před 14 dny +1

      @@jackdubz4247and Nicola Sturgeon was a list MSP between 1999-2007!!!

    • @blueangel2466
      @blueangel2466 Před 13 dny

      Is that the system where a minority of Green MPs have been holding the SNP to ransom, forcing them to adopt policies no one voted for? Yeah, working great for ya

    • @derekbrown3165
      @derekbrown3165 Před 13 dny

      PR in Scotland is horrific. thats why we get loonies like the Greens running the show. How is that democratic?

    • @carelgoodheir692
      @carelgoodheir692 Před 11 dny +1

      @@jackdubz4247 On the contrary. I vote in Scotland and knew exactly who was on the list for each party in my region (The Highlands). I used the flexibility in the system too, more than once I gave my constituency vote to one party and my list vote to another. I dislike some of the people who got elected, whether by the list of by their constituency - but I'm not going around pretending they weren't really elected because they got to Holyrood via the list.

  • @lewisfitzsimmons1271
    @lewisfitzsimmons1271 Před 14 dny +52

    Having the title “what the result would be with RP” and a thumbnail showing a larger vote share for Reform vs only covering how results would not be like this, and that people would approach voting to begin with, just at the end is misleading.

    • @jurassiccraft883
      @jurassiccraft883 Před 14 dny +14

      "welcome to the internet, have a look around"

    • @temtem9255
      @temtem9255 Před 13 dny +2

      It's to scare you. 'Ooh if you get proper representation reform will do well, you don't like reform right? Better support fptp!'

    • @samueldorrington8990
      @samueldorrington8990 Před 13 dny +4

      It wouldn't be hard to find out. With all the polls being done. Instead of asking "how do you intend to vote at the next general election" ask "if you could directly pick who was in government, who would you choose"
      These would give two wildly different answers.

    • @lewisfitzsimmons1271
      @lewisfitzsimmons1271 Před 13 dny

      @@temtem9255 I thought that, but given the tone of the video, I actually thinks it’s just poorly thought out not necessarily malicious.

  • @elisabethpattison1568
    @elisabethpattison1568 Před 14 dny +5

    Labour would have even fewer seats, since all the people voting to keep the tories out would have been able to vote with their principles

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @quietcell
      @quietcell Před 13 dny

      Might encourage labour to up their game. Or some new parties...

    • @user-ge5ce2rr6p
      @user-ge5ce2rr6p Před 13 dny

      @@markaxworthy2508
      The world doesn't revolve around anyone therefor it would be foolish to think that a voter should get all what they want.
      In NZ, in 2011, they had a referendum whether to switch back to FPTP which there was a 50%+ voter turn out which the majority of the voters voted NO, they want PR to stay.
      They are happy with PR compare to the years of FPTP.
      Also, in 2020, the New Zealand Labour party got a majority with MMP, yet the voters still didn't get what they want.
      I think you should remember that politicians lie a lot and breaks promises with PR or without PR
      (Also, you definitely know this, you are just cherry picking information to make PR look bad)

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      @@user-ge5ce2rr6p You write, "it would be foolish to think that a voter should get all what they want". Exactly my point in writing, "Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system." It also explains why everybody adopts different versions of PR. There is NO right answer.
      In the UK we also had a referendum on the subject. FPTP won overwhelmingly.
      You say, "in 2020, the New Zealand Labour party got a majority with MMP, yet the voters still didn't get what they want." Perhaps not, but they certainly, for once, got the government at least one of them VOTED FOR. In the other eight MMP ensured not a single voter did. They horse-trading coalition governments nobody had voted for.
      You say, "I think you should remember that politicians lie a lot and breaks promises with PR or without PR." Different issue and down to political culture, not the electoral system.
      I would suggest that for you to highlight just one election in nine is the "cherry picking". 2020 was an exception that proves the rule.
      FPTP is a compromise with pure democracy, but so is every other system.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      You write, "it would be foolish to think that a voter should get all what they want". Exactly my point in writing, "Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system." It also explains why everybody adopts different versions of PR. There is NO right answer.
      In the UK we also had a referendum on the subject. FPTP won overwhelmingly.
      You say, "in 2020, the New Zealand Labour party got a majority with MMP, yet the voters still didn't get what they want." Perhaps not, but they certainly, for once, got the government at least one of them VOTED FOR. In the other eight MMP ensured not a single voter did. They horse-trading coalition governments nobody had voted for.
      You say, "I think you should remember that politicians lie a lot and breaks promises with PR or without PR." Different issue and down to political culture, not the electoral system.
      I would suggest that for you to highlight just one election in nine is the "cherry picking". 2020 was an exception that proves the rule.
      FPTP is a compromise with pure democracy, but so is every other system.

  • @joanneburford6364
    @joanneburford6364 Před 14 dny +8

    How can you have a true representation when voting isn't mandated in the UK - 44% of the voting public didn't bother. Look at other models and look at mandatory voting it works here 🇦🇺

    • @roberthudson3386
      @roberthudson3386 Před 14 dny +6

      I can't think of anything worse than being forced to vote for one of a list of candidates that are all terrible.

    • @markbirtchnell2249
      @markbirtchnell2249 Před 14 dny

      Turnout is partly a result of the system. Millions don't vote because they live in 'safe' seats. With PR or another system, they can see their vote counts.

    • @Zen-rd9np
      @Zen-rd9np Před 14 dny +2

      @@roberthudson3386spoil your ballot then, good? Awesome!

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 14 dny +4

      There is value to being able to differentiate between people who don't bother voting and people who vote by spoiling their ballot.
      That forty odd percent of people staying home are a mix of people that don't care, people that are lazy, people that realise they are not informed enough to make the decision and people that would happily vote if the choice wasn't pointless/terrible. It's impossible to tell how that is split.
      When someone spoils their ballot in a non-mandatory vote, it's not because they are lazy, if they were lazy they wouldn't bother at all. It PROVES that they have at least some passion, but that none of the candidates have made them care specifically about them.
      Spoiling the ballot is saying "I came out here of my own volition, if you were less useless you could have got my vote, but you all suck, so you can't have it".
      You can't get that with mandatory voting.

    • @Zen-rd9np
      @Zen-rd9np Před 14 dny

      @@kieranharwood7186
      The person in question could write their reason for spoiling on the ballot.
      Those who are disinterested can just leave it blank.
      What is the advantage of knowing what category non-voters are in?

  • @italifacts1461
    @italifacts1461 Před 14 dny +55

    _Personally, I like the idea of Single Transferable Vote._

    • @gnoelalexmay
      @gnoelalexmay Před 14 dny

      Soz to mess with your comment, but how do you put italics in your post?
      I can only do the *bold* thing 🤷‍♂️

    • @Charlizzie
      @Charlizzie Před 14 dny

      Australian government is unstable because of the STV.

    • @sawtoothspike
      @sawtoothspike Před 14 dny

      This is what i would love to see. Then my vote always counts

    • @DynoKea
      @DynoKea Před 13 dny +4

      @@gnoelalexmay _Italics_ is _ either side

    • @Flame1500
      @Flame1500 Před 13 dny

      Problem with STV is it favours centrist parties because right wingers and left wingers will put the centrists on their 2nd & 3rd place votes. So anything on the fringe basically has no chance of winning even if it had high support of 1st place votes.

  • @BoredomIncarnate1
    @BoredomIncarnate1 Před 14 dny +27

    Strangely, the most representative government we've had under FPTP was the 2010 coalition, where they had 59% of the vote and 56% of the seats between them.
    Nearly every other election in the past 40 years has been Labour or the Tories holding a majority of seats with only 30-45% of the vote.
    FPTP is a total joke.

  • @jameshutton3960
    @jameshutton3960 Před 14 dny +4

    14 years the tories had no issue with FPTP but suddenly labour win and it's an issue....

    • @SoSimonSays
      @SoSimonSays Před 12 dny

      the tories dont have an issue with it, in fact most parties dont as they know its a corrupt way of getting themselves into power.

  • @markovermeer1394
    @markovermeer1394 Před 11 dny +2

    More important than share mismatch, is that many people are not able to express where they believe in in the first place: they feel left-out because their voice is never heard.

  • @plasmacannon1198
    @plasmacannon1198 Před 14 dny +52

    Absolutely fucked system. At least use the French dual rounds system or the Australian preferential voting system

    • @joanneburford6364
      @joanneburford6364 Před 14 dny +10

      Thank you finally someone mentioning the Australian voting system 🤦‍♀️

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +5

      The French system just tells some electors that they got it wrong first time and obliges them to either drop out of the electoral process by abstaining, or vote for someone they don't really want.

    • @jayggg
      @jayggg Před 13 dny +1

      French system is not the answer. UK rightly rejected the offer to move to AV. It's a ridiculous system. One vote and divi up the seats based on the outome. That works for me. I struggle to make my mark for one party let alone be asked to choose the next least shite alternative.

    • @plasmacannon1198
      @plasmacannon1198 Před 13 dny +1

      @@jayggg 100% disagree. I do however support proportional representation, but, if you want a local MP, which I can understand, then the frech system is still way better than the current system. You still know whether you would rather have a green MP or a reform MP. You would make that choice easy

    • @jayggg
      @jayggg Před 13 dny

      @@plasmacannon1198 So let's imagine you are for Macron. Your scheming politicians do a deal so that your candidate steps down to prevent another party winning. Who do you expect that person should vote for in round 2? Ridiculous system. I'd stay home if I were that person because now, instead of voting for a party you want, you are voting againt someone you don't want and will have no representation. (for clarity I am far from being a supporter of Macron).

  • @Gillemear
    @Gillemear Před 14 dny +11

    We use PR in Ireland and are very happy with it. If you don't get option 1, then you are more likely to get optio 2 or 3 so most people are satisfied as they get at least someone representing them in some way. Here the vote is also transferable so every vote is counted and every vote counts. Also, coalitions are essentially a negotiation and so you don't get the vile factionalism you get in the UK and US. I disagree with the American gentleman's opinion that you get an overproliferation of smaller parties, it does happen from time to time but as the larger parties will only enter into coalition with certain partners, these smaller parties get whittled down to only ones that are acceptable to the electorate and can work well with more established stable parties. All it all its a good system, much fairer, much more representative and much more satisfying for the electorate.

    • @allthenewsordeath5772
      @allthenewsordeath5772 Před 14 dny +2

      You say that, but having virtually no differences between the major political parties is just as detrimental to a democracy as factionalism, if I recall the two main political parties in Ireland have been described as two cheeks of the same ars.
      The trouble with the government in Dublin is that they only seem to serve the upper class progressives of Dublin.

    • @andrasfogarasi5014
      @andrasfogarasi5014 Před 14 dny +1

      What you're describing is not PR in general. It is STV. There are other ways to accomplish PR, though the only ones besides STV that are in use are list-PR and MMPR. Among countries using PR, STV is actually quite uncommon. Though in my opinion it is a better system than list-PR and MMPR.
      Do not mix these up. STV isn't the only way to accomplish PR, and by implying that it is, you may confuse people.

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear Před 14 dny +1

      @@allthenewsordeath5772 Well, shows how little you know about how Irish politics work.

    • @Gillemear
      @Gillemear Před 14 dny

      @@andrasfogarasi5014 Granted

    • @rubbishrabble
      @rubbishrabble Před 14 dny

      The Irish want a 100% Northern Ireland referendum when only half want to join. How does that make any sense? Especially with as you say factionalism? Just let the left leave.

  • @Ballacha
    @Ballacha Před 13 dny +7

    the thing with ranked choice is, most of the time, you are putting your favourite candidate first, then you are just treating the rest of the candidates as an excercise of "who do i hate the least". a compromise between proportional representation (ranked choice) and stable government (first past the post) would be using a ranked choice system that only allows you to rank your top 2 or top 3 candidates.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Před 13 dny +1

      Don't agree. It's more common to hate a small number of parties and like several to different extents.
      If by stable government you mean one party has a majority so you don't need coalitions, that is exactly the thing we are trying to avoid! Unless one party actually has the support of a majority of people then they shouldn't get a majority of seats.
      PR and ranked choice are different things. Under a pure PR system you only vote for 1 party and then they get the number of seats according to their % of votes. STV is ranked choice proportional. In that system you group existing constituencies into groups of about 5 then you vote for your candidates in order of preference. This way only parties that get over 20% in that area get a seat. This keeps out extreme fringe parties but lets moderate minor parties get seats where they have local support. That's a good compromise between full PR and FPTP.

    • @Ballacha
      @Ballacha Před 13 dny

      @@adrianthoroughgood1191 ranked choice is already proportional enough to cause the problem of “too many parties”. That’s why I think only being able to rank top 2/3 would be a good compromise. Pure PR would make the issue even more nighmareish. Best case scenario, the candidate/party you support compromised their political stance you voted for just so that they can be in a coalition to govern. Worst case scenario, constant infighting within the coalition of many parties and no legislation gets passed.
      Also, mandatory voting. Without it, only those who feel strongly about their political opinions come out to vote. That’s how you get parties to produce candidates on the extreme spectrum of either left or right. Requiring the silent moderates to come out and vote is the best medicine for divisiveness in the society.

    • @adrianthoroughgood1191
      @adrianthoroughgood1191 Před 13 dny

      @@Ballacha Are you saying you think candidates are too extreme now? Most people complain that there isn't enough difference between Con and Lab and that they are all the same!

    • @Ballacha
      @Ballacha Před 13 dny

      @@adrianthoroughgood1191 14% of the votes went to nigel farage and his goons. 14%. if the uk had a slightly more proportional system, they would have won big. if this goes on, more and more people are going to be too disillusioned to vote. and britain is going to be as divided as america in no time at all.

    • @thegregorycolin2335
      @thegregorycolin2335 Před 12 dny

      You're not required to ranked all the candidates though, at least not anywhere in the UK that uses STV. If you hate all the parties bar one then only use you're first preference and then stop

  • @DatDirtyDog
    @DatDirtyDog Před 13 dny +11

    We had a referendum on an alterative vote in 2011 and no won by almost 68%
    I'd rather see a system like Australia where it is a legal requirement to vote. You can still spoil your ballot if you want in protest but turnout should be in the 80-90% to get true democracy otherwise you only see the will of 40% of the people.

    • @samb3783
      @samb3783 Před 11 dny +1

      You just have to turn up, you're not forced to vote.

    • @pollyparrot8759
      @pollyparrot8759 Před 11 dny +2

      We were only offered one, very convoluted and still unfair system ... so we voted no because it was a bad system. There are some very good PR systems but we weren't offered them as an alternative because they didn't want us to vote yes and oust their cushy jobs for the boys FPTP. Try it again with a democratic option and I think you'll get a very different result, especially after the latest fiasco.

    • @AnthonyFlack
      @AnthonyFlack Před 10 dny

      You were offered one choice, and the PM blatantly lied to the public about how it would work. And if somebody doesn't follow politics they shouldn't be made to vote. People vote in ignorance too much as it is.

    • @WH40KHero
      @WH40KHero Před 8 dny

      Indecision is a decision in its own.
      If you can not get up in the morning, go to your vote and cast your ballot a few times a year every other year then you do not deserve to have a say in it.
      And no right to complain afterwards.

    • @brunoparga
      @brunoparga Před 6 dny

      Or you could try to be like Sweden, which does things so right that they have 84% turnout *without* mandatory voting.

  • @ant7936
    @ant7936 Před 14 dny +35

    Coalition requires cooperation with other parties to make a solution.
    The people benefit.
    And people are "giving it a go", as you put it - in Scotland.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @ant7936
      @ant7936 Před 13 dny

      @markaxworthy2508
      Should we expect to get only and exactly what we want?
      Isn't government about doing the best possible for everyone?
      When a gov has absolutely no Opposition, it can impose its will regardless of half the populations' wishes.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      @@ant7936 You ask, "Should we expect to get only and exactly what we want?" In an ideal world, yes. On a more practical level it would be nice if at least somebody gets what they want. FPTP, for all its other faults, generally ensures that this happens.

    • @derekbrown3165
      @derekbrown3165 Před 13 dny

      But its not working in Scotland. The Greens get no votes but end up as part of the government. How is that democratic.?

    • @Stjorn
      @Stjorn Před 13 dny

      ​@markaxworthy2508 Under a PR system, people vote based on who represents them best ideologically. Like-minded people vote for like-minded parties. Like-minded parties work and form coalitions with like-minded parties.

  • @pichofiraviyah8492
    @pichofiraviyah8492 Před 14 dny +14

    channel 4 comments are wild

  • @geoffreylee5199
    @geoffreylee5199 Před 6 dny +1

    FPTP allows for about 35% of electors to have a majority government. Time for FPTP to be retired.

  • @Nyghl0
    @Nyghl0 Před 11 dny +1

    Imagine being represented. You know, proportionally...
    "But that doesn’t look very likely any time soon".

  • @JakubS
    @JakubS Před 14 dny +27

    Multi-party coalitions are good though because they make it more likely for laws to be passed that are popular with the public

    • @armelfrancois7009
      @armelfrancois7009 Před 13 dny

      isn't it more a tradeoff between laws that keep one part of the public very happy vs. laws that make most of the public, just a bit happy

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @shrouddreamer
      @shrouddreamer Před 13 dny +2

      ​@@markaxworthy2508 You know that the point of "Replies" is to interact with the comment, not to copy-paste the same argument everywhere?

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny

      @@shrouddreamer If something is worth saying once, it is worth saying multiple times, don't you think? It doesn't get more or less true with repetition. Have you anything on subject to offer?

    • @AnthonyFlack
      @AnthonyFlack Před 10 dny

      ​@@markaxworthy2508 - we've already read it three times by now. Once was enough to get the point, and I don't think it's worth repeating. Voters not getting exactly what they ask for isn't necessarily a flaw - we have representative democracies for good reason.

  • @SongokuJidai
    @SongokuJidai Před 14 dny +18

    People don't just vote nationally, the person you elect is your local representative. You're not just picking the tram, but the player you want to deal with your local issues. Proportional representation doesn't solve that problem, as fairer a system it is.

    • @JMac7991
      @JMac7991 Před 14 dny +3

      You can manage both depending on the system used. Scotland and other areas use a version of Mixed Member Proportionate(al?). One vote goes to your representitive, the other vote to the party. The party vote corresponds roughly to a share of the seats and the representative votes elects your MP. The difference between directly elected MPs and the seat share is made up with list MPs made by the party. Downside is these currently aren't very transparent or manipulatable by the public, but probably could be for those interested. See Australia above the line or below the line type voting. I hope this makes sense. I'm writing this at 2.05am...

    • @Matt-ou7tu
      @Matt-ou7tu Před 14 dny +14

      Lol most people voting for a political party aren't doing so because of the local candidate lol. That's the claim but it's not true. Most people who voted Thursday did so on a "get the Tories out" ticket, and probably knew very little about who their local candidate even was. A lot of candidates are brought in to areas that they have absolutely no affiliation with.

    • @f-86zoomer37
      @f-86zoomer37 Před 14 dny +3

      Well that’s why most countries actually use both. In Germany, they have two ballots, one for the constituency which is FTFP, and one that is directly proportional, with a vote threshold of 5%.

    • @jameswright4236
      @jameswright4236 Před 14 dny +1

      Except that tram is essentially powerless without the support of the governing party.
      Why do you think most northern towns and cities have been left to rot over the past 20 years? Because they don't fit the narrative within Westminster.
      If the Tories could, they would have demolished the likes of Middlesbrough and Sunderland and expanded London or Milton Keynes instead.

    • @notorio526
      @notorio526 Před 13 dny +5

      That's just marketing spiel. MPs govern by party whip, the constituency is irrelevant in Parliament. And forms of PR can still give you local MPs, or you can give the council more powers. There is zero excuse for FPTP.

  • @tombloomfield4784
    @tombloomfield4784 Před 10 dny +7

    Yes, but if we had PR then people would have voted differently.

  • @TheKraken5360
    @TheKraken5360 Před 14 dny +3

    Thresholds are one way to address the over proliferation of parties. A number of countries seem relatively satisfied with a 5% threshold.

  • @asheastral
    @asheastral Před 14 dny +4

    The coverage of proportional representation in the wake of the Labour Landslide victory by campaigners and by news has been shocking when in years prior, they've been pretty adamant on the other side. Remember David Cameron and his statement that Proportional Representation or the Alternate Vote was "Crazy and undemocratic"? The opinion on this topic will continue to flip back and forth until everyone is unhappy.

    • @RCassinello
      @RCassinello Před 13 dny +1

      Yep, and people have forgotten that the 2011 referendum only happened at all because Labour pushed it through in February 2010, shortly before losing the May election.

  • @johntaylor5968
    @johntaylor5968 Před 7 dny +1

    This says it all. Proportional Representation is the only democratic vote. So Nigel, get it through, you can do it.

  • @phillwainewright4221
    @phillwainewright4221 Před 10 dny +1

    In the constituency I live in, the winner got in by just 18 votes.
    We *need* PR in the UK.
    The last vote we had was for or against AV, which doesn't work, so we rejected it.
    We need a vote for or against PR, which *does* work.

  • @gregoryfenn1462
    @gregoryfenn1462 Před 14 dny +15

    Single Transferable Vote is better than pure PR as you have local MPs and direct individual accountability.

    • @Robert-cu9bm
      @Robert-cu9bm Před 14 dny +1

      Preferential is better.
      If your first choice doesn't get in your second might and so on

    • @davidty2006
      @davidty2006 Před 14 dny +1

      @@Robert-cu9bm though thats just the current system but slight improovment.

    • @angelakadeer1565
      @angelakadeer1565 Před 13 dny

      @@Robert-cu9bm I could not have put any party as a second vote so prefer pr system

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +1

      STV tells some of the electorate that they got it wrong and gives them a choice of either dropping out of the electoral process altogether or voting for someone they don't really want. NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @Robert-cu9bm
      @Robert-cu9bm Před 13 dny

      @@angelakadeer1565
      Then you don't put one down.
      That's the brilliance of it, you can pick just the one or your second, third..etc choice.

  • @bzuidgeest
    @bzuidgeest Před 14 dny +12

    Splintering is easily avoided in PR with a small vote threshold.

    • @gregoryfenn1462
      @gregoryfenn1462 Před 14 dny +1

      How small?

    • @bzuidgeest
      @bzuidgeest Před 14 dny +2

      @@gregoryfenn1462 good question. It's something that always gets a lot of discussion. Technically it takes away a little from the true democracy of pr. PR is perfect democracy, but humans are not perfect. My usual guess is that a few percent vote threshold should be enough. If you need a solid number... About 5% possibly less, but it depends on the population and the number of seats in government to be divided. My number is for 16000000 people and 150 seats. I'm not from the UK. For you
      Take your voting population and divide by the number of seats. You will get the number of votes needed for a seat in PR.
      Then calculate one percent of your population. Think of what you think is the smallest amount of seats for a party you find acceptable. For example no parties with less than two seats. Use the numbers you just got to calculate the vote share for that number of seats and you got a voting threshold.

    • @bananenmusli2769
      @bananenmusli2769 Před 13 dny +2

      @@gregoryfenn1462 in Germany it's 5%

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +1

      PR ensures splintering into multiple parties. NZ has had 9 elections since PR was introduced. In not one has a single voter got what they voted for because of post-election coalition horse trading. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @bzuidgeest
      @bzuidgeest Před 13 dny

      @@markaxworthy2508 no voter should get what they voted for unless their party has more then 50% of the vote share and can govern alone. If you don't represent a majority on your own, you shouldn't be able to force things thru on your own. It's a democracy not a dictatorship of the minority.
      If the citizens have different opinions on how things should be solved then those opinions should be taken into account. Yes nobody gets exactly what they want, but everybody gets something of what they want.
      If that makes things a little less stable in times where opinion is divided, so be it. Their government should represent the people, if the people are divided then so should the government be. They should work and work until a solution for the division is found.
      No system is perfect, but some systems are far more flawed than others. Fptp is severely more flawed than pr.

  • @mooxim
    @mooxim Před 14 dny +1

    I'm used to CZcams videos made by CZcamsrs who will set up a premise or promise in the title then you have to sit through about 80% of the vid to get to the meat. This video showed us what UK election result if we had proportional representation would look like in the first 6 seconds. Thank you Channel 4. ❤❤

  • @edmundprice5276
    @edmundprice5276 Před 14 dny +4

    We could have a ranked demerit vote system, the party with the least demerits wins.

  • @mLyonJE
    @mLyonJE Před 11 dny +3

    Remember, the votes cast would be DIFFERENT if people knew it was a PR system. It makes almost no sense to translate current voting patterns into being counted in a PR-like way.
    The arguments for PR are many. The fact that Britain and USA have the systems we do, is just an utter embarrassment.

    • @TheFinaDragonZ
      @TheFinaDragonZ Před 8 dny +1

      They do cover that towards the end of the video to be fair.

    • @brunoparga
      @brunoparga Před 6 dny

      That is a fair argument, but one important point is that there is no way 63.8% of the people would vote for Labour if they had PR. I believe virtually all Green and Reform voters under FPTP would still vote for those parties, and many Lib Dem voters as well (except those who would prefer Labour but voted Lib Dem tactically).
      You can't directly translate the FPTP vote into PR, but it's not like the PR results would be completely disconnected from the vote that actually happened either. It's just more nuanced.

  • @GoogleSnakeee
    @GoogleSnakeee Před 13 dny +1

    reform voters get mad that they lost and start complaining about the system

  • @peteface24
    @peteface24 Před 13 dny +2

    I moved to Denmark after Brexit. For the last year we've had the equivalent of a Labour-Tory coalition government. It's a Social Democrat prime minister only because they have roughly 1 more seat! Pretty wild. But it works, and as the guy in the video says, people are satisfied with how the democracy functions.

  • @PhilipJackson03
    @PhilipJackson03 Před 14 dny +8

    I’d rather have my government squabble for months until a government that is representative of the majority of the electorate is formed than just one party doing whatever it wants despite only having a third of the vote. It’s absolutely ridiculous and anyone who argues against that is against democracy.

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 14 dny

      Not only that, but shouldn't a prospective PM be able to manage alliances amongst other parties? Isn't being the leader of one country amongst hundreds worldwide involve that same diplomacy?
      The idea that we WANT a leader that is inept at one of the main skills they require for the job is madness.

  • @nastybadger-tn4kl
    @nastybadger-tn4kl Před 14 dny +8

    THIS IS NOT DEMOCRACY!

    • @sailaway8244
      @sailaway8244 Před 13 dny

      Actually it's "our democracy" ..... only question is who is "our" 🤔

  • @DenDave_
    @DenDave_ Před 13 dny +1

    For me the solution is a proportional representation but with a seat treshold. What we see in the Netherlands for example, we just keep on getting more and smaller parties in the House of Representatives, making it increasingly more difficult to form a government and slowing down any decisions to be made. Introducing a treshold would still ensure a fair representation, but with the caviat that you need to represent a sizable portion of the population to balance it out.

  • @cglees
    @cglees Před 3 dny

    We had a referendum to change the system to PR, the public overwhelmingly voted to keep it how it is

  • @awppenheimer
    @awppenheimer Před 14 dny +3

    Why was this re-uploaded?

    • @SoSimonSays
      @SoSimonSays Před 12 dny +1

      c4 trying to cover their asses after the actor scandal election interference. Playing both sides

  • @adamking2468
    @adamking2468 Před 14 dny +21

    So my vote didn’t count so what’s the point?

    • @alr68
      @alr68 Před 14 dny +21

      It did, just not enough people in your constituency share the same opinion as you

    • @entx8491
      @entx8491 Před 14 dny +2

      Or they're equally clueless ​@@alr68

    • @chrisoneill3999
      @chrisoneill3999 Před 14 dny +9

      My vote counted. The candidate I backed didn't win the seat, but their party went from a weak fourth to a strong second in the poll. The trick is to understand the system, complaining is never a winning stratagem.

    • @Fab666.
      @Fab666. Před 14 dny +7

      @@chrisoneill3999your vote goes up in smoke if who u voted for doesn’t win. It doesn’t get added to the tally as it would in a real democratic system, it’s simply binned

    • @auraan__
      @auraan__ Před 14 dny +7

      ​@chrisoneill3999 The system heavily favours previously established and long running parties, which is exactly why we have the same 2 parties dominating every decade, regardless of whether you know the system or not, you can't change that without decades of voting.
      It leaves no room for newer established parties, people that have already assigned themselves to a party are unlikely to change their allegiances.
      The vote does go to waste if your voted candidate in your constituency doesn't win, if 10,000 people vote Reform for example, and Labour win, those 10,000 votes don't carry over to the general consensus, they're basically binned.
      It's a rigged system to keep those in power, in power.

  • @markovermeer1394
    @markovermeer1394 Před 11 dny +1

    Brits like their regional representation, so the simple solution is: cut England in 20 large regions of 30 electoral, with proportional representation per region. At the same time, reduce the number of representatives per region to 15, so parliament size halves (20x15=300)

  • @SamRommer
    @SamRommer Před 12 dny

    Thank you for making this video

  • @stevenosimpson
    @stevenosimpson Před 14 dny +21

    But lets not forget we had a referendum on this not that long ago and it was rejected.
    ... God knows why, probably scaremongering

    • @blisz2718
      @blisz2718 Před 14 dny +13

      To be fair, it wasn't specifically for PR vs FPTP. It was FPTP vs AV.

    • @arranclark
      @arranclark Před 14 dny +18

      that was a referendum for alternative vote, not proportional representation

    • @scotandiamapping4549
      @scotandiamapping4549 Před 14 dny +4

      ​@@arranclarkwhich is still infinitely better than FPTP

    • @crow-dont-know
      @crow-dont-know Před 14 dny +4

      @@blisz2718 It wasn't "an unspecified alternative", it was alternative vote (AV) a.k.a ranked-choice voting.

    • @arranclark
      @arranclark Před 14 dny +1

      @@scotandiamapping4549 i agree completely

  • @generalludwig1637
    @generalludwig1637 Před 14 dny +5

    one small issue, STV isn't a proportional representation voting system, it just allows people to vote for more fringe candidates without wasting their vote

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 14 dny +1

      In most, if not all, cases the final result of STV will be closer to the PR result than FPTP.
      STV also allows a more accurate prediction of what PR would give (as there's virtually no need to vote tactically in STV).

    • @brunoparga
      @brunoparga Před 6 dny

      STV is indeed a proportional representation method. If party X has the support of 20% of voters and they rank all party X candidates above any other candidates, they're guaranteed to get 20% of the seats, up to rounding. That is what proportional representation means.

  • @biggobmalc8118
    @biggobmalc8118 Před 6 dny

    Our first past the post electoral system just encourages five-year dictatorships, which is hardly democratic.

  • @geronimo4511
    @geronimo4511 Před 6 dny

    PR system is clearly a more democratic system and should be seriously discussed in the UK.

  • @Bnk12x
    @Bnk12x Před 14 dny +6

    first pass keeps the votes more representive for people with brains, and it shows for reform voters, lots of them but none of them are smart😂

    • @Dylan20579
      @Dylan20579 Před 13 dny

      So you're against democracy?

    • @angelakadeer1565
      @angelakadeer1565 Před 13 dny

      What a biased and unfair comment !! I could say the same for people who vote Libour, idiots.

  • @chaphidoesstuff
    @chaphidoesstuff Před 14 dny +9

    Reform got hit HARD

    • @isolationnationn
      @isolationnationn Před 14 dny +7

      @@chaphidoesstuff we’re all already on board for PR. Please don’t put us off by pointing out it’ll help the Nazis.

    • @xioshen2058
      @xioshen2058 Před 14 dny

      ​@@isolationnationnyou insult the dead of the second world war with your brain damage comment

    • @jackdubz4247
      @jackdubz4247 Před 14 dny

      They'll get hit harder once the 5 Reform UK Party Ltd MPs all go in by-elections in the next few months.

    • @Jimmy-me3fe
      @Jimmy-me3fe Před 14 dny +15

      @@isolationnationn "Nazis". Don't be silly.

    • @shanghaichica
      @shanghaichica Před 13 dny +5

      Reform got what they deserved. Probably a bit more than they’re deserved actually.

  • @dawhite115
    @dawhite115 Před 13 dny +1

    Except that the votes would have been different with proportional representation. There would be no tactical voting. And Labour would have had to run a different campaign with more exciting policies rather than their strategy to say little and let the anti Conservative tactical voting carry the day for them.

  • @bytesabre
    @bytesabre Před 11 dny +1

    Love to see Reform try to actually fill the seats with their AI generated candidates

  • @goooooorkyo
    @goooooorkyo Před 13 dny +4

    Imagine 93 constituencies having Reform MPs inflicted upon them.

    • @angelakadeer1565
      @angelakadeer1565 Před 13 dny +4

      I do and it would be great !

    • @GDP-hm5ey
      @GDP-hm5ey Před 13 dny +5

      "Inflicted". Reform came second in 98 constituencies mate... And won 5 + 1 TUV MP making it 6.
      Telegraph analysis shows if 340,000 more conservative voters swing to reform they'd end up being the opposition.

    • @goooooorkyo
      @goooooorkyo Před 13 dny +1

      @@GDP-hm5ey yeah, 2nd. Why should a constituency have an MP who they didn't vote for?

    • @GDP-hm5ey
      @GDP-hm5ey Před 13 dny +4

      @@goooooorkyo Majority of people in Labour constituencies didn't vote Labour.
      And where Reform came second most of the time if some of the left over conservative voters had swapped to them they would have won.

    • @MrLordBear
      @MrLordBear Před 12 dny +2

      @@goooooorkyoLabour got 30% of the vote share in almost all of their victory constituencies.

  • @seasad1900
    @seasad1900 Před 14 dny +18

    but my party won? it's clearly a fair system

    • @kieranharwood7186
      @kieranharwood7186 Před 14 dny +10

      It is so worrying the number of people who post this sentiment un-ironically.

    • @markaxworthy2508
      @markaxworthy2508 Před 13 dny +2

      There is no "fair" system. Every system is flawed. It is a matter of choosing your preferred flawed system.

    • @jonistan9268
      @jonistan9268 Před 12 dny

      This is how you spot people who don't actually support democracy, but prefer to have some sort of dictatorship, where a minority, including them, gets to make the rules for everyone.

  • @HGSuper
    @HGSuper Před 6 dny

    Problem with PR is that it gives a mouthpiece to extreme politics.

  • @kimemia_maina
    @kimemia_maina Před 12 dny +1

    Without FPTP, I doubt you get the distorting effect of tactical voting

  • @Fab666.
    @Fab666. Před 14 dny +3

    The popular vote is all that matters, no real democracy has a right to burn ur vote if ur party comes in 2nd 3rd or 4th. That’s exactly why we have had the same 2 parties for over 💯 years!
    It’s not really a democracy, it’s the illusion that’s very predictable and very controllable.
    You can’t vote for the leader directly, you can’t vote for the party directly, you can vote for a candidate in ur area and if ur surrounded by enough life time voters then ur vote is scrapped and counts for nothing! Barriers to entry are everywhere on purpose.
    It’s a democracy that Putin is jealous of, atleast it can pretend to be legitimate and still keep a 50/50 prediction rate 😂

  • @hunts19792205
    @hunts19792205 Před 14 dny +7

    The only other country that does it this way is Belarus....let that sink in

  • @rhysrunsriot
    @rhysrunsriot Před 13 dny

    Why didn’t they mention that Labour Party members passed a motion in support of PR at their last conference- but the national body ignored them.

  • @mkmajuska8487
    @mkmajuska8487 Před 14 dny

    As a lithuanian, I love our election system, when there is 2 types of electoral districts, from where we have to choose 141 person. First type in lithuanian it's called „vienmandatė“(single-member) which is similar to France, Netherlands where politicians choose where they want to candidate and if they win, they get a seat, but the biggest difference in this and in UK elections, that politicians in those single-member districts must score 50%, if not, best 2 politicians going to the 2nd round and who win gets a seat in Seimas(Parliament in Lithuania), but also we have harder system called „daugiamandatė“(multi-mandates), which there is parties and their lists, like conservatives, liberals or socialdemocrats, where they have to score 5% to have a chance for mandate calculations. From single-member system we get 71 politicians. From multi-mandates we get 70 politicians. I also understand that in bigger countries like France or UK this system would be even harder than in Lithuania, but there is great election system for better democracy. How I said, system is hard, but when you understand it, it starts to make sense.

  • @chrisoneill3999
    @chrisoneill3999 Před 14 dny +48

    When the UK was part of the EU, the EU elections had a PR system; and Nigel Farage was constantly telling us how unfair that was. Now that Reform UK is competing in the UK FPTP elections, Nigel Farage is telling us the system he supported was unfair all along. Voters are the problem, and then politicians; not the system.

    • @Steven-vo4ee
      @Steven-vo4ee Před 14 dny +31

      Consistency is an alien concept to fifth columnist Farage

    • @RealOGfikey
      @RealOGfikey Před 14 dny

      Voters who are bigots will believe anything a bigoted politician tells them. Confirmation bias.
      The people who voted for Reform live in dilapidated areas who are told brown skinned people with funny sounding accents are the cause and not the capitalist policies of the tories. The tories were simply blamed for not being far right enough.

    • @billyward7108
      @billyward7108 Před 14 dny +17

      Farage has never complained about PR, what are you on about 🤣

    • @terryj50
      @terryj50 Před 14 dny +2

      What was funny earlier ed davey was going on about changing to pr. then the reporter told him his party would have less seats than reform and he shut up. Lol

    • @alexmacfie4521
      @alexmacfie4521 Před 14 dny +11

      @@billyward7108 I'm not a fan of Farage but I do give him that, he's consistently supported electoral reform.

  • @RESIST_THE_GREAT_REPLACEMENT

    If anything, if there was a proportional voting system Reform would’ve gained even MORE votes because the only reason it didn’t is because people are strategically voting for the next “best” (and I use that term loosely here) option which were the tories. Our election system has suppressed Reform big time.

    • @mwd331
      @mwd331 Před 14 dny

      Wah 😭

    • @shanghaichica
      @shanghaichica Před 13 dny +1

      The system has been in place for years and it’s a system that people voted to keep in a referendum. However, of course she system was set up to disenfranchise reform voters and if it PR reform would have won.

    • @Dylan20579
      @Dylan20579 Před 13 dny

      ​@@mwd331people didn't vote reform because they had more confidence in conservatives to win in their area. They do this because if you don't vote for the winner your vote doesn't matter at all and they'd rather the conservatives win than labour

    • @FranzBieberkopf
      @FranzBieberkopf Před 13 dny +1

      @@shanghaichica But the referendum rejected AV.
      No evidence to say that another referendum would be any different.

  • @Jabberstax
    @Jabberstax Před 4 dny

    This is why Britain will only ever have either a Tory or Labour government.

  • @pony_OwO
    @pony_OwO Před 6 dny +1

    what is with all these quick cuts? you're not making a tiktok it's ok to pause on important points for a bit

  • @gaycha6589
    @gaycha6589 Před 14 dny +5

    “None of the above” should be a ballot option

    • @jeromefitzroy
      @jeromefitzroy Před 13 dny

      Just spoil it

    • @saikoujikan
      @saikoujikan Před 12 dny +1

      And what happens when that option wins? That constituency goes unrepresented? Or do we need further rounds of election?
      Either way it is not an ideal situation

    • @gaycha6589
      @gaycha6589 Před 12 dny

      @@saikoujikan should either be a second ballot for that constituency, force voters to think more

    • @saikoujikan
      @saikoujikan Před 12 dny

      @@gaycha6589 it’s more likely fewer people will be bothered to vote the second time, meaning the turnout lowers and only the dieheart will turn up, getting what they wish.

    • @brunoparga
      @brunoparga Před 6 dny

      If you don't like any of the options, leave your ballot blank. Spoil it. Or, better yet: run.

  • @Thedarkknight2244
    @Thedarkknight2244 Před 13 dny +4

    Abolishing first past the post would disrupt the concept that your local mp represents your area and you can write letters to them etc. enables how democracy works on a personal level. The only way to keep the local area (grass roots) politics in elections would be to have 2-3 seats per constituency. And then you can vote for a party multiple times, or 2-3 parties

    • @karinwenzel6361
      @karinwenzel6361 Před 13 dny

      Not true, we have PR in German elections and every constituency has an elected MP (sometimes even two if a party does really well). Check out the German voting system for the Bundestag.

    • @FranzBieberkopf
      @FranzBieberkopf Před 13 dny

      Jesus Christ-1300 to 1950 MPs.
      Save us.

    • @karinwenzel6361
      @karinwenzel6361 Před 12 dny

      @@FranzBieberkopf Not true, you just have to change the size of your constituencies. Germany has 299 for the Bundestag elections, the UK has 650 with a smaller population (84.6 versus 67 mlillion)!
      The maximum number of seats in future will be 630, restricting the number of overhang seats (to ensure proportional representation) to 32.

    • @thegregorycolin2335
      @thegregorycolin2335 Před 12 dny +2

      That's not true. London Assembly, Welsh Parliament, Scottish Parliament, and Norther Irish Assembly all use PR and all have a connection between voters and their local representatives

    • @AnthonyFlack
      @AnthonyFlack Před 10 dny

      @@FranzBieberkopf - save us from representation? More MPs is not a bad thing. Better than having fewer. Better than the opposite end of the scale with one person holding all the power.

  • @Chag69420
    @Chag69420 Před 13 dny

    This system needs to be scrapped. Completely.

  • @marksavage1108
    @marksavage1108 Před 8 dny

    It leaves millions suffering taxation without representation.

  • @Chatmat
    @Chatmat Před 14 dny +11

    The fact that people still voted tory, and voted reform is worrying

    • @kiwi235kiwi
      @kiwi235kiwi Před 14 dny +3

      Why?

    • @Chatmat
      @Chatmat Před 14 dny

      @@kiwi235kiwi the Tory mention is self explanatory, especially if you're not part of the 1%.
      For reform: no plans on the housing issue other than "reviewing the system", scrapping laws that we have adopted from the EU now we've left such as the consumer rights act, literally zero ways of funding any of their plans as their plans on the economy would cost the government more money, they reject the WHO which is absolutely bananas and their views on immigration is what they're banking on. They're acting as if immigration is the biggest threat to everyday lives & the cost of living crisis & immigrants, legal or not, cannot claim benefits (outside of special circumstances and length of stay) so them claiming there is a drain on the benefits system is false. They're pushing a populist agenda to give the people who have been hard done by something to blame.
      Sorry if this is long, this isn't me telling you how you should vote, you're entitled to vote however which way you want. It's just with parties like reform it's good to look past the big drum they pound and see what they would offer to you and the people you care about.

    • @fredfish4316
      @fredfish4316 Před 14 dny

      ​@@kiwi235kiwi Because all they offer is culture wars and handouts to their rich sponors (owners re reform corp).

    • @Chatmat
      @Chatmat Před 14 dny +2

      @@kiwi235kiwi I did reply with some thought out and factual reasons but it seems like my comment has been deleted. I do apologise.

    • @ProsecutorZekrom
      @ProsecutorZekrom Před 14 dny

      @@kiwi235kiwiBecause right wing ideology has destroyed this country, the solution is not to move further right.

  • @jackdubz4247
    @jackdubz4247 Před 14 dny +6

    A dangerously misleading extrapolation of the result that does not take into account all of the tactical voting that occurred last night. Had PR been the established system going into the GE then people would have voted in a completely different manner. Taking the result from one electoral system and doing a 1:1 transfer into another only serves to skew the eventual result. Please, don't do this again.

    • @cazmaestro
      @cazmaestro Před 14 dny

      Did you watch the end of the video? They literally directly address this

  • @SiLoMixMaster
    @SiLoMixMaster Před 13 dny +1

    The SNP and Greens coalition has been a disaster in Scotland

    • @thegregorycolin2335
      @thegregorycolin2335 Před 12 dny

      That's your opinion but the reality is the majority of people who voted had a representative in government. The same was true when Labour and the liberals formed a coalition between 1999 and 2007. Just because you don't like the government doesn't make the system bad. Most people just don't agree with you and voted for something you don't agree with

  • @reyson01
    @reyson01 Před 11 dny +1

    Could've been interesting to ask people from countries with representational voting, instead of the only non-Brit being an American, who have an even more dominant two party system.

  • @ChickenNugNugz2
    @ChickenNugNugz2 Před 14 dny +17

    The british equivalent of the Nazi party having 93 seats is the best argument against PR i have ever seen

    • @isolationnationn
      @isolationnationn Před 14 dny

      @@ChickenNugNugz2 as much as I agree they’re Nazis, there is *no* argument you can make against having a true democracy. In the long run, clinging to power through authoritarian means (not having a system that represents the will of the people) will only empower those autocrats, not save us from them.

    • @Ixaglet
      @Ixaglet Před 14 dny

      "Everyone to the right of Mao is a Nazi!" - a tired, old argument that holds zero weight anymore.

    • @ProsecutorZekrom
      @ProsecutorZekrom Před 14 dny +2

      Yep, the big benefit of FPTP which is quite underrated is that it can represent a specific area. Since the reform vote is so spread out though, surely some people will be represented by reform even though the majority didn’t vote them.

    • @sadisticsalmon7323
      @sadisticsalmon7323 Před 14 dny

      You arent equating Reform to the NSDAP right? You’re not that idiotic right? I dont even support reform but that is just fucking ludicrous

    • @viewerman-tq5ne
      @viewerman-tq5ne Před 14 dny +9

      when they win 400 seats from 30% of the vote, then I'm sure your views will change

  • @culturevulturepapi8948
    @culturevulturepapi8948 Před 14 dny +4

    we already had a referendum on changing this and it was rejected
    so all the gammon screaming for a referendum can not say we can't have another EU referendum 😅

    • @steveknight878
      @steveknight878 Před 14 dny +3

      The version of PR we were offered was not a good one.

    • @dominicchallis2928
      @dominicchallis2928 Před 14 dny +2

      @@steveknight878Yes it was, the AV system actually lets you rank candidates and subsequent runoffs from that lead to the party that is most broadly preferred being elected in each constituency.

    • @bangbangcan2
      @bangbangcan2 Před 14 dny +5

      ​@@steveknight878Neither was Brexit. Let's vote on both again

    • @culturevulturepapi8948
      @culturevulturepapi8948 Před 14 dny +2

      @@steveknight878 well you had your chance, not allowed to have another referendum ever again..... Brexiters said so....and they love referendum results

    • @culturevulturepapi8948
      @culturevulturepapi8948 Před 14 dny

      @@dominicchallis2928 as far as I remember there were multiple options.... it was just more complicated than a three word slogan. stop the boats, take back control etc