Originally posted by MicrosoftBob
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is it fair
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They only sell it to people who have no chance of ever having a wife.Originally posted by MicrosoftBob View PostI didn't know they drunk wife beater over in krankie land
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So that's what the ladies drink while the men are on the Buckie?Originally posted by Batcher View PostThey only sell it to people who have no chance of ever having a wife.
(Yes, gay marriage, I know. Ignored so I can make a joke)Comment
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Is there a system where one can vote for their local MP, AND for which party they want to be in power? I'm not sure how the logistics would work out... if your local MP doesn't make the PR 'cut' then they aren't allowed to vote in the Commons or something like that?
Does this exist?Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Are you asking for essentially two elections? One for your local rep, and a separate vote for which party should lead? Not sure how that would work, as everyone could vote Party A rep for themselves, but Party B to leadOriginally posted by d000hg View PostIs there a system where one can vote for their local MP, AND for which party they want to be in power? I'm not sure how the logistics would work out... if your local MP doesn't make the PR 'cut' then they aren't allowed to vote in the Commons or something like that?
Does this exist?Comment
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Something along those lines. It sounds a bit clunky to me too.Originally posted by Ticktock View PostAre you asking for essentially two elections? One for your local rep, and a separate vote for which party should lead?Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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I guess what's meant to be happening is that everyone is voting for their local rep, and no-one is voting for a leader.Originally posted by d000hg View PostSomething along those lines. It sounds a bit clunky to me too.
I suspect that quite often it's the reverse, however.Comment
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Like what I said before. I'm not quite sure how the US works, but the President's party can end up with a minority in Congress and The Senate, but he still remains President.Originally posted by Ticktock View PostAre you asking for essentially two elections? One for your local rep, and a separate vote for which party should lead? Not sure how that would work, as everyone could vote Party A rep for themselves, but Party B to lead
So perhaps we vote for the PM and government in one election and have a different election for MPs half way through.Will work inside IR35. Or for food.Comment
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I'd rather NOT have a presidential type election, the feckwits are too full of themselves as it is.Originally posted by VectraMan View PostLike what I said before. I'm not quite sure how the US works, but the President's party can end up with a minority in Congress and The Senate, but he still remains President.
So perhaps we vote for the PM and government in one election and have a different election for MPs half way through.
As to the "Is it fair?" question posted by the sockie, there was a vote on alternative voting methods a while back and it was defeated this country uses the First Past the Post system which has a raft of problems, just as many problems as other alternatives, they're just different ones.
There isn't in truth a fair electoral system as it's too easy to corrupt.Comment
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Germany is a rich and peaceful country for 70 years now. No wars against Argentina, Iraq, Korea or Afghanistan in that period.Originally posted by Dominic Connor View PostA big problem with PR is that you have party lists, who gets to be MPsis chosen by the party machine, so in pure(ish) PR there is an ordered list.
So the bigwigs are the safest (no possibility of an "up for Portillo" moment) and they work their way down. In UK terms, about each 30,000 votes would gift a seat to a party, but voters would have zero choice in which individuals they were.
Also the current crop of PR countries which include Italy, Greece, Israel et al aren't exactly shining examples of good governance.
A this point, someone will say "Germany", which is a rich, peaceful country, which is true.
Then one is rather forced to point out that the Weimar Republic that brought the Nazis to power was PR.
In the Netherlands you can still give preferential votes so someone on the list that you like, quite often people get directly elected this way even when they were on a so called unelectable place.Comment
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