If you vote based on the party leader you are putting your media-influenced opinion of one person based on how they talk or how photogenic they are above both the party's policies and whoever you think would be the best person for your constituency. It's like choosing what music to listen to from a photo of the musicians.
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So who is PM now?
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Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishing -
Bonar Law
yes it was mainly him I was thinking of. Also I was assuming a value judgement that you probably didn't intend, making me want to only include ones who never won an election which would be very few of them.Comment
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Originally posted by Sysman View Postthe Times points out the possibility of another unelected PM:The Mods stole my post count!Comment
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Originally posted by Pickle2 View PostWhoever gets in as PM will be unelected. Cameron didn't get a majority of the votes or a majority of the seats, so he can hardly lay claim to the "i was elected all good and proper" crown. So him, balls, brown the queen mum, they would all be pretty illegitimate as PM, in terms of having been "voted in". Although perhaps TQM would be up to the job, at least.
This is why, as d000hg says above, you shouldn't vote based on the party leader: you aren't voting for a leader, you're voting for a government.
This is also why it's perfectly legitimate for somebody to hold the office of Prime Minister even if, at the time the party of government was elected, that person was not expected by the electorate to hold that office. Suppose the Brighton bomb had succeeded in wiping out all the senior Tories with the exception of the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Laundry: that person, being the most senior member of the party that had been elected to govern, would have been the one The Queen would have invited to become Prime Minister, for the simple reason that PM is an office that must be filled in order to keep government running, not a prize awarded specifically to the winner of some kind of electoral beauty pageant.Comment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostBut a Prime Minister is never "voted in" - an election decides which party (or, in the current circumstances, parties) should have the right to form a government. Then the Queen appoints the leader of that party or coalition to the office of Prime Minister so they can form the new government.
This is why, as d000hg says above, you shouldn't vote based on the party leader: you aren't voting for a leader, you're voting for a government.
This is also why it's perfectly legitimate for somebody to hold the office of Prime Minister even if, at the time the party of government was elected, that person was not expected by the electorate to hold that office. Suppose the Brighton bomb had succeeded in wiping out all the senior Tories with the exception of the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Laundry: that person, being the most senior member of the party that had been elected to govern, would have been the one The Queen would have invited to become Prime Minister, for the simple reason that PM is an office that must be filled in order to keep government running, not a prize awarded specifically to the winner of some kind of electoral beauty pageant.
Yes, they have different policies. But this election unlike any other was about media, presentation & personality.
During the election process, there wasn't the usual gravitas toward senior politicians, the coverage of the big guns, the in depth analysis of policy. It was all fluff & presidential.
So your argument is true in terms of semantics, but weak on actual facts.What happens in General, stays in General.You know what they say about assumptions!Comment
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Originally posted by NickFitz View PostBut a Prime Minister is never "voted in" - an election decides which party (or, in the current circumstances, parties) should have the right to form a government. Then the Queen appoints the leader of that party or coalition to the office of Prime Minister so they can form the new government.
This is why, as d000hg says above, you shouldn't vote based on the party leader: you aren't voting for a leader, you're voting for a government.
This is also why it's perfectly legitimate for somebody to hold the office of Prime Minister even if, at the time the party of government was elected, that person was not expected by the electorate to hold that office. Suppose the Brighton bomb had succeeded in wiping out all the senior Tories with the exception of the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Laundry: that person, being the most senior member of the party that had been elected to govern, would have been the one The Queen would have invited to become Prime Minister, for the simple reason that PM is an office that must be filled in order to keep government running, not a prize awarded specifically to the winner of some kind of electoral beauty pageant.
The tories can't grumble that Brown Balls is "unelected", because that's not the way it works. Although I hear electoral reform might be in air, so they should be happy soon.The Mods stole my post count!Comment
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Originally posted by thunderlizard View Postyes it was mainly him I was thinking of. Also I was assuming a value judgement that you probably didn't intend, making me want to only include ones who never won an election which would be very few of them.
My point being that the current media (and certain members of CUK) seems to have a big thing about how we might have a prime minister who has not been "elected" (i.e. they were not the party leader when the election was held), and what a disgrace that is. That list shows who else has become prime minister without being elected.If you have to add a , it isn't funny. HTH. LOL.Comment
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If you vote for a party but can't even trust in their ability to do something as simple as pick a leader, how are you going to deal with them being in charge of important things like wars and the economy?Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Originally posted by MarillionFan View PostBut this wasn't a 'party' election. This was a personality election. That was why it was so difficult to pull the parties apart on policy.
Yes, they have different policies. But this election unlike any other was about media, presentation & personality.
During the election process, there wasn't the usual gravitas toward senior politicians, the coverage of the big guns, the in depth analysis of policy. It was all fluff & presidential.
So your argument is true in terms of semantics, but weak on actual facts.
In the USA people get to vote separately for who they want to run the country (the President) and who they want to represent them in the bit where the laws are passed (Senators and Congressmen). This is not a choice that we get.
I do like the American system but they do have the advantage that they were able to start from scratch a couple of hundred years ago whereas in the UK there is a lot of historical baggage.Comment
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Originally posted by The Wikir Man View PostAnother unelected PM in the long line:
Gordon Brown, 2007
John Major, 1990
Jim Callaghan, 1976
Alec Douglas-Home, 1963
Harold MacMillan, 1957
Anthony Eden, 1955
Winston Churchill, 1940
Neville Chamberlain, 1937
Stanley Baldwin, 1923
Andrew Bonar Law, 1922
David Lloyd George, 1916
H H Asquith, 1908
Arthur Balfour, 1902
Compared with the list of 20th century prime ministers who were elected, it's significantly longer.Comment
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