Dug Briderider
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Dug Briderider back in the day 13 years forum service, now exiled
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Post by Dug Briderider on Sept 28, 2021 11:29:17 GMT
It will be another year before Labour will have a chance to adopt PR as a Policy, lets hope they know who to shift. I don't buy the idea that's its an unnecessary distraction as it has such far reaching implications. I do agree that it is more complicated and different versions suit different countries.
I live surrounded by Con/Lib marginal areas and under PR if we had larger constituencies that sent multiple MP's the they would probably send a good potion of each, but unfortunately its all Tory.
I can see that Labour are scared of loosing their consistent runner up prize and perhaps encouraging splinter factions, but Keir and rest of them need a flagship policy and cause to fight and win the next election. Its difficult to argue against PR especially if you keep it vague like Brexit was.
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Post by simple on Sept 28, 2021 11:38:58 GMT
I think part of the problem of rejecting PR in principle is that it just gives the SNP, Greens and Lib Dems another way to project themselves as more radical and forward thinking than lumbering old establishment Labour
(Whatever the truth of the matter either way)
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razz
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Post by razz on Sept 28, 2021 11:39:22 GMT
That slim majority Brexit vote still pisses me off. Actual anger
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Dgzter
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Post by Dgzter on Sept 28, 2021 11:43:30 GMT
With regard to the Labour Party conference: the seemingly relentless deification of Corbyn within certain quarters of the left continues to bemuse.
What exactly is the proposed end game for these people in terms of Corbyn, specifically? Do they genuinely expect to see him at the helm of the party ever again? Or, even if that came to pass, that the wider British public would eventually deem him electable?
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Dug Briderider
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Dug Briderider back in the day 13 years forum service, now exiled
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Post by Dug Briderider on Sept 28, 2021 11:58:11 GMT
That slim majority Brexit vote still pisses me off. Actual anger As well as all the larger reasons, I see it as stripping me of EU citizenship. I take it personally and I can't see me ever getting over it ….but there's another thread for that, still after 5 years and a new forum it's raw enough to deserve it own thread.
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Post by imamazed on Sept 28, 2021 11:58:37 GMT
With regard to the Labour Party conference: the seemingly relentless deification of Corbyn within certain quarters of the left continues to bemuse. What exactly is the proposed end game for these people in terms of Corbyn, specifically? Do they genuinely expect to see him at the helm of the party ever again? Or, even if that came to pass, that the wider British public would eventually deem him electable? Yeh, it's odd isn't it. I'm guessing it's just due to lack of a suitable successor? Pidcock lost her seat, RLB had her go, Rayner is too close to leadership now and so isn't 'pure'? I would consider myself 'of the left', very broadly speaking, and I do think 'Momentum types' did bring some positive things to Labour (getting non-voters out to vote, getting young people involved in politics, mobilising activity, etc.), but I have to say I think there is a substantial element of 'the left' that doesn't actually want to win, that just wants to protest things. They just want anyone who isn't Corbyn or his crew to lose and to then say 'I told you so'. So by holding on to Corbyn in the meantime they can argue it's got worse rather than better.
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Post by imamazed on Sept 28, 2021 12:00:34 GMT
I think part of the problem of rejecting PR in principle is that it just gives the SNP, Greens and Lib Dems another way to project themselves as more radical and forward thinking than lumbering old establishment Labour (Whatever the truth of the matter either way) Fair point, but I really don't think electoral systems matter to the vast majority of the population.
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minimatt
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Post by minimatt on Sept 28, 2021 12:04:46 GMT
Fair point, but I really don't think electoral systems matter to the vast majority of the population.
There was some YouGov polling, I'll try to dig it out, on the whole "send in the army to take over fuel deliveries" thing on what areas people would be happy to see the army assume responsibility for - something like 25% were happy with the army taking over the the functions of government - "let's just forget the whole elections thing, military dictatorship for me!"
edit: struggling to find this now, so perhaps put in category of "heard it from some bloke down the pub"
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Dug Briderider
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Dug Briderider back in the day 13 years forum service, now exiled
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Post by Dug Briderider on Sept 28, 2021 12:07:09 GMT
I think part of the problem of rejecting PR in principle is that it just gives the SNP, Greens and Lib Dems another way to project themselves as more radical and forward thinking than lumbering old establishment Labour (Whatever the truth of the matter either way) Fair point, but I really don't think electoral systems matter to the vast majority of the population. Stats show membership of the EU didn't matter to a lot of people, until it did, not asking for a referendum on this though GE win is enough
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dogbot
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Post by dogbot on Sept 28, 2021 12:13:47 GMT
With regard to the Labour Party conference: the seemingly relentless deification of Corbyn within certain quarters of the left continues to bemuse. What exactly is the proposed end game for these people in terms of Corbyn, specifically? Do they genuinely expect to see him at the helm of the party ever again? Or, even if that came to pass, that the wider British public would eventually deem him electable? All they can see is "teh socialism", which apparently blinds them to the hopelessly inept incompetence and general all round lack of leadership skills or ability to make any sort of valid decision. About anything, ever. I'm all for a broad church Labour party, but it's hard to stay focused when there's quite such a large bunch of fuckwits making the most noise.
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Post by grizzly on Sept 28, 2021 13:28:31 GMT
PR systems aren't a panacea in that respect. Generally speaking, yes they allow a broader selection of parties voted for to wield power. But how those parties are put together is not usually a democratic process and can still disregard huge swathes of votes. There's a good argument that FPTP is the least worst option, but I suspect the 'best' options are hybrid models that become needlessly complicated. I disagree vehemently that FPTP is the "least worst" option nor that any good argument can be made in favour of it, even though I do live in a country that has relatively vague coalition-making rules (basically the biggest party gets the initiative but after that it gets messy). Even with all the trappings of PR, I still think a coalition of a few parties that ultimately got the majority of the vote is still more democratic then a party with a minority of the vote getting all the power. Arguably the way to make it more democratic is to have an electable head of state (like the president) and put him in charge of spearheading the coalition talks and not much else (which iirc is the german system). It creates its own problems: The dutch political culture leans towards conservative centrism becuase it's the centre-leaning parties that are most likely to be able to work together, and because they have to work together the more ambitious plans of any of those parties get watered down a bit. An additional problem is that if any participating political party feels like one of their other parties did something that they can politically exploit, there is a chance for them to scupper the deal entirely and a new election will have to be called. On the other hand, that also means that nobody can do anything too crazy. I'd invite you to look back on the past few years of Theresa May or Boris Johnson rule and see if there's anything that you would say should've lead to the government resigning. In a coalition system, that actually can happen, whilst with a one-party system, the party actually has incentive to stay in power until their bad PR has been forgotten.
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Post by simple on Sept 28, 2021 13:49:16 GMT
Fair point, but I really don't think electoral systems matter to the vast majority of the population. Stats show membership of the EU didn't matter to a lot of people, until it did, not asking for a referendum on this though GE win is enough I think at this point for Labour is more about statements of intent than anything else. If Starmer had been able to say that they aspire to a £15 minimum wage and a more proportional voting system but that it would be a long road to get there then he could look ambitious while managing expectations.
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Post by imamazed on Sept 28, 2021 14:03:32 GMT
PR systems aren't a panacea in that respect. Generally speaking, yes they allow a broader selection of parties voted for to wield power. But how those parties are put together is not usually a democratic process and can still disregard huge swathes of votes. There's a good argument that FPTP is the least worst option, but I suspect the 'best' options are hybrid models that become needlessly complicated. I disagree vehemently that FPTP is the "least worst" option nor that any good argument can be made in favour of it, even though I do live in a country that has relatively vague coalition-making rules (basically the biggest party gets the initiative but after that it gets messy). Even with all the trappings of PR, I still think a coalition of a few parties that ultimately got the majority of the vote is still more democratic then a party with a minority of the vote getting all the power. Arguably the way to make it more democratic is to have an electable head of state (like the president) and put him in charge of spearheading the coalition talks and not much else (which iirc is the german system). It creates its own problems: The dutch political culture leans towards conservative centrism becuase it's the centre-leaning parties that are most likely to be able to work together, and because they have to work together the more ambitious plans of any of those parties get watered down a bit. An additional problem is that if any participating political party feels like one of their other parties did something that they can politically exploit, there is a chance for them to scupper the deal entirely and a new election will have to be called. On the other hand, that also means that nobody can do anything too crazy. I'd invite you to look back on the past few years of Theresa May or Boris Johnson rule and see if there's anything that you would say should've lead to the government resigning. In a coalition system, that actually can happen, whilst with a one-party system, the party actually has incentive to stay in power until their bad PR has been forgotten. Good post, and fair comment on governments resigning. 5 years ago I wouldn't have agreed with that point, and I think that in the past governments would have been much quicker to sack ministers or even be voted down (including votes from their own party) if the sort of nonsense that has happened recently had occurred. Perhaps that is a downside of the electoral system - just one that the Tories have only recently begun to take advantage of. Ultimately, I'd believe they'd eventually be punished in the ballot box for this, but they're re-writing the rules on democracy itself, never mind the electoral system. There's advantages and disadvantages to every system, and you can certainly make a case against FPTP based on that, but I don't think you can seriously suggest that FPTP has no arguments in favour of it. Although not a total safeguard, it does tie parties more rigorously to manifesto pledges. It ensures parties have a broad base of support. It prevents extreme parties from gaining footholds (I very much doubt UKIP could have gained the traction they did here without the EU elections). It almost exclusively allows the party with the most votes to form a government. It provides excellent geographical links to power, and it's easy to understand. That's not to say countries with FPTP haven't had any issues with extremism, broken promises, 'wasted votes', centralism etc - you can't safeguard against all that with just an electoral system. But they are strengths of the system in and of itself.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 28, 2021 15:28:13 GMT
£15 p/h minimum wage is a pipe dream right now, it would be great as I'm only on £22k a year
Once again the corbyn cultists on the r/labouruk sub reddit show how you can't take them serious like old h1ggy (RIP you utter loon)
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Post by Vandelay on Sept 28, 2021 15:33:58 GMT
[(I very much doubt UKIP could have gained the traction they did here without the EU elections). I disagree that UKIP gaining seats in the EU parliament and the success of other anti-EU MEPs from the UK demonstrates flaws in the voting system. It shows the abysmal political education we have and the completely ambivalence to EU that most people had. Our turnout for EU elections is far below the EU average. We are mostly about 35%, with 1999 being a particularly bad year with only 24%! Average EU turnout isn't great either, but still mostly at around 50%. The only people that really took note of EU elections were people that wanted to destroy it. The majority of people wouldn't be able to name a single MEP, outside of Farage (even then, I expect most people wouldn't even know that's what he was). Likely where this myth that the EU is all unelected bureaucrats stems from. I agree with those that say FPTP is absymal and I would have been thrilled to see Labour backing a revised system. However, actual education of how our parliamentary system works, as well as other systems, would be a bigger step in correcting the problems we have.
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Post by simple on Sept 28, 2021 15:37:35 GMT
£15 p/h minimum wage is a pipe dream right now, it would be great as I'm only on £22k a year Once again the corbyn cultists on the r/labouruk sub reddit show how you can't take them serious like old h1ggy (RIP you utter loon) They’ll be digging the vaults for the old Mail commenters go-tos ZaNuLabour / New Liebore next
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Post by imamazed on Sept 28, 2021 15:59:28 GMT
[(I very much doubt UKIP could have gained the traction they did here without the EU elections). I disagree that UKIP gaining seats in the EU parliament and the success of other anti-EU MEPs from the UK demonstrates flaws in the voting system. It shows the abysmal political education we have and the completely ambivalence to EU that most people had. Our turnout for EU elections is far below the EU average. We are mostly about 35%, with 1999 being a particularly bad year with only 24%! Average EU turnout isn't great either, but still mostly at around 50%. The only people that really took note of EU elections were people that wanted to destroy it. The majority of people wouldn't be able to name a single MEP, outside of Farage (even then, I expect most people wouldn't even know that's what he was). Likely where this myth that the EU is all unelected bureaucrats stems from. The education point is a good one, and of course there are a huge range of factors that influence voting and voting intention. I think there did used to be a valid case for saying that that EU parliament's role was too weak and the electorate knew that, but of course turnout didn't really increase as its powers grow at the expense of the Commission. It's impossible to know for sure how different things would be without EU elections, or if they were elected via a different means, but the huge size of constituencies and the electoral system did mean they could profit off short-term support. This built them political and media currency that never really died. Without their performances in EU elections, you don't get UKIP MEPs being legitimised on the BBC, building a base around the country and becoming known in households. It's more nuanced than just saying under FPTP there would be no UKIP or extremism, or that the EU elections caused their rise, but yeh, I think it's a big factor.
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Post by CHPxtreme on Sept 28, 2021 16:55:01 GMT
To say that the great advantage of FPTP is that it stopped UKIP gaining any traction is possibly a bit undemocratic. They were consistently polling quite high, but only the European elections reflected that. Fundamentally, a lot of voters felt (or feel) that UKIP represented their views, and in a democratic society that should be reflected in elections.
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X201
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Post by X201 on Sept 28, 2021 17:04:46 GMT
Our glorious PM has finally broken cover now the worst seems to be receding: “Only fill up when you need to”
You blusterwaffling arse! What do you think people are trying to do?
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Post by stuz359 on Sept 28, 2021 17:31:01 GMT
My entire adult life, only three votes I have cast have had any meaning. I live in probably one of the safest Labour seats in the country, so promptly ignored by pretty much all parties. The EU elections, UKIP gained traction there because no one before 2015 took the EU seriously or gave much thought to it at all (the most googled term in this country AFTER the referendum was 'what is the EU?'). Local elections are a bit of a joke, more of a popularity contest for the Westminster party than (or protest vote) than actually a meaningful vote for local democracy.
So the three votes that counted were, the Euro Ref (voted against), AV referendum (Voted against) and the Brexit referendum (voted against leaving). I turned 18 in 1999, so in 22 years of being able to vote, three have had some meaning.
A bit sad in a democracy.
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Post by TheSaint on Sept 28, 2021 17:35:24 GMT
Our glorious PM has finally broken cover now the worst seems to be receding: “Only fill up when you need to” You blusterwaffling arse! What do you think people are trying to do? I don't know why the media let him get away with these 2min pool clips where nobody can ask any questions. They should be demanding a full press conference and refusing to show these stupid clips.
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Post by simple on Sept 28, 2021 17:59:54 GMT
Alright Trotsky
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Post by clemfandango on Sept 28, 2021 18:39:21 GMT
I was speaking to somebody at my work this Morning who lives in Bolton. She said she sent her husband out to get petrol yesterday and he queued for 45 minutes as people were filling their car and a few canisters at the same time. He said it was carnage and everybody was kicking off. I can guarantee that everyone of those tits filling canisters plus their car voted for brexit....
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Dgzter
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Post by Dgzter on Sept 28, 2021 18:58:13 GMT
Nothing says sovereignty like a dented jerrycan full of panic and despair.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Sept 28, 2021 19:04:45 GMT
Utter morons are filling plastic water bottles with fuel
We need to convert cars to run on soverunty, that will fix the problems
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Post by technoish on Sept 28, 2021 22:18:04 GMT
I don't get why they didn't put a ban on filling cans.
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Post by Psychotext on Sept 29, 2021 0:02:48 GMT
I don't get why they didn't put a ban on filling cans. You'd basically immediately fuck anyone that does groundwork (and a whole host of other jobs). It's the usual shit though, some pictures of people taking the piss and the assumption is that most people are doing it. They're not.
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Post by Bill in the rain on Sept 29, 2021 5:08:52 GMT
How much do the (arbitrary) boundaries for election districts affect voter representation in the UK these days?
Over here, the vote of someone in the countryside is often worth up to 2.5 times the vote of someone living in the city... and all the old people live in the coutryside and always vote for the same party. Which is what makes them invulnerable, no matter what they do.
I seem to remember the Tories have pulled a few boundary-moving tricks over the years, but I don't remember the impact. I'm also unsure whether the Electoral Commission or someone has the power to force the boundaries to be redrawn to better equalize the value of people's votes.
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Post by Reviewer on Sept 29, 2021 5:46:21 GMT
And the answer is yes, anti Etonian prejudice is ok. They think they’re better than everyone else because their parents bought them a private education, running the country is a game for them.
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X201
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Post by X201 on Sept 29, 2021 5:48:46 GMT
Rumblings that the left may break away from Labour and form their own party with magic grandpa.
I really hope they do, but they haven’t got the balls to do it. Who else would they blame for their one true way party not winning?
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