U.K. Government Appears to Move Voting Reform to Back Burner London, Oct. 29 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair appears to have put reform of the country's parliamentary voting system down the political agenda. In the ruling Labour Party's manifesto for the May 1997 general election they won, Blair said he would hold a referendum on whether to change the British winner-takes-all voting system for parliament. In reaction to the release of a government-appointed commission report on how to change it, though, Blair's spokesman said the referendum would be held during the current parliament, which could last until the summer of 2002 and that holding the referendum as late as that ``remains an option.'' This phrase was taken by supporters of change to mean it had been put on the back burner. As expected, the report by the commission, led by minority Liberal party member Lord Roy Jenkins, said the system should be changed to make up to 15 percent of the members of the 659-seat House of Commons elected under a list system nominated by political parties. Jenkins said in his report that any change couldn't be implemented for at least eight years. 09:25:04 10/29/1998
