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Do you think the UK needs to change its voting system? After a historic set of results in last week’s election, this is the new landscape of British politics. Smaller parties achieved record vote shares, while independent candidates broke through in many places and the Liberal Democrats regained their status as the third largest party. But while the colours look definitive, the unbalanced relationship between the number of seats won by the parties versus their share of the total vote paints a different picture – and has led some to call for a change to the way the voting system works. The 2024 election was “one of the most disproportionate results in recent history”, according to Darren Hughes, the chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society. The UK uses a first-past-the-post system, which tends to exaggerate the representation of larger parties in parliament in order to create majorities, and often leaves smaller parties clutching on to a handful of seats relative to their vote share. While Labour won 63% of seats from only 33.8% of the vote, Reform took 14.3% of the popular vote – making it the third biggest party by vote share – but won only five seats. In contrast the Lib Dems won a record 72 seats despite a vote share of about 12%. The Green party received 6.8% of the vote for its four seats. “We have already had a growing chorus of calls for PR [proportional representation] in the aftermath,” said Hughes, which allows voters to vote for candidates in order of preference. Some experts argue that PR has produced more social democratic politics in Wales and Scotland. However, others say it could be a pathway for extremist politics, as has happened in some places in Europe. Head to the link in bio to find out more about why campaigners are calling for a change to the voting system – and what the other options could be.
Do you think the UK needs to change its voting system? After a historic set of results in last week’s election, this is the new landscape of British politics. Smaller parties achieved record vote shares, while independent candidates broke through in many places and the Liberal Democrats regained their status as the third largest party. But while the colours look definitive, the unbalanced relationship between the number of seats won by the parties versus their share of the total vote paints a different picture – and has led some to call for a change to the way the voting system works. The 2024 election was “one of the most disproportionate results in recent history”, according to Darren Hughes, the chief executive of the Electoral Reform Society. The UK uses a first-past-the-post system, which tends to exaggerate the representation of larger parties in parliament in order to create majorities, and often leaves smaller parties clutching on to a handful of seats relative to their vote share. While Labour won 63% of seats from only 33.8% of the vote, Reform took 14.3% of the popular vote – making it the third biggest party by vote share – but won only five seats. In contrast the Lib Dems won a record 72 seats despite a vote share of about 12%. The Green party received 6.8% of the vote for its four seats. “We have already had a growing chorus of calls for PR [proportional representation] in the aftermath,” said Hughes, which allows voters to vote for candidates in order of preference. Some experts argue that PR has produced more social democratic politics in Wales and Scotland. However, others say it could be a pathway for extremist politics, as has happened in some places in Europe. Head to the link in bio to find out more about why campaigners are calling for a change to the voting system – and what the other options could be.

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