DCWoody
Posts: 1401
Joined: 10/27/2006 Status: offline
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UK General Election will be on May 6th. In the British System, there is not one national election but hundreds (650 this time) of local elections, to send a Member of Parliament to the House of Commons. The House of Commons then decides the Prime Minister. If any one party gets more than half of the commons, their leader is PM....otherwise, parties need to negotiate. This system tends to exaggerate the power of larger parties, and geographically concentrated parties, at the expense of tiny parties such as the Greens. In 2005: Labour (government since 1997) got 35.3% of the vote, 356 seats. Conservatives (government between 1979 and 1997) got 32.3% of the vote, 198 seats. Liberal Democrats (desendants of the Liberal party in govt mid 1800s to early 1900s) 22.1%, 62 seats. There are also many small and/or local parties, but those are the three that win multiple seats across the UK. The boundaries have changed slightly since then, expected to result in a few fewer labour seats if everyone voted the same way. Current polling has Labour ~27%, Conservatives ~34%, Liberal-Democrats~29% Which very roughly works out at Cons 271 seats, Labour 252, Lib-dems 98. Liberals losing out as their support is spread roughly evenly throughout the nation, where labours is strongly concentrated in towns& cities, and cons concentrated in England. This would lead to the liberal democrats getting to choose whether to ally with cons or labour to elect a PM...a very powerful position. With the economy &/or national debt as the overriding issue, each parties chancellor candidate (economics boss guy) has come under almost as much scrutiny as their candidate for PM. Cons have PM:Cameron, C:Osborne Libs have PM:Clegg, C:Cable Labour have PM:Brown, C:Darling....although it is extremely likely that Brown will be sacked after the GE, and another leader (quite possibly Darling) selected. The most popular PM is Clegg, with Brown by far the least, the most popular chancellor is Cable, with Osborne the least. So, depending on whether you're economically left or right (labour or cons), the prefered outcome of negotiations seems to be PM:Darling C:Cable or PM:Cameron C:Cable. Of course, there's still a week to go, Labour or Cons could both theoretically steal the whole thing and not need an alliance with the Libs (more likely cons could do that, labour are fucked).....in theory, so could Liberals...but they've already gained ~12 points in the last couple of weeks, they'd need to gain another 12 in 6 days....so...not likely. Not entirely sure where I was going with this post, but....there's no UKGE thread on the first page, so...now there is. I'm a bit of a political obsessive so feel free to ask me shit. Personally I'm torn between lib-dems & UKIP for my vote. PS:Americans, 'Liberal' in the UK has the same etymology as the word 'liberty', not as 'communist'.
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