Voting Systems Flashcards
What is the introduction to this essay?
- The electoral system that will be analysed will be First Past the Post (FPTP), which will be analysed to find out if the system provides fair representation.
What is the first point?
- FPTP usually produces majority governments.
Why is the FPTP system good for majority governments?
- This is because the system encourages mundane politics and it tends to avoid the un-democraticness of a joint coalition party.
Why is majority governments a good thing?
- This is a good thing as it allows the government party that has been elected to deliver on what they promised in their manifesto and won’t be delayed on having to negotiate with the other parties to come to a deal.
- It also allows voters’ views to be supported as the policies and rulings they wanted would be supported and passed through quickly.
- The voters would be happier, unlike the coalition government in which the people might not have voted for the party and still got into government, which is again very un-democratic.
What is the example to support majority governments?
- For example, since 1945 the FPTP system has always produced a one-party system and in 2019 Boris Johnson’s government won with a majority of 162 seats which then should allow for delivering what the public wants and what the party promised.
What is the analysis of majority governments?
- This evidence shows that the FPTP system which produces majority governments is effective as governments are able to get things done quicker,
- while the voters are satisfied as their preferred party is in government and is not tied with an opposite party that the people didn’t want, this increases democracy.
What is one disadvantage of FPTP?
- FPTP is at a disadvantage as it has limited proportionality.
Why is limited proportionality a disadvantage for FPTP?
- This is because the percentage of votes that parties may receive is not accurate to the number of seats they receive in Parliament.
- This can then provide unfair representation as votes are wasted due to the ‘winner takes all’ approach where the party that gets the majority gets lots of seats.
- This means that parties that had similar votes wouldn’t get as many seats as the party that won, meaning further unfair representation.
What is evidence to support this disadvantage for FPTP?
- For example, the Conservatives in the 2019 General Election, won 56% of the seats, but less than half of the votes.
- This means that the rest of the votes are unaccounted for, meaning that there is very unfair representation.
What is the analysis of this evidence for the disadvantage of FPTP?
- This shows that the FPTP electoral system does not provide fair representation
- as the number of seats does not account for the number of votes,
- meaning that half the country could feel unrepresented by its current government.
What is the second disadvantage of FPTP?
- FPTP usually produces a two-party system which means it’s harder for smaller parties to gain representation.
Why are two-party systems a disadvantage for FPTP? (1)
- This is because FPTP is more likely to reward parties with stronger regional support such as Labour in the North of England ad the Conservatives in the South, meaning that smaller parties like the Liberal Democrats which are spread throughout the region would get fewer votes.
What is example 1 for two-party systems?
- For example, almost every general election in the UK since 1945 has been between the Conservatives and the Labour Party with the deciding vote left up to the voters that choose the least bad party.
What is example 2 for two-party systems?
- In Scotland specifically, they only won 7% of the seats with 4% of the vote as they have stronger support throughout Scotland, in contrast to the Lib Dems gathering 2% of the seats and 12% of the vote due to the even spread of Lib Dems throughout Scotland
What is the analysis for these two examples of two-party systems being a disadvantage to FPTP?
- This provides very unfair representation as voters cannot get their favoured party in parliament as they’d have to vote for the least worst party
- meaning voter views cannot get through, adding to the undemocratic feeling, which then weakens the electoral system as a whole.