The case against First Past the Post
There is a voting system that exists that tends to take away the meaning of your local MP as a representative, a system that allows a minority of MPs to greatly influence the direction of laws passed by the House of Commons, a system that encourages back room dealing and negotiations away from the public eye. That voting system is First Past the Post (FPTP).
For a long time now we, supporters of electoral reform, have spent our time defending the supposed negative aspects of good PR systems. We have to contest with the broad and misleading statements of the likes Cameron makes, and we have to defend against shoddy government spin of shoddy reviews in to the subject.
The reality is that it is now time for FPTP to be put in the dock, to try to put an end to the sort of articles that blindly make sweeping statements for FPTP. In this time of reform the narrative shouldn’t be why the PR systems are supposedly bad, but why does anyone think that FPTP is any better?
Mark Thompson recently wrote a great piece, one who’s sentiment has been repeated time and time again (for good reason) on the arguments David Cameron put up against Proportional Representation (PR). It’s worth a read, especially for truly understanding how political deception works. Cameron states “PR is bad” in the same way that I could shout “jumping from a plane is certain death!”. I mean, yes, if I don’t have a parachute, and if the plane is also actually flying while I do it then my statement is correct…but it’s hardly the whole picture now, is it?
FPTP fallacy #1
“FPTP keeps government strong, able to operate without constant compromise”
This is an interesting one in the current climate. In the recent past the government has had to climb down or be defeated on secret inquests, 42 day detention, centralised storage of our data, free movement of our personal information and Gurkha settlement. Is this “strong” governance?
FPTP fallacy #2
“FPTP stops small minorities becoming king makers, taking power away from the electorate”
Linking extremely closely with the above…who do you think makes the government climb down? It’s not the Tories and Lib Dem’s in opposition who, even if they all vote together, cannot stop a “strong” FPTP government from doing what it likes. It is a handful of MPs on the government’s own back benches.
It is extremely entertaining to hear people argue against PR systems because they fear that a small party or groupings of small parties will be able to make government water down their policy, but ignore completely that behind the scenes there are constant dealings with back benchers to ensure they don’t rebel against the Whip. Do we even need to remind of the accusations that the DUP, who allowed the ultimately quashed 42 days vote to go through to the Lords, received promises of huge amounts of money for Ireland in return for their vital votes in favour of the government’s plans?
FPTP fallacy #3
“FPTP means that voters don’t know what they’re voting for, policy direction becomes the result of coalition”
With recent developments this argument is finally starting to show its weakness. People are tired of policy being dictated to them with little to no chance of their issues being raised in the Commons. The mood of the nation is that simply having a big ol’ manifesto to vote for (and to cross your fingers and hope that they’ll keep their promises) isn’t good enough any more. The game is up, people know their interests aren’t being pursued by the current system, and that their interests can’t be pursued without high profile celebrity involvement or back room deals.
The main thing here is that with FPTP voters do know who they’re voting for, and the majority of people voted AGAINST the manifesto that we are currently following. Perhaps the statement should be “with FPTP voters at least know the manifesto of whoever gets in, despite not having a proportional majority and likely not their vote.”
FPTP fallacy #4
“FPTP is a constituency linked process of election, you know who your MP is and that’s important for accountability”
But does it work that way in practice? There are some, those rebels mentioned above, that do what they wish because they know they are representing their people and not their party. They also know they’re never going to get a good job in government.
Whips under a FPTP system mean any constituency link is redundant. Because of the way that FPTP elects MPs, a voter is rarely voting for an MP as a local representative more than they’re voting for a national party. Want your views replicated in parliament? Tough, the Whip is the one who has ultimate control over your MPs voting habits, not you. At least…not if you live in a constituency where that MP has a nice safe seat and doesn’t have to worry about your change of vote meaning anything to their power.
FPTP fallacy #5
“FPTP means a parliament that isn’t breaking down every 9 months to be re-elected”
Finally, this one is more a matter of opinion on which you would prefer. In the past year the Labour party has largely failed to create meaningful legislation. For fear of it getting watered down by party rebels, to be mauled by the media, most legislation has been delayed and delayed, or dropped indefinitely (and quietly). Under PR it may well be the case that by now we would have already had an election to sort out, as Nick Clegg put it, this void in governance. Under FPTP however we must sit down and endure.
Is one truly better than the other? Of course a reasonable PR system doesn’t break down that often despite what the anecdotes of Italy suggest, but can one objectively look at the system as it is now with a lame duck government largely failing to legislate and failing to meet its own manifesto pledges but plodding on for another year is significantly more beneficial to the country than the idea of the country going to the polls early when the ability to govern has diminished?
So FPTP is a problem?
Of course it is, safe seats cause problems. Governments being in majority despite not having a majority of the public backing them causes problems. But the real problem is in how governance occurs constitutionally.
You may have got the theme above, but it is essentially that the problems and benefits of FPTP and PR are one and the same. Under FPTP a large majority government can railroad through their policies with little opposition, little fear of not getting their own way. The same can happen if a party achieves a huge majority through PR. Under FPTP if the government has a tenuous majority the interests of the party are weakened as back benchers become “king makers”, the same can happen in PR parliaments through smaller parties.
Most of the “problems” that are raised by FPTP advocates are constitutional ones, problems that occur under a different guise within their own supposedly superior system. At least with the right kind of PR system we know that our views will be reflected fairly in our representation, and that our MPs will not be able to sit by abusing expenses safe in the knowledge that no-one would dare vote for the other party in their constituency.
We can either stay the course with FPTP, encouraging complacency and lack of accountability, while living with all of the problems of marginalisation of government power or abuse of large majority governments…just as we would have to under PR; or alternatively we could take the brave and sensible step of introducing fairness in to the equation, and developing trust between the electorate and politicians by moulding a parliament that reflects, not distorts, public wishes.
If you wish to add your voice to the growing calls for reform there are many places to do it. You can take back power, or make your vote count, just to name a couple of avenues.
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Lee is a 20 something web developer from Cornwall now residing in Bristol since completing his degree at the lesser university. He has strange dreams, a big appetite, a small flat, and when not forcing his views on the world he is probably eating a cookie. Lee blogs independently from party colours at Program your own mind.
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Reader comments
I am sorry if this is off-topic to a discussion of PR, but I think part of the problem is the length of the parliamentary term. It would be more difficutt for a government, however elected, to ram through unpopular policies if it had to face the electorate more often.
PR is bad for one reason. If the nation is going to change electoral procedures, it should be in the direction of delivering power to the people in that the people control their representatives during the period after they are elected.
Any system that delivers party political control post an MP being elected is as bad as FPTP.
Full rights of recall are needed before any electoral changes are made – with an easy threshold for voters to gain sufficient numbers to force a by-election. What Clegg has proposed, backed by Cameron is a sham right of recall – a political party smokescreen of what recall is supposed to be – they will only allow a recall in circumstances over which those at the centre still have control.
Unless and until the people can truely regard their MPs as their representatives, and their representatives alone, any other proposed changes are the red herrings of those who wish to maintain a fundamentally undemocratic system of government.
PR is not more democratic at all. It is a lie to say so, unless it is PR with an electoral system that allows the public to sack their MPs at any time that the public no longer decide that they want such a person to represent them.
If fixed term comes in (and it’s only tenuously off topic!) then it’s not really going to present the public with more chances to vote. Every 20 years they’d have got an extra election, at best, IF fixed terms are put on a 4 year basis.
I prefer fixed terms as it puts a fairness in to the equation as to when the elections are called, and a schedule for parties to get their manifestos in order. However we have to remember that “unpopular policies” only get through on large majorities because they don’t even face enough opposition from back bench rebels. Whether the election is guaranteed to be in 4 years time or perhaps in 3-5, unpopular legislation will still be made if there isn’t a more proportional chamber elected.
Certainly there is the example we have right now that Brown is going to have to call an election within a year, and at no point is that going to be a “good time” for him either, so not being on a fixed term doesn’t guarantee an incumbent advantage either, even if it does make it more likely.
“PR is not more democratic at all. It is a lie to say so, unless it is PR with an electoral system that allows the public to sack their MPs at any time that the public no longer decide that they want such a person to represent them.”
There is no reason why you can’t have PR and also the ability to sack your MPs, one is an electoral issue, the other is a constitutional one, two separate subjects really.
Also Cameron hasn’t supported any change to the electoral system so I’m not sure where you’re coming from?
“Most of the “problems” that are raised by FPTP advocates are constitutional ones, problems that occur under a different guise within their own supposedly superior system.”
Good point.
Just one example, all the talk about how a PR system would let extremist parties like the BNP in (which as Malcolm Clark already noted can and has happened under FPTP against the will of the majority – http://tinyurl.com/qge3kd) misses the point that there are better solutions than having a crap electoral system. If we really care about scary parties getting into power and passing scary laws, we should have a Bill of Rights that would limit their ability to do so unchecked. There are so many dimentions to this yet some people still can’t get their heads out ‘PR -> Weimar -> Hitler -> BAD’ despite all the evidence of the problems FPTP is causing us.
Lee, excellent article. I would also like to point out that Italy has had many different electoral systems including first-past-the-post. It is an electoral chameleon country not a PR country.
PR countries do better than us on the democracy index and quality of life index.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy_Index
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_of_life_index
Coalition government under first-past-the-post is very different to coalition government under PR. One is unrepresentative of what people voted for and usually very unstable as a result, while the other is not.
PR countries have enjoyed higher post-war economic growth, have better run public services, higher political engagement/turnout and coincidentally tend to give less fertile ground for the far right parties.
Aren’t we missing something when we criticise PR for allowing the BNP a seat or two? The real problem is the BNP getting 10% of the vote in the first place. This is primarily because people believe the anti-immigration crap written in the Tory tabloids.
The Tories stir up racial hatred to split the working class vote off from Labour because this is worth doing under first-past-the-post as the seats your party win is not just determined by your own vote, but by your main opponents vote.
So clever and subtle negative campaigning becomes paramount to splinter the opposition vote while appearing above the fray yourselves to hold on to your own voters.
Under PR this sort of campaign would be of little help to the Tories as their number of seats would only be determined by their own vote share. So the Tory press would stop doing it.
This is why the countries with a problem with the far-right tend not to be PR countries but France and the UK that predominantly use first-past-the-post systems
Excellent article, and there’s nothing here incompatible with recall: in fact it would be easier to bring in recall as part of the PR package than to bring it in seperately under FPTP. There’s a mood in favour of change: best to do it all at once.
Re comment 3, I was thinking more of a 2 year fixed term.
In which case, maybe the right of recall would be less pressing?
Re comment 7, but what about Italy? I think the far right has been strong there for decades.
Some blogger (may have been Dale, not sure) was claiming that when he spoke to people from PR countries, they urged Britain to stick with FPTP.
Would be interesting to hear from those who live under PR systems what they think of whem and whether they’d prefer FPTP.
Regarding fallacy #5, I always point to the Orson Welles cuckoo clock speech from The Third Man.
The fact that Italy had “unstable” government for so many years post World War II was down to Italian political and social culture: organised crime connected with the Christian Democrats, a popular Eurocommunist party, political terrorism, a managerialist state, whatever. In spite of the “instability”, one party held the office of Prime Minister under every coalition and the country thrived economically.
Under the “Second Republic”, PR was abolished and Italy adopted Additional Member System — I think that it is even more like FPTP today. Result: Berlusconi and the rump of the Fascist party holding ministerial positions.
Italy’s governance has always been a consequence of how Italians think and behave. The electoral system was incidental to historical government “instability” but that “PR instability” is preferable to what now exists.
I blogged yesterday about how FPTP created the illusion of a massive victory for the Tories at the local elections.
“Re comment 3, I was thinking more of a 2 year fixed term.”
Interesting, I’ve personally got views that electing half the chamber every 2 years wouldn’t necessarily be a bad idea, certainly for keeping legislative plans in the here and now. The disadvantage to 2 year terms, regardless of how many are elected every 2 years, is that long term policy would find it hard to survive.
There’s definitely a fascinating debate that could be had on fixed term parliaments and how to go about utilising it, but as I said above, the key has to be about making parliament itself more reflective of national views first, so that 40% of the population aren’t commanding 60% of the house.
@Bruce
It would be more difficutt for a government, however elected, to ram through unpopular policies if it had to face the electorate more often.
I was thinking more of a 2 year fixed term.
This would also prevent good long-term policies that are unpopular with the public over the short-term being implemented. Tough decisions would be completely avoided until crisis point was reached.
The current 5-year time horizon of Parliament already contributes to a lot of short-termism- just think of the poor decisions that would be made if MPs and Government’s had a maximum 2-year time horizon.
After the 2005 GE (which was a more typical result than, say, the landslides of ’83 and ’07), and using the standard definition of a ‘safe’ seat as being one where the winning party had a majority of 10%+ of the votes cast over the second-place party, then 74% of the seats were safe; in other words, only something quite seismic (à la ’97) or some peculiarity of local circumstances would get those seats to change hands. Even tightening the definition of ‘safe’ to a majority of 15%+ means that 60% of seats are ‘safe’ (and it would take an even greater upheaval to change that).
It cannot be healthy that 60% – 74% of MPs know that – however useless they may be – they cannot effectively lose their positions (unless caught with their hands in the till, or by being sufficiently independently-minded as to piss off the whips).
The only sound definition of a fair voting system is one where, a) everyone’s vote has something approaching equal value, and b) where the outcome – nationally – properly reflects the proportion of support each party has. FPTP is a signal failure in both of these regards. A Labour voter in Buckingham, a Tory voter in Bootle, and a third-party voter in many places are effectively disenfranchised – they may as well not bother. This feeds into the sense of general disillusionment not only with political parties, but with the system itself. This is dangerous.
As for the ‘strong government’ argument, well I detect an almost Nietzschean obsession with it by its advocates. ‘Strong’ government, as we found between 1983-92 and again since 1997, merely means a government which can ignore any advice or opposition which doesn’t suit it and march on regardless into its own vision of the Golden Future, irrespective of what might be termed ‘reality’. This has led to more bad legislation, created and implemented for spiteful and partisan reasons, than anything which could be created by so-called ‘weak’ coalition governments which could result from PR.
The experiences of Wales and Scotland – admittedly with spatchcock simulacra of PR devised with the primary intent of keeping Labour permanently in power by skewing in favour of FPTP constituency seats – show that a fair(er) voting system tends to lead to more consensual government which – as a result – leads to less of both the ‘Buggins’ turn’ phenomena and the distancing of the political classes from the people they’re supposed to be representing.
And as for the verbiage about breaking the link between the constituency and MP, it strikes me as being like so much of the other self-serviing, mystical twaddle which surrounds Westminster. In any case, there’s no need for PR to break any putative link – the experience of Ireland shows that.
11.Charlieman.
The first Berlusconi govt. got into power with a modified FPTP. The same govt. then changed back to a PR system with a 5% bar for getting seats 8similar to the German system) and Berlusconi narrowly lost the following election. the Left were unable to hold onto power for the whole legislative period and Berlusconi won the following election fairly convincingly still using the PR system with 5% gate. However, totally agree with you that “Italy’s governance has always been a consequence of how Italians think and behave”.
But Italy is also a country with relatively high electoral turnouts at all levels and politics is still followed with a certain degree of passion. In the past it was the most popular spectator sport but now it runs a close second to Serie A.
Going back to your comment about Italy’s governance….Is this a good or a bad thing? Are you suggesting that Italy should have an electoral system which is not a consequence of how Italians think and behave? I would personally love such a system but I do wonder whether this would be fair.
Here in the UK the wielding of power and how representation is obtained has become increasingly problematical and this probably started with the Thatcher regime. The Blair government made the problem more acute and now Brown’s
Excellent article Lee.
What gets me is the amount of misinformation on the subject. For instance when the Taliban of FPTP lazily repeat that PR system would make it easy for political parties to impose candidates from the top.
Hello? James Purnell, anyone? A grammar school boy from North London, what connection did he ever have with the supersafe Stalybridge and Hyde constituency until his party bosses catapulted him there?
Also, in any case STV or any open-list system would allow voters to choose between candidates of the SAME party as opposed to a close-list system.
Other typical lazy cliche is the stuff about the Italian system. They quote Italy and its ridiculously unstable parliamentary history but they don;t quote Germany or Spain, both countries with PR-based system but with remarkable levels of stability.
11.Charlieman.
The first Berlusconi govt. got into power with a modified FPTP. The same govt. then changed back to a PR system with a 5% bar for getting seats (similar to the German system) and Berlusconi narrowly lost the following election. The Left were unable to hold onto power for the whole legislative period and Berlusconi won the following election fairly convincingly still using the PR system with 5% gate. However, totally agree with you that “Italy’s governance has always been a consequence of how Italians think and behave”.
But Italy is also a country with relatively high electoral turnouts at all levels and politics is still followed with a certain degree of passion. In the past it was the most popular spectator sport but now it runs a close second to Serie A.
Going back to your comment about Italy’s governance….Is this a good or a bad thing? Are you suggesting that Italy should have an electoral system which is not a consequence of how Italians think and behave? I would personally love such a system but I do wonder whether this would be fair.
Here in the UK the wielding of power and how representation is obtained has become increasingly problematical and this probably started with the Thatcher regime. The Blair government made the problem more acute and now Brown’s dogged holding onto power is increasing the level of frustration. It is indeed sad to see supposedly serious people in Government actually believing the satires of themselves (Yes Minister for Thatcher and In The Thick of It for Blair/Brown) and acting accordingly.
So, I’ve changed my mind. I always used to think that FPTP was the system best suited to how British people did their politics, just as pure PR was best suited for Italians. But FPTP has obviously outlived its usefulness!
16. Apologies to all…my laptop decided to send the incomplete version (see 18 for complete comment). My laptop’s governance is also a consequence of how this Italian thinks and behaves!
Good concluding para. Claude at 17.
A quick and clear example of what STRONG GOVERNMENT (under FPTP) can do and how unfair it can be.
18 March 2003.
412 to 149 MPs voted in favour of the Iraq war. Even though eighty-four rebel Labour MPs voted along with the LibDems and a handful of Tories, the result was a clear majority pro-invasion.
Contrast that with the opinion polls of March 2003 which gave a consistent 60-65% of the British public against the war in those circumstances – following the wave of emotions generated by the biggest demo in British history the previous month.
@16 Nino, thanks for the correction about Italian voting systems.
It just goes to show, though, that changing an electoral system doesn’t make politics better, merely different. If you don’t want Fascists in parliament, conduct a public debate against Fascism.
I seek PR based on STV. It is much better that Fascists are unelected because they don’t get enough transfers than they don’t meet an arbitrary 5% threshold.
The idea of Strong Government has always seemed a little kinky to me.
Good post. Much of the debate is naturally about the pros and cons of majoritarian versus proportional systems. The former claim better accountability in selecting an executive; the latter point to the unfairness in electing the legislature and promote the democratic value of checks and balances. The majoritarians claim strong government, and the reformers can point to a different kind of strength of Scandinavian and German pluralist systems against the post-war UK experience. Lee makes a good case against FPTP of this kind.
Let me go onto a different tack. There is a further powerful and pretty foundational critique of FPTP which reformers often miss. First-past-the-post increasingly doesn’t work – not only when compared to what PR supporters want, but in terms of its own objectives of being able to pick (at a national level) “the first-past-the-post” party which should govern.
This is not often put by pro-PR reformers, who are not in favour of majoritarianism. It is overlooked by defenders of the system – perhaps tactically, but also often out of ignorance. A good example was the official Tory submission to Jenkins, which is ill-informed
http://www.archive.official-documents.co.uk/document/cm40/4090/volume-2/ppf-02.PDF
The foundation of the case for FPTP is the clear choice of governments. The Tory submission said it is fair because “the most popular party in the country almost always gets a majority in the House of Commons and goes on to form a government”.
But this isn’t true. FPTP certainly doesn’t guarantee that. It can deliver that outcome. But it depends on luck, in how the geography of votes falls. And the evidence is very clearly that this now requires much more luck than it did in the past to do what it says on the tin.
* Even so, FPTP got the ‘wrong result’ three times in the 20th century – in 1951 giving the Tories an overall majority when Labour had more votes; and in 1929 and Feb 1974 giving Labour a plurality of seats to form a minority government when the Tories were unpopular.
Is three wrong election results in a century good or bad? I think it is pretty poor for three reasons.
- Firstly, the proportion of mistakes of the number of close elections is very high. It got two of the six post-war elections wrong where the major parties finished within 5% of each other.
- Secondly, it is no longer (as in 1951 and 1974) making mistakes which could go either way, like an unlucky referee. There is a systemic problem …. it can get the right result only if Labour wins, or if the Tories win by a street. (Compare the 1992 result, where Major has a lead of 7.5% and squeaks a majority of 21 with 2005 where Labour gets a majority of 65 on a less than 3% lead).
- Thirdly, the political system including the electoral system had enormous legitimacy in 1951 and could shrug off a ‘wrong result’. The idea that local constituency contests predominated over the national outcome was broadly accepted, pre-television and opinion polling. Whereas today a similar result would create a significant legitimacy crisis.
* Hung Parliaments are now much more likely than they were between 1945 and 1974.
The academic expert consensus submission to Jenkins explains this
http://www.archive.official-documents.co.uk/document/cm40/4090/volume-2/acdmcs01.PDF
This is not entirely new. Half of the 20th century elections before 1945 delivered hung parliaments. Again, now the vote is much more fragmented among parties than it was in the 1950s and 1960s; and the number of seats held by parties other than the biggest two is higher giving a much greater ‘hung’ spread (that is partly a consequence of the fall of the two-party vote; while the different party systems in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales also add to this). This is also why hung parliament scenarios in which the third party can choose between major coalition partner are v.unlikely.
The only reason we have not had hung parliaments is because we happen not to have had close elections in the last 30 years. The 2005 contest (which was never actually in doubt) was the first since 1974 when the two major parties finished within 5% of each other. You could argue that FPTP works to pick a winner only because elections have not effectively been contested by both major parties at the same time!
* It is often thought that FPTP helps big parties: it doesn’t particularly. By design, it helps geographically concentrated parties (whether big or large): for example, Plaid Cymru did best of all on vote to seat ratios in 1992 and 1997, while the Scottish Nationalists have often done worse than the LibDems in Westminster elections.
There are arguable points to be made for and against majoritarian systems. (Getting a balance is why the Jenkins AV+ sought to have a bias towards single-party governments, while correcting for the level of disproportionality of FPTP). But, if that is what people want, they should favour a system which is designed to do that. The most obvious would be a direct election for Prime Minister.
The current system will fall over badly – it is simply a matter of time. That is why I think it can be regarded as a “Russian roulette” electoral system, which is pretty fundamentally broken.
there was a typo which changed the meaning …
In 1929 and Feb 1974, Labour got a plurality of seats and so formed a minority government when the Tories were more popular (ie beat Labour in the popular vote).
Great comment Sunder; lots to digest, but extremely interesting.
I wish we could move beyond the same debate about whether we want FPTP or PR, realise that FPTP is not working and discuss what kind of PR we want. I can’t see many people apart from party hacks wanting a closed list system, like we have for the European Parliament. But it’s precisely this unpopular system that Cameron and others put up as a straw man when they want to knock PR. Italy has also been mentioned. The problem with Italian politics isn’t PR or the constitution, it is the effect of a polarised civil society. Many constitutional lawyers have cited the Italian constitution as one of the fairest and most democratic in the world, yet it fails to deliver. With this in mind, it’s important to realise that electoral reform without increased social participation in governance will not deliver the results we are looking for.
The more I read about AV+, the more it looks like a Frankenstein’s monster. It has some good principles, but bad methodology. Voting for candidates rather than parties is always going to provide more individual accountability of our representatives. Some geographical link also focuses accountability, yet strengthening local government would better meet the needs of a lot of the constituency surgery workload.
A directly elected PM becomes presidential, with a mandate allowing them to ignore Parliament completely, unless it was severely beefed up too. I think we’d be far better off having a Parliament that can hold the PM to account and take some of the patronage and whipping out of the picture.
I consider STV to be the most effective PR system for providing proportionality, constituency link and putting voters and candidates, not parties, in control. It too has problems, but we can all agree to live with them. Fixed terms and power of recall would be good too: expressions of popular sovereignty. And just for the cherry, can we please abolish this silly monarchy?
Slight correction to the first para. of my previous post (#15):
“After the 2005 GE (which was a more typical result than, say, the landslides of ‘83 and ‘97)…”
Gareth@26
The debate “which PR system do we want” is ongoing and endless. I think it is also among the reasons why reformers make little headway.
I think all of those interested in reform should say something like – whatever my personal preferences for STV, AMS, AV+ or others, I would support any more proportional system which had broad support in a referendum. (There is never going to be a serious proposal for a closed party list system for national domestic elections)
I also think reformers should keep an open mind about a combination of AV for the Commons with a PR-elected Senate, as part of a written constitutional settlement with other checks and balances on majoritarian power. (I personally would like to see STV in local government). The reform debate has been too isolated from the other constitutional changes. This achieves the hybridity which Jenkins was seeking across democratic institutions, rather than in only one place. (This is a step too far for some PR supporters: though a good deal of cross-party and non-partisan reformist opinion was moving in this direction over the last couple of years; though I think supporters of full PR might well now take the view that they can get straight there, particularly by proposing a Constitutional Convenrtion process to settle the systems debate.
In any event, a theological attachment to a particular system is likely to derail reform efforts. The Clegg reform plan recognises this, by arguing that a referendum on AV+ is possible now, which does not prevent LibDem advocacy of STV (eg if there is no quick referendum, and as a preferred outcome in a constitutional convention)
I put the argument against FPTP, for a non-theological approach, and (while i would also support pr-systems) for AV and a PR second chamber in this essay in 2007
How to reform the electoral system
http://www.fabians.org.uk/publications/extracts/call-for-lab-libdem-deal-on-alternative-vote
While favoured systems are much debated, the strategic challenge of how to bring about reform does not get the same attention.
There is now some danger, in my view, of getting a referendum and struggling to win it, which would be a disaster.
Electoral reform advocacy has all taken place within highly engaged/informed audiences. LC in particular should be discussing strategies not just for securing a referendum (which is looking a possible bet right now) but for winning it. The polls show majority support but it is pretty shallow.
The question of how to fight a popular and populist case for electoral reform could be an urgent one – to which LC might usefully devote some serious attention.
(eg what do we learn from referendums in other countries – canada, new zealand. what segments of the electorate are most open and which specific issues matter there. this is a pro-politics reform agenda but who makes it and how in an anti-politics atmosphere. if it is a plural campaign, how to prevent its diversity appearing chaotic. no doubt many other issues too)
People arguing against FPTP? There must be a Conservative government coming…
Is this “strong” governance?
Relative to what is usually produced by PR, yes. The question is rather whether one prefers the strong governance produced by FPTP. More intelligent arguments for PR would make the case that government based on compromise is better…
Linking extremely closely with the above…who do you think makes the government climb down?
‘kingmakers’ refers to the fact that small parties are required to form governments in the first place – it isn’t about governments backing down on this or that issue. Any voting system produces governements that do this from time to time. It’s called pluralism.
The main thing here is that with FPTP voters do know who they’re voting for, and the majority of people voted AGAINST the manifesto that we are currently following.
The majority against didn’t vote for the same thing. The main case against PR is that it produces governments and policy platorms that no-one voted for.
“FPTP is a constituency linked process of election, you know who your MP is and that’s important for accountability”
But does it work that way in practice?
Yup. I know who my FPTP MSP is but who’s my List MSP? Don’t have a fucking clue. PR puts more power in the hands of the party machine – end of.
“FPTP means a parliament that isn’t breaking down every 9 months to be re-elected”
Finally, this one is more a matter of opinion on which you would prefer.
Slight exaggeration. One of the worst examples is Italy where, pre-Berlusconi, a parliament lasted an average of a year. Which would you prefer?
The question you haven’t adressed is this: PR produces a system where it is feasible for a government to change without a single vote being cast. While this has happened here with Major and more recently with Brown, at least it is the same party that has continued governing. Not so in Ireland, for example, where there was a complete change of party government without an election – the Labour Party here being the ‘kingmakers’. I think people should drop this childish nonsense about voting systems being ‘fair’ and ask instead: what do you want your electoral system to do? If you want, and need, to represent a multiplicity of interests in a divided society, then PR is the thing. FPTP would be completely inappropriate, for example, in Northern Ireland. But if you want a mechanism that allows the electorate to throw out completely one bunch and choose another, then one shouldn’t overlook the benefits of FPTP.
“People arguing against FPTP? There must be a Conservative government coming…”
People have been arguing against it for a long time before that, hence why electoral reform was a manifesto pledge in 1997, later ignored. We thought only the Tories cared enough about it to keep it, we were wrong.
“I wish we could move beyond the same debate about whether we want FPTP or PR, realise that FPTP is not working and discuss what kind of PR we want.”
I’m with sunder on this; this article is here as part of an attempt to try to help put the nail in the argument that FPTP is even a credible system for fair government and politics. You’re right that the debate has to move on, but now is not the time to get bogged down in what type of PR. I’d personally prefer AV (well, actually single member constituency STV), but would gladly welcome either STV or AV+ if that’s what the public felt was best based on the arguments that can be put to them.
The time is now to push that the system has to change, and to really quite simply put the explanation of how it works out there and let people decide.
“The question you haven’t adressed is this: PR produces a system where it is feasible for a government to change without a single vote being cast.”
The fact you have to try and undermine this post with something I’ve clearly already stated shows that you’re clearly not here to have a meaningful debate. FPTP also produces a system where it is feasible for a government to change without a single vote to be cast. There are numerous county councils up and down the land that are a testament to this fact.
Feel free to keep repeating these same old fallacies, Shuggy, and to ignore that the problems you talk about also exist under FPTP, but less and less people are buying your, and your fellow FPTP advocates, misdirection these days.
I’m happy to consider FPTP abolition a done deal, or at least the philosophical arguments are over, and that is why I’m arguing to bring back multi-member University Constituencies.
I’m not sure it’d be a good idea to spend political capital fighting for it, but it’s a good idea nonetheless.
Actually, Shuggy, under the Westminster system it isn’t feasible for a government to change without a vote being cast without provoking a serious constitutional crisis, simply because such a move would require the reigning monarch’s assent in order to effect a transfer of the Royal Prerogative, something that hasn’t happened since, I think, the Gladstone/Disraeli era of the 19th century.
Yes, the Queen could theoretically assent to such a move but only at the risk of bringing down the monarchy in the process.
I wonder why the hue and cry about PR now maybe because Labour is going to lose the election.
I also find it very surprising that stalwarts from think tanks arguing for giving power to the electorate. I did not hear them screaming bloody murder or death of democracy when an elected Labour Leader who gave 3 election victories were removed by an internal coup and an unelected PM hoisted on us.
But its hard to remain objective when Ed Balls (the back stabber in chief for his Boss (GB) the destroyer of a successful labour party) being the ultimate fabian home boy – I guess the chance of being sidelined for a long time to come has made them try to go for PR now. Even in September 2008, the Fabian homeboy Balls was attacking Blair in a Fabian event with stalwarts such as Sunder, the crackpot Williams — so please don’t get surprised when I take things with a little bit of salt.
Thirdly, at the end of the day, a country needs a strong Government and a Strong PM. I know that is the very polar opposite of what most commentators on Liberal Conspiracy — but if you look at the history of 1970s — successive weak Governments made Britain almost a third world country where Unions ran amok and public services were ruined.
In a parliamentary democracy -where the executive is directly chosen from the parliament — the PR system is probably not the best option. I want to vote for a party whose manifesto I like and by casting a vote for a particular party — I am also endorsing my vote for the PM.
Under the PR system, it would end up being a horse trading affair where the voters choice rather than being upheld would be neglected.
If we want the parliament to be more powerful, then maybe we ought to look for a way of directly electing our PM and give them free choice in appointing a cabinet etc. which could be ratified by the parliament. Kind of like the German and the American system.
In our system the power of the MP has to be subject to the party whip because the legislature creates and sustains the executive and is not separate. And the MP has an obligation to support its leadership and manifesto.
I would also suggest bringing in a law which stops MPs from crossing over. If you wish to change sides as an MP, you would have to step down and run as a candidate in the by-election. It would stop opportunists such as Shaun Woodward’s of this world.
I also like the way how selectively the self proclaimed progressives (in my book loony lefties – the progressive movement within Labour died the day Blair was forced out of office) like to sprout how the electorate wants PR — the same electorate also wants a General Election and getting rid of GB as PM.
Hell the Guardian’s poll of labour activists show that 53% of them believe they were better under Blair. So why not act on the clear choices the electorate and labour party membership wants?
“Under the PR system, it would end up being a horse trading affair where the voters choice rather than being upheld would be neglected.”
This happens anyway under FPTP. The majority of people didn’t vote for the Labour manifesto, and “weak” governments are perfectly possible under FPTP too. I will repeat that legislation such as the recent bill from the justice department, and the 42 days legislation, was all watered down after a “horse trading affair” with party rebels and then external small parties to get their votes.
“I wonder why the hue and cry about PR now maybe because Labour is going to lose the election.”
Are you accusing Labour of organising this Expenses scandal so they can bring in PR? The only reasons Electoral Reform is on people’s radar is because Parliament isn’t working.
Try to not engage in ad hominem attacks when the isn’t much evidence to back up your claim…
Most Labour/Liberal/”insert generic progressive label” people have wanted a reformed Parliament for ages. And it looks like GB is leaning towards AV+, which is very much a modified FPTP system, not the full PR which anyone actually wants.
Shamit
You are talking nonsense, in my view, about the Fabians. Ed Balls is a member of the Fabian executive – he is there because he stands for election and all of our members vote to elect the Executive. So is Denis MacShane, Fiona MacTaggart, John Denham, Sadiq Khan, Anne Campbell and Austin Mitchell, on the same basis. If you can tell me which party faction they are all part of, I will be impressed. We are a democratically constituted political society. (Many of the members tend to vote less, I think, in terms of what political direction the Society should have, and perhaps more on the basis of the level of commitment and engagement MPs and others show to the Society).
Gordon Brown and Tony Blair have both been Fabian members for nearly 30 years. Blair frequently spoke for the Fabians, including as prime minister. Charles Clarke has often debated Ed Balls on Fabian platforms, so has Jon Cruddas.
Michael Meacher and John McDonnell debated Gordon Brown ahead of the last leadership transition. It was up to the MPs as to whether there was a contest or not, but I think we were the only organisation to put on a debate between potential candidates, as we also did for the deputy leadership. (We have a very small % of the electoral college ourselves as an affiliated society: we use it by balloting individual members so the vote is cast in the proportion they decide: can you suggest a more democratic approach? We didn’t – for that reason – endorse any candidate for the deputy contest as an organisation).
My opinions are my own. I am sure many but not all Fabians agree with the broad thrust of much of what I argue, but equally many may legitimately disagree about any specific issue – whether that is tax, electoral reform or whatever else.
The fact you have to try and undermine this post with something I’ve clearly already stated shows that you’re clearly not here to have a meaningful debate.
So disagreeing with you is ‘undermining’ your post? Don’t you think that’s a little childish? If I’m wrong, it would be nice if you could explain why instead of throwing your toys out of the pram. I’ve already acknowledged that FPTP can allow for a change of government without a vote being cast but a) it happens less often b) I can’t think of an example of this where it led to a different party being in power. If you have evidence to the contrary or if you think this is unimportant, could you come up with evidence and explanation please? I note you haven’t dealt with my other points either. Serious debate? If you can’t tackle these basic arguments, why should I take you seriously?
Disagreement is undermining in its very nature, if by the way you disagree you get off the concept of the post. The rather borish “arguments” about how PR is doomed to anti-democratic failure have been heard time and time again, this is about how FPTP has exactly the same issues inherent in it under our constitution…from a practical point of view that implementing PR could only, at worst, replicate and from a theoretical point of view which would suggest if we went for PR then we wouldn’t see the problems you suggest.
If you don’t take me seriously, fine, I stopped taking you seriously the moment you decided to bring an argument about PR to the table with the same old tactics of moving the goalposts, along with the highly hypocritical stance of both disliking a supposed unlinking of constituency relationships through PR yet supporting a system which encourages people to vote for the national party they approve of rather than the local candidate that’s best for the job.
The rather borish “arguments” about how PR is doomed to anti-democratic failure have been heard time and time again, this is about how FPTP has exactly the same issues inherent in it under our constitution
I think you mean ‘boorish’ – but quite why you think it is boorish to disagree with you and why this necessitates ‘moving the goalposts’ is something you have, yet again, failed to explain.
I stopped taking you seriously the moment you decided to bring an argument about PR to the table
Blah blah. If you weren’t so busy being so hyper-sensitive, you’d realise that I am, in fact, a PR sceptic – rather than someone who dismisses it out of hand. I was in favour of it, for example, for the Northern Ireland Assembly. I have also enjoyed Labour in Holyrood being confronted with the fact that they do not actually have the divine right to rule. Your failure to pay even the slightest bit of attention to how PR has worked in Scotland is one of the many annoying things about your post. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to you that you’re talking to someone who has the experience of living under government – both local and (Scottish) national – that is elected under two different forms of PR. I can only repeat my invitation: would you care to address the points I actually raise – which I think any fair-minded reader would agree are perfectly valid – rather than attacking me personally? Because if you persist in the latter, this will only re-enforce the impression that you are ill-equipped to respond to the former.
“I think you mean ‘boorish’”
Oh christ, I’m in the internet equivalent of the playground.
“would you care to address the points I actually raise”
Which points are you talking about? The ones already discussed in the main bulk of the original post, or the ones that anyone could see discussed by googling the subject of misleading arguments against PR from the last 5 years? I’ve already said, I’m not sitting here rehashing old arguments that have been and gone, nor am I repeating what I’ve already spent time writing above.
Reactions: Twitter, blogs
- sunny hundal
The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- thabet
RT @pickledpolitics The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- Simon Barrow
RT: @pickledpolitics The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- Lee Griffin
http://bit.ly/Q8Ovi – My new blog post, Why arguments against PR Elections also apply to our FPTP system
- Michael Calderbank
RT The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- sunny hundal
The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- thabet
RT @pickledpolitics The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- Simon Barrow
RT: @pickledpolitics The case against First Past the Post (voting) – good article by Lee Griffin – http://tr.im/nD7t
- Lee Griffin
http://bit.ly/Q8Ovi – My new blog post, Why arguments against PR Elections also apply to our FPTP system
- Why Universities need a say… « Left Outside
[...] Conspiracy’s Lee Griffin does a good job exposing some patent flaws in [...]
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