Title: Politics and the Electoral System
1Politics and the Electoral System
2The Story of an Election
- Labour Party leader Tony Blair transfers party
leadership to Gordon Brown at a Labour Party
conference in July 2007. - Brown becomes Prime Minister (PM) without having
stood for new election as the leader of his
party. - This is normal.
- Party leaders are selected within the political
party itself. - A party leader becomes PM because his party is
the majority party in parliament. - Labour has the majority in Parliament in 2007,
and Gordon Brown becomes PM. - Browns prime-minister-ship is formalized by the
Queen
3The Story of an Election
- On April 6, 2010, Brown calls a new parliamentary
election for May 6, 2010 - The campaign lasts only one month.
4The Story of an Election
- All Members of Parliament (MPs) stand for
election only in their own constituencies
(districts). - David Cameron (leader of the Conservative Party)
stands for election only in Whitney in
Oxfordshire - Gordon Brown (leader of the Labour Party) stands
for election only in Kirkcaldy-Caldenbeath in
Fife. - Big-name politicianslike Cameron and Brownalso
campaign in colleagues constituencies to boost
their parties fortunes. - Whichever party can form a majority in parliament
will put forward the next prime minister.
David Cameron in Whitney
Gordon Brown in Kirkcaldy
5Effect of Electoral Institutions
- How does the electoral system work?
- Single-member-district electoral system
- First-past-the-post
- (also called winner-take-all)
5
6Effect of Electoral Institutions
- Hypothetical
- 34 Labour
- 33 Conservative
- 33 Liberal-Democrat
- ?Single-member/First-past-the-post
- ? Labour wins all parliamentary seats
- ? Parties w/ combined backing of 2/3s of
- electorate win no seats at all
-
- Multi-member/Proporational Representation
- Would be a three-party system w/ roughly equal
representation -
6
7(No Transcript)
88
99
10British Popular Vote by Party, 1945-2010
11Look at declines in Labour (red line) popularity.
Why?
12Labour Party increasingly out of touch in 1970s
1980s
- Shift from manufacturing to services
- Fewer blue collar jobs
- Fewer union members identify with Old Labour
- Less union membership among white collar
workers lower - Hurt Old Labour
12
13Effect of Electoral Institutions on Political
Outcomes
- If Labour was so out-of-touch for 2 decades, why
wasnt it replaced by a third party? - Not for lack of trying by 3rd Parties
- Social Democratic Party (1981)
- Liberal Democrats (since 1988)
- But remember disproportionality
- And Labour finally adapts to post-industrial
society
13
14Tony Blair reinvents Labour Party
14
15Look at Labours (red line) comeback
16Look at Labours (red line) comeback until 2010
17The Story of an Election
- Labour loses
- 29 of vote down from 35
- Gordon Brown un-popular
- Conservatives gain
- 36 up from 32
- But lack a majority of seats (47)
- Liberal-Democrats about same (22-23)
- Join Conservatives in coalition government!
182010 Election Conservative Party improves, but
fails to win out-right majorityvery unusual
outcome
19Why would Lib-Dems want PR?
- Liberal Democrats pushed for 2011 Referendum on
Electoral Reform - Compromise
- Not proportional representation (PR)
- Alternate Vote (AV) also known as instant
run-off voting
20Lib-Dems get referendum on AV not PR!
- Mr Clegg said
- "AV is a baby step in the right direction only
because nothing can be worse than the status quo.
- If we want to change British politics once and
for all, we have got to have a quite simple
system in which everyone's votes count.
21Simulated outcome of proposed AV voting based
on 2010 survey data