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Politics and the Electoral System

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Politics and the Electoral System The Story of an Election Labour Party leader Tony Blair transfers party leadership to Gordon Brown at a Labour Party conference in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Politics and the Electoral System


1
Politics and the Electoral System

2
The 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

3
The Story of an Election
  • On April 6, 2010, Brown calls a new parliamentary
    election for May 6, 2010
  • The campaign lasts only one month.

4
The 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
5
Effect of Electoral Institutions
  • How does the electoral system work?
  • Single-member-district electoral system
  • First-past-the-post
  • (also called winner-take-all)

5
6
Effect 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
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10
British Popular Vote by Party, 1945-2010
11
Look at declines in Labour (red line) popularity.
Why?
12
Labour 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
13
Effect 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
14
Tony Blair reinvents Labour Party
14
15
Look at Labours (red line) comeback
16
Look at Labours (red line) comeback until 2010
17
The 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!

18
2010 Election Conservative Party improves, but
fails to win out-right majorityvery unusual
outcome
19
Why 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

20
Lib-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.

21
Simulated outcome of proposed AV voting based
on 2010 survey data
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