If it helps them decide to get rid of him, it may help the Lib Dems. I certainly won't be voting for them again until Clegg has gone.
I don't understand how it will stop tactical voting. If I was, say, a lib dem voter in a mostly labour/conservative constituency, I'd still have to vote tactically - constituencies generally have more than 5/6 candidates, and in the vast majority of cases, lib dem votes will be 3rd or 4th. Therefore, my first vote is more than likely to be the only one counted, even if I do vote lib dem, as the minority candidates will be eliminated first and the election probably decided before my second choice is considered. This is something I've been confused about for a while, am I right?
On a pure statistical level, our current system means very few votes actually count.
It eliminates tactical voting in the sense ...
Clegg is dead and buried anyway. The local elections will be another nail in his coffin, and even if he survives as long as the coalition does (even if that's all 5 years) he won't be leader after the next election. Electoral Reform, on the other hand, is a long-term decision. Voting either way just for the sake of one man is, IMHO, madness
What if a No vote does secure Clegg's early exit, but keeping FPTP allows the Tories to secure majority governments in 2015, 2020 and even 2025 on about 35% of the vote, when electoral reform would have at least given a hung parliament? you can't say that will be helping them? Nothing will help any party (Lib Dems or Labour) when the system is so heavily stacked against them. (Yes, Labour won huge majorities under FPTP, but don't forget the boundary changes now coming into place that favour the Tories)
He should have thought this through before getting into bed with them, then.
I honestly can't see why people will change their voting patterns, as I mentioned in my previous post re tactical voting. Maybe you can help me out, as I'm struggling to see the benefits of AV over FPTP (I don't like either system)
In a word, no.
In terms of keeping out a particular person, it doesn't matter if you put them 1st or 12th as long as they're above the party you want to keep out. It's all about reaching 50% - if they reach 50% then it doesn't matter which party your vote is for as they've got more than all the others put together.
It eliminates tactical voting in the sense that you can put your first choice for someone who you think has no chance but still express a preference out of the "big two" - currently your first choice party will be massively under-represented as voters will completely ignore them just to keep out Labour/Tories
Well for this parliament, he should have allowed the Tories to form a minority government instead of allowing a referendum on AV.If he hadn't got "into bed with them", there would be no referendum on any reform whatsoever, so I'm not really sure what relevance this point has to the AV debate?
As labour changed them to suit the Labour voters.Nothing will help any party (Lib Dems or Labour) when the system is so heavily stacked against them. (Yes, Labour won huge majorities under FPTP, but don't forget the boundary changes now coming into place that favour the Tories)
A "No" vote on Thursday will (rightly or wrongly) be taken as a statement that the population is happy with FPTP, particularly by a Conservative party who will take any excuse to avoid reform. They only gave us this referendum as a price to secure the coalition; there is no chance they'll ever offer another one as it stands.
But a yes vote will simply push voting reform off the agenda for the foreseeable future, and we will be lumbered with a system only slightly more fair than the existing shambles.
I don't understand how it will stop tactical voting. If I was, say, a lib dem voter in a mostly labour/conservative constituency, I'd still have to vote tactically - constituencies generally have more than 5/6 candidates, and in the vast majority of cases, lib dem votes will be 3rd or 4th. Therefore, my first vote is more than likely to be the only one counted, even if I do vote lib dem, as the minority candidates will be eliminated first and the election probably decided before my second choice is considered. This is something I've been confused about for a while, am I right?
Of course, he might yet find himself in that position, but the problem is that the two bigger parties are probably going to be less happy about granting a referendum on voting reform, given that we'll have only just had one.
Well for this parliament, he should have allowed the Tories to form a minority government instead of allowing a referendum on AV.
As labour changed them to suit the Labour voters.
I think it depends on how emphatic the decisions is. If it's only a small win either way it will be revsited, if it's a stonking win either way it won't be.
In theory, I think it would mean you put lib dem 1st, and everyone puts their first choice first, then it gives a true reflection of support in that the (perhaps) misconception that one party won't get enough to win will often cause them to get fewer votes because people don't think it will do any good, making it a self-fulfilling prophecy.