Ninja Elephant
Doctor Elephant
- Feb 16, 2009
- 18,855
So, the point was that a party electing a new Prime Minister without going to the bother of putting it to a General Election? But, by your own original post, you've pointed out that 50% of the last 8 Prime Ministers have been properly elected to the position. Which is how it should be.
If Mrs May wants to stand down, that's fine - and for the Conservatives to hold their process of electing a new leader is fine, but when the Parliament is dissolved in order for Johnson to be duly appointed by The Queen, that's when there should be a General Election in my opinion. In this case, it would have been Johnson's Conservatives vs Corbyn's Labour and Jo Swinson's Liberal Democrats. Then a duly elected Prime Minister would have been appointed to form a government and SURELY, that's how it should be? Rather than Johnson inheriting the position.
Also, a big issue I have with the current system is that you are, in effect, supporting a party when you're voting on a local level. I live in Peter Kyle's Ward, so he gets my vote and that means I'm voting for Labour to be in government. That might not necessarily be who I want in power, so I'd have the option either of voting for my man and hoping he wins but his party doesn't overall, or voting for someone else in the hope they'll win nationally. It's far from perfect.
If Mrs May wants to stand down, that's fine - and for the Conservatives to hold their process of electing a new leader is fine, but when the Parliament is dissolved in order for Johnson to be duly appointed by The Queen, that's when there should be a General Election in my opinion. In this case, it would have been Johnson's Conservatives vs Corbyn's Labour and Jo Swinson's Liberal Democrats. Then a duly elected Prime Minister would have been appointed to form a government and SURELY, that's how it should be? Rather than Johnson inheriting the position.
Also, a big issue I have with the current system is that you are, in effect, supporting a party when you're voting on a local level. I live in Peter Kyle's Ward, so he gets my vote and that means I'm voting for Labour to be in government. That might not necessarily be who I want in power, so I'd have the option either of voting for my man and hoping he wins but his party doesn't overall, or voting for someone else in the hope they'll win nationally. It's far from perfect.