My point entirelyLabour have moved a long way since shooting Jeremy Corbyn.
My point entirelyLabour have moved a long way since shooting Jeremy Corbyn.
My point was that if you tried to interpret the graph(s) by interpolating between the start and the end in order to illustrate a steady decline, you would fail.Come on Harry, you'd laugh at at school child for that interpretation of a graph!
You don't draw a trend line by taking the first and last value and drawing a line between them.
And the statement was that the decline began after the postwar period. You've started your line in 1924.
"You can prove anything with statistics" was never supposed to mean that you can just wilfully misinterprete them to fit your argument.
Intersting and thoughtful commentsI didn’t "abuse" FPTP, unless there's some set of voting rules I’m unaware of, and that I unwittingly contravened. Without some form of PR, many of us are forced into tactical voting. The alternative, sadly followed by millions of would-be voters, is to stay at home on election day because their preferred party has no chance of winning.
Not sure what’s meant by 'owning the franchise'. But there may be a reason why of the 45 countries in Europe, the one solitary nation that doesn’t use some form of PR is the UK. And even within Britain, Scotland uses PR for its own devolved assembly. Not sure about Wales.
TBH, I’m not sure what "voting rubric" means. Do you mean what voting system should be used to gauge public opinion in a vote on a change to our electoral system? I’d favour a simple question — Would you like our electoral system to be changed to a form of proportional representation? Yes or No.
If the majority is Yes, then we convene a commission to shortlist the options. This can be done quickly as it’s been discussed to death over the years. I personally don’t think it’s necessary to ask people to vote again on the particular flavour of PR we should have. That’s too technical. It’s the big principle that’s under scrutiny, not the fine detail.
It's worth remembering that the vote at the Labour Party conference a couple of years back, to introduce some form of PR/STV, was simply ignored by Sir Keir and his colleagues. I found that scandalous.
(You’ve lost me on the Brexit referendum question. Regardless of whether we got the result we wanted, the voting system was wholly democratic from what I can see. Some people said it should have required a two thirds majority but even that, I’d have to say, is not really democratic. Suppose 65% had voted for Brexit — should the 35% be allowed to win the day? Not for me.)
I have to say I find your verment defence of FPTP at little bit odd. Surely everyone can see that the political system we have at the current time serves nobody's interests particularly well, it returns government after government that nobody particularly likes, and very few prime ministers that people look back on with fondness, There may be a whole raft of reasons for that, but it does appear that the whole system needs looking at, and as part of that a change to the voting system shouldn't be off the table to try to make it more representative. The famous saying comes to mind 'Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results'.Intersting and thoughtful comments
1. If the rest of Europe does it we should we not do it? This is an interesting argument. The rebuttal may be 'but we are not like the rest of Europe, which is why we left the EU'. As a strong remainer I would be conflicted by this reasoning, were it not for the fact that although the majority approach is usually the best, this is not always the case, and it is OK to make up one's own mind. For similar reasons I never became a fan of The Osmonds or East Enders. Or Mrs Thatcher.
2/3. Thank goodness the leadership has the confidence to ignore motions passed at conference. It has been one of the PLP's strengths to have ignored some of the silly arse motions passed at conference over the years.
Incidentally, for those who consider that PR would reverse the 'steady decline' in voter turnout in UK GEs, let's take a look at Germany (which has PR). Oh dear. A 'steady' fall in turnout since 1983. To fix this threat to democracy perhaps they should consider FPTP.
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I am no tory but the tory supporters seems to be jubilant when Johnson was elected.I have to say I find your verment defence of FPTP at little bit odd. Surely everyone can see that the political system we have at the current time serves nobody's interests particularly well, it returns government after government that nobody particularly likes, and very few prime ministers that people look back on with fondness, There may be a whole raft of reasons for that, but it does appear that the whole system needs looking at, and as part of that a change to the voting system shouldn't be off the table. The famous saying comes to mind 'Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results'.
It's not the voting system that is feeding us with governments we don't like. It's the party system that supplies us with a conveyor belt of like-minded career politicians.I have to say I find your verment defence of FPTP at little bit odd. Surely everyone can see that the political system we have at the current time serves nobody's interests particularly well, it returns government after government that nobody particularly likes, and very few prime ministers that people look back on with fondness, There may be a whole raft of reasons for that, but it does appear that the whole system needs looking at, and as part of that a change to the voting system shouldn't be off the table to try to make it more representative. The famous saying comes to mind 'Insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results'.
I really didn't. I rejected the claim that it was 'a ridiculous appointment', and explained why Labour needed an insider -- a civil servant, if you will -- or someone with governmental experience in order to transition from opposition to government.All true.
Yet you suggested, elsewhere, that Sue Gray had done a good job. You've just illustrated exactly why she hadn't.
The budgetWhats the “big set piece”?
Jenrick is awful. A poundshop Farage, Badenoch policy wise is bad too...... this massive act of Tory stupidity is a great day for the Labour party.New old labour may be annoying and dull (they are) but they have a long way to fall before anyone is going to launch an in-depth analysis of the shower in opposition.
The Tories still look like the mad lot who advocated sniffing bleach while wearing a paper bag over the head to cure Covid 3 years ago, and whose main policies are to repeal human rights legislation and bayonet dinghies.
Badenoch is interesting. But she's still a vile tory ****: "In 2018, Badenoch admitted that, a decade earlier, she had hacked into the website of Harriet Harman, who was then Deputy Leader of the Labour Party; Harman accepted Badenoch's apology, but the matter was reported to Action Fraud, the UK's cyber crime reporting centre"
A bit like the US Election being on November 5th - famous for gunpowder, treason and plot.At least the Tories' sense of humour is improving. They're announcing their new leader on 2 November , The Day Of The Dead
Doh.The budget
I also blame much of the electorate - it was the 'great British voters' who gave us Brexit and Boris Johnson.It's not the voting system that is feeding us with governments we don't like. It's the party system that supplies us with a conveyor belt of like-minded career politicians.
So in summary the Tory great and good (pardon!) have decided that their future lays in the hands of two unelectable fucktards. Jenrick is just a turd in human form and Badenoch, who if she were white, would be taking pelters for being a racist bitch.Jenrick is awful. A poundshop Farage, Badenoch policy wise is bad too...... this massive act of Tory stupidity is a great day for the Labour party.
The only upside of Badenoch is that she is a black woman and from the party that has had all 3 female PMs, that alone is a positive in 2024 UK when contrasting to Labour which is always white men.
And i’ve heard there is a whole bunch who vote for people you don’t like, can you believe that, shockingI also blame much of the electorate - it was the 'great British voters' who gave us Brexit and Boris Johnson.
I do sometimes wonder if there should be some kind of political intelligence/awareness test before people should be allowed to vote. Unpopular and elitist, I know, but it really depresses me that many people give such simplistic, superficial or shallow reasons for how they vote; I once knew a woman in a low-paid job who said she voted Conservative because she liked Margaret Thatcher's hairstyle, and thought she looked 'nice'.
Or vote for a party simply because that's what 'their' newspaper tells them to do.
I have repeatedly advocated a political literacy test for budding voters.I also blame much of the electorate - it was the 'great British voters' who gave us Brexit and Boris Johnson.
I do sometimes wonder if there should be some kind of political intelligence/awareness test before people should be allowed to vote. Unpopular and elitist, I know, but it really depresses me that many people give such simplistic, superficial or shallow reasons for how they vote; I once knew a woman in a low-paid job who said she voted Conservative because she liked Margaret Thatcher's hairstyle, and thought she looked 'nice'.
Or vote for a party simply because that's what 'their' newspaper tells them to do.
I have suggested similar.I have repeatedly advocated a political literacy test for budding voters.
whereas PR also delivers a government nobody particulary likes. PR isn't supposed to deliver a government you like, its suppose to give better representation, with the theory that's least objectionable to the electorate.I have to say I find your verment defence of FPTP at little bit odd. Surely everyone can see that the political system we have at the current time serves nobody's interests particularly well, it returns government after government that nobody particularly likes,
I suppose certain types of people like the idea that "we the elite" get a say in what goes on while "they the common people" have to do as they are told by "we the elite". They used the same logic to ban women from voting, strangely enough - they didn't think they were sufficiently savvy to be worth a vote.I also blame much of the electorate - it was the 'great British voters' who gave us Brexit and Boris Johnson.
I do sometimes wonder if there should be some kind of political intelligence/awareness test before people should be allowed to vote. Unpopular and elitist, I know, but it really depresses me that many people give such simplistic, superficial or shallow reasons for how they vote; I once knew a woman in a low-paid job who said she voted Conservative because she liked Margaret Thatcher's hairstyle, and thought she looked 'nice'.
Or vote for a party simply because that's what 'their' newspaper tells them to do.