So the technically 'winning' conservatives will be able to get nothing through at all - and the super-duper coalition of losers will spend hours/days/months compromising on blimin' everything. Government becomes slower, more cumbersome, expensive. The manifestos are thrown in the bin (as the 'super duper coalition' wasn't voted for, therefore have no promises). The whole gig becomes a farce.
The super-duper coalition of losers can happen under FPTP. However there's never been a coalition like that because coordinating that many politicians to not fight and bicker with each other is nigh on impossible.
The manifestos are thrown in the bin
I just hope the greens don't get loads of seats :s
Just had a leaflet from the NO Campaign with the tagline:
AV Leads to Broken Promises.
Because, y'know, FPTP has always put forward honest governments...
A elected government is hauled over the coals by the opposition whenever it breaks any manifesto pledge.
Under coalition, they just say 'Well we didn't actually technically win' and they've got an instant get-out clause with the opposition being a lot less able to put the boot in. Hence why the lib-dems got limited grief over their 'no tuition fees' pledge. They just said 'uh .. yea .. we're in a coalition, not solely in government', so our entire manifesto is mute' - and the tories say the same thing.
And likewise about what you have said. You cannot compare Australia's political system to our own (it is clear you know nothing about it, in fact, and have probably just read this 'factoid' somewhere). If we introduce AV, all the probabilities are that the Lib Dems will double their seats in parliament at the expense of the two main parties, which will increase the chances of hung parliaments for each election.What you have said is technically correct, but also COMPLETELY IRRELEVANT.
AV (as proven by Australia) causes LESS coalitions in government, as we HAVE to remember that we ARE NOT changing how government is formed in parliament, just how we elect MP's. Australia with AV has had ONE coalition to the UK's FPTP 5 5 sounds about right) over the last 100 or so years...
AV (as proven by Australia) causes LESS coalitions in government, as we HAVE to remember that we ARE NOT changing how government is formed in parliament, just how we elect MP's. Australia with AV has had ONE coalition to the UK's FPTP 5 5 sounds about right) over the last 100 or so years...
Not when the coalitions are formed by throwing out party manifestos and worse, 'buying' the support of minority party seats by making huge and vastly disproportionate concessions to them (ala Greens in Germany).Everybody hates on coalitions, but if the voting public are spread in such a fashion, then they are more representative than a minority party ruling outright.
Everybody hates on coalitions, but if the voting public are spread in such a fashion, then they are more representative than a minority party ruling outright.
So what you're advocating is a dictatorship, with the whips as the management tools of choice?Basically because members say 'why should I vote for the education bill?'. If the government is all within a single party the whips to that party say nasty things like 'Because otherwise your career doesn't look very good from where I'm standing mate' and things actually get done .. the government gets stuff through relatively quickly.
So what you're advocating is a dictatorship, with the whips as the management tools of choice?
I'm advocating a FPTP system, where MPs have party loyalty.
If no-one has party loyalty and individual MPs vote on what is best for their constituency, it'll be like herding cats ..
I love how the system is so ****** up that the best option is to not have our elected representatvies think independently.I'm advocating a FPTP system, where MPs have party loyalty.
If no-one has party loyalty and individual MPs vote on what is best for their constituency, it'll be like herding cats ..