Despite the dissatisfaction about the UK's political system on this board there really does not seem to be any discernible appetite for change amongst the UK public. The Lib Dems and Greens lobby for change without any success whatsoever.
What special power do you possess to state "there should be development"? Is that a law of the universe or just a Cologne viewpoint?I can say that the British system can develop into anything it wants to be Leo.....but there should be a development, because democracy is a process and not an end product. If you want something to be 'living' and 'breathing' then you should be thinking constantly about how to enlarge and improve it - otherwise it will stagnate. The same applies to any other country but we are mostly concerned with Britain here - I could give a list of reasons why Germany is not a 'living' 'breathing' democracy as well, but it would bore people to tears.
I can count the number of people who seem to have a problem with the UK's political system on this board on the fingers of one hand.Despite the dissatisfaction about the UK's political system on this board there really does not seem to be any discernible appetite for change amongst the UK public. The Lib Dems and Greens lobby for change without any success whatsoever.
I can count the number of people who seem to have a problem with the UK's political system on this board on the fingers of one hand.
In the population at large PR has been mooted since I was in nappies but there has never been a sufficient dissatisfaction with FPTP to bring about a switch to it
The expression ''Democracy is a process not an end product'' applies to life itself Leo. Like life itself everything created by man is subject to birth, growth, fruition, decay and death - there is no exception to this. You cannot freeze things in time, and say 'we have arrived'. So the minute you say 'we have arrived' you have missed it because the journey is the point, not the arriving. How do you measure public dissatisfaction Leo ? By non voters ? Or by other means....if so what ? One of the central problems is that we are pulling in different directions - you think that as long as you can vote between a limited range of options once every 5 years that this is enough. You presume that others think the same because they are not rioting on the streets about it.What special power do you possess to state "there should be development"? Is that a law of the universe or just a Cologne viewpoint?
Another oft repeated mantra of yours "democracy is a process and not an end product". Is that so good you need to keep repeating it? I do not agree. Democracy is not a process or an end product. It is a system that can be used to help form a government and like all systems it is subject to change.
I do not want democracy to be living and breathing. I simply want to be able to vote if I choose. If democracy needs to be changed there will be public pressure to change it.
I do not care about Germany - or frankly other countries forms of democracy - so long as the people there are happy so am I.
I think you will find that the system which was offered as an alternative in the referendum on that was too, unnecessarily complicated. There are far simpler forms of PR. available.It is fair to say the lack of support for political parties that push PR and the level of apathy shown in the recent Alternative Vote referendum clearly shows a lack of demand for a change in our political system.
Just because life is a process does not mean everything is. Democracy COULD be an immutable fact. The fact that it does change simply reflects that sometimes people want change - it is neither good nor bad in itself. I have only heard you use the phrase "we have arrived" - and that to deny it. Nobody else is suggesting "we have arrived". We are simply where we are - whether that changes this year, next year or sometime in the future is down to what people want.The expression ''Democracy is a process not an end product'' applies to life itself Leo. Like life itself everything created by man is subject to birth, growth, fruition, decay and death - there is no exception to this. You cannot freeze things in time, and say 'we have arrived'. So the minute you say 'we have arrived' you have missed it because the journey is the point, not the arriving. How do you measure public dissatisfaction Leo ? By non voters ? Or by other means....if so what ? One of the central problems is that we are pulling in different directions - you think that as long as you can vote between a limited range of options once every 5 years that this is enough. You presume that others think the same because they are not rioting on the streets about it.
Sixty years are plenty for advocates of PR to drum up support for a system they want - if they could find such support. Maybe it does not exist because people are happy with FPTP. I think Churchill said something like democracy is the worst form of government but is the best we have. Perhaps the same applies to FPTP.I think you will find that the system which was offered as an alternative in the referendum on that was too, unnecessarily complicated. There are far simpler forms of PR. available.
Frankly I don't think the UK public give a monkeys about other countries form of voting. They are used to what we have and it is good enough to get 70% of the electorate voting which in my book is a great turnout.I think the recent Belgium example and now the German PR government teetering after only a few months in existence is hardly going to impress the UK public to change. I think the onus is on those looking to change the UK's system to show where there is any sign of interest, might be difficult.
Frankly I don't think the UK public give a monkeys about other countries form of voting. They are used to what we have and it is good enough to get 70% of the electorate voting which in my book is a great turnout.
The problem is Leo that you do not know the reasons the 30% have for not voting. If you then add to this the numbers of people in the UK. who vote tactically ie. not necessarily for the party of their choice, but rather 'against' the Tories or Labour then you have a large number of alienated voters. The lack of PR. means that many people do not vote for the party of their choice, but rather for the party which can stop the party they dislike from taking a seat.Frankly I don't think the UK public give a monkeys about other countries form of voting. They are used to what we have and it is good enough to get 70% of the electorate voting which in my book is a great turnout.
The problem is Leo that you do not know the reasons the 30% have for not voting. If you then add to this the numbers of people in the UK. who vote tactically ie. not necessarily for the party of their choice, but rather 'against' the Tories or Labour then you have a large number of alienated voters. The lack of PR. means that many people do not vote for the party of their choice, but rather for the party which can stop the party they dislike from taking a seat.
The problem is Leo that you do not know the reasons the 30% have for not voting. If you then add to this the numbers of people in the UK. who vote tactically ie. not necessarily for the party of their choice, but rather 'against' the Tories or Labour then you have a large number of alienated voters. The lack of PR. means that many people do not vote for the party of their choice, but rather for the party which can stop the party they dislike from taking a seat.
Sorry Theo but this is the reason in a nutshell. If you are eg. a Labour voter in a rural constituency in the south of England and you know that your party has no chance of winning the seat then there is a very good chance that you will simply vote for the party which has the most chance of stopping the Tories winning the seat - to do otherwise is to throw your vote away. In practice this would probably mean the Lib/Dem candidate. With PR. people would know that every vote is counted and would be more likely to vote exactly according to their consciences.Since you admit you do not know the reasons for the 30% not voting you cannot add them to your "alienated voters". They may be ill, confused, remote...not necessarily alienated. People don't vote tactically because there is no PR but because they wish to see the nearest approximation to solving a complex set of political issues, just as they would if they were voting in a PR election. Such an election might give them the illusion of being closer to a perfect fit with their own set of values, but the reality is that compromise and short termism would inhibit many such hopes.
Who cares if people DO vote tactically. With PR you vote and have no idea what you will get because a bunch of politicians - maybe many of whom you detest get together for what you agree is horse trading. LibDem voters were pretty sure they would get no increase to tuition fees - but in a typical coalition deal that got "traded" for a PR vote - and the PR vote was scuppered by the complicated system chosen. So one set of coalition partners got nothing of what they wanted. In PR this would be the case EVERY time. Once you have more than three or four parties you are never again likely to get a single party government so will always be denied what you want. Greens like it because most hate the Tories and see it as a way of never again having a Tory government. I understand their enthusiasm for it. But they need not try to concoct some fabricated story about our democracy being poor to try to justify their case.Sorry Theo but this is the reason in a nutshell. If you are eg. a Labour voter in a rural constituency in the south of England and you know that your party has no chance of winning the seat then there is a very good chance that you will simply vote for the party which has the most chance of stopping the Tories winning the seat - to do otherwise is to throw your vote away. In practice this would probably mean the Lib/Dem candidate. With PR. people would know that every vote is counted and would be more likely to vote exactly according to their consciences.
I will say this in a way you can understand Leo. If we, as Greens, form a coalition with say the SPD (In Germany) we will have had a questionaire of party members to identify which points can be traded and which can't. If we have 5 points in descending level of importance and can trade 2 in order toget the other 3 then it is better than not being in power at all. From their side the SPD will be in government and can execute most of their voters wishes - which they would not have been able to do without us. So both get a bit of what they want - as opposed to the zero which they would have got. A larger percentage of the population is partially happy ie. would have got something from this arrangement. At the same time working together with another party will have produced more circulation of ideas than would have been the case otherwise.Who cares if people DO vote tactically. With PR you vote and have no idea what you will get because a bunch of politicians - maybe many of whom you detest get together for what you agree is horse trading. LibDem voters were pretty sure they would get no increase to tuition fees - but in a typical coalition deal that got "traded" for a PR vote - and the PR vote was scuppered by the complicated system chosen. So one set of coalition partners got nothing of what they wanted. In PR this would be the case EVERY time. Once you have more than three or four parties you are never again likely to get a single party government so will always be denied what you want. Greens like it because most hate the Tories and see it as a way of never again having a Tory government. I understand their enthusiasm for it. But they need not try to concoct some fabricated story about our democracy being poor to try to justify their case.
Equally understandably Labour and Conservative like the FPTP system because it gives them a chance to introduce a progamme that they believe in. The vast majority of voters vote for those two so using your dodgy approach to statistics I could say that they all support FPTP (nonsense of course as are your bogus statistical arguments).
Thank you for dumbing it down Cologne as I have such trouble usually in understanding English.I will say this in a way you can understand Leo. If we, as Greens, form a coalition with say the SPD (In Germany) we will have had a questionaire of party members to identify which points can be traded and which can't. If we have 5 points in descending level of importance and can trade 2 in order toget the other 3 then it is better than not being in power at all. From their side the SPD will be in government and can execute most of their voters wishes - which they would not have been able to do without us. So both get a bit of what they want - as opposed to the zero which they would have got. A larger percentage of the population is partially happy ie. would have got something from this arrangement. At the same time working together with another party will have produced more circulation of ideas than would have been the case otherwise.