Discover Habbo's history
Treat yourself with a Secret Santa gift.... of a random Wiki page for you to start exploring Habbo's history!
Happy holidays!
Celebrate with us at Habbox on the hotel, on our Forum and right here!
Join Habbox!
One of us! One of us! Click here to see the roles you could take as part of the Habbox community!


View Poll Results: Do you think the United Kingdom should use proportional representation?

Voters
9. You may not vote on this poll
  • Yes, I believe we should swap to proportional representation.

    2 22.22%
  • No, I believe in the 'first past the post' system we currently use.

    7 77.78%
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 11
  1. #1
    -:Undertaker:-'s Avatar
    -:Undertaker:- is offline Habbox Hall of Fame Inductee
    Former Rare Values Manager
    HabboxForum Top Poster


    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Jerez, the Kingdom of Spain
    Country
    Spain
    Posts
    30,024
    Tokens
    869
    Habbo
    -:overtaker:-

    Latest Awards:

    Default Proportional Representation

    Proportional Representation is a method of voting in elections. What it means is that basically the number of votes you get = determines your power in parliament/the number of seats you have.

    The method we in the United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland currently use is known as 'first past the post' which basically means this;

    Below are some made up election results of the system we use;


    -----------------------------------------------------

    Aintree (counts as 1 seat)
    voters: 100,000

    Conservative recieve: 40,000
    Liberal Democrats recieve: 35,000
    Labour recieve: 20,000
    UKIP recieve: 5,000

    Winner: Conservatives, who gain 1 seat.

    -----------------------------------------------------

    Glasgow East (counts as 1 seat)
    voters: 5,000

    Conservative recieve: 1,000
    Liberal Democrats recieve: 1,000
    Labour recieve: 2,500
    UKIP recieve: 500

    Winner: Labour, who gain 1 seat.

    -----------------------------------------------------

    So that would mean so far in the General Election, both Labour & Conservative would have 1 seat each in the house of commons. The problem and injustice of this is, Labour only recieved 2,500 votes compared to the Conservatives 40,000 votes but both count equally as 1 point closer to forming a government.

    It also means that smaller parties such as UKIP who had no MP's in parliament despite recieving 2.38% of the national vote, although they do now have 1 MP, but only because a conservative defected to them in 2008.

    Below is a genuine graph from the 2005 General Election which clearly shows how Labour have too many seats in parliament whereas the Conservatives, Liberal Democrats & UKIP are under-represented. If we had proportional representation each party across the country would be equally represented according to how many votes they recieved in an election.



    So the question is, do you think the current system is fair or should we have proportional representation?


  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    6,615
    Tokens
    0

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Nope simple because it didn't work in Germany in the early 1900s because on laws were being passed, many coalitions were built to try and pass laws but by the time they got enough parties together the original law had changed, its stupid if you think about. It might be a 'fairer' way but its not practical.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Nazareth
    Posts
    3,547
    Tokens
    0

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    No. It's stupid. It's like putting loads of people with different opinions in one room and asking them to come up with same ideas.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    devonshire
    Posts
    16,952
    Tokens
    0

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Awful idea. I don't see how it would work, people wouldn't be able to come to conclusions. When Government need to act quick on certain situations this system would make it a lot harder due to parties not agreeing. Too many parties would want different things to happen.

  5. #5
    -:Undertaker:-'s Avatar
    -:Undertaker:- is offline Habbox Hall of Fame Inductee
    Former Rare Values Manager
    HabboxForum Top Poster


    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Jerez, the Kingdom of Spain
    Country
    Spain
    Posts
    30,024
    Tokens
    869
    Habbo
    -:overtaker:-

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    However it would mean a more fair representation if parliament, governments' would be more forced to stick by their manifesto or face defeat in a vote. I don't see how it is fair that Labour can get one seat in Scotland with only 5,000 people living in it whilst the conservatives in another constituancy could get 17,000 votes and still not even win that seat. That would mean the opinions of 5,000 people are placed over the opinion of 17,000 people.

    The problem now is once a government is in, it can turn it's back on its promises and manifesto as much as it likes and can force any law they want through parliament because of a bloated and unjust majority compared to other parties.


  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Billingham, near Middlesbrough
    Posts
    5,417
    Tokens
    0

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Definitely stick with FPTP. It's simple, effective and easy. Why would you want to make things more confusing and discourage participation in politics? At least this way everybody knows what they are doing and if you don't like it, don't play the game.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Posts
    24,818
    Tokens
    63,690
    Habbo
    FlyingJesus

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Fairer is not the same as better. Minority governments are a far more dangerous thing than majority governments of people you might not like
    | TWITTER |



    Blessed be
    + * + * + * +

  8. #8
    -:Undertaker:-'s Avatar
    -:Undertaker:- is offline Habbox Hall of Fame Inductee
    Former Rare Values Manager
    HabboxForum Top Poster


    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Jerez, the Kingdom of Spain
    Country
    Spain
    Posts
    30,024
    Tokens
    869
    Habbo
    -:overtaker:-

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    In a fair parliament with PR, a government would have win support from other parties, to make sure the laws benefit and are supported by a large section of society. If we had proportional representation I doubt acts like the Lisbon Treaty could be forced through - that is democracy.

    Proportional representation means that everyone gets a say, as they should in a democracy. Take the Lisbon Treaty for example, Labour promised a referendum on the treaty if they were voted in for a third term, they got voted in and what happend? - they knew they would lose so they rammed it through parliament.


  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    near Manchester
    Posts
    2,317
    Tokens
    0

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    If no party gets the most seats, all hell will break loose and smaller parties with dangerous views will be able to get in power more easily!!

  10. #10
    -:Undertaker:-'s Avatar
    -:Undertaker:- is offline Habbox Hall of Fame Inductee
    Former Rare Values Manager
    HabboxForum Top Poster


    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Jerez, the Kingdom of Spain
    Country
    Spain
    Posts
    30,024
    Tokens
    869
    Habbo
    -:overtaker:-

    Latest Awards:

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by PriceTags View Post
    If no party gets the most seats, all hell will break loose and smaller parties with dangerous views will be able to get in power more easily!!
    If we got to a hung parliament then they would not be able to unite, the BNP are partly socialist from what I gather and UKIP are the opposite. The only coalitions being formed would be ones like below;

    Conservative & UKIP
    Conservative & Liberal Democrats
    Labour & Liberal Democrats
    Labour & Green Party
    Liberal Democrats & Green Party

    Besides, if a 'dangerous' party did get it, it would not be able to do anything. Do you really think the army, NATO & the world would stand by while we set up concentration camps, I know they wouldn't. That was Europe in the early 1900's, not the twenty first century.


Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •