Kristofer Munsterhjelm  > Sent: Tuesday, November 03, 2009 4:34 PM
> > James Gilmour wrote:
> > Why in any country that would merit the description "democracy" would 
> > you want to impose a "two-party system" when the votes of the voters 
> > showed that was not what they wanted?
> 
> That is my question, too. 

Maybe what the "two-party" advocates really want is guaranteed single-party 
majority government.  If that IS what they want, there
is a VERY simple and effective electoral solution.  If no party wins an 
absolute majority of the votes and seats, give 55% of the
seats to the party that wins the largest number of votes and divide the 
remaining seats among the other parties in proportion to the
their shares of the votes.

It has been done and it works.  Importantly, it's honest.  It sets out clearly 
what is considered to be the over-riding electoral
criterion and it fulfils it.  In the UK we suffer from a lot of nonsense about 
the desirability of single-party majority government
and even worse nonsense about the importance of FPTP in securing that.  In 
fact, in two of the most critical elections since 1945,
when the government of the day (one Labour, one Conservative) was seeking a 
renewed mandate for the continuation of its policies,
FPTP elected the wrong government. In both cases the outgoing government won 
the referendum on its policies (votes) and lost the
election (seats).

James Gilmour

No virus found in this outgoing message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com 
Version: 9.0.698 / Virus Database: 270.14.47/2478 - Release Date: 11/03/09 
07:36:00


----
Election-Methods mailing list - see http://electorama.com/em for list info

Reply via email to