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Nice in theory Glyn. In practice, very few MPs lose their seats because of personal issues. Most do so because of their party's popularity. An MP's chances of being voted out depend mainly on whether they are unlucky enough to be in a marginal. May and Gove and Abbott and Harman all have majorities above 20k. They could shoot a constituent and still not be voted out. (EDIT: Just realised I was looking at majorities from the 2015 election but the principle still holds.)I get your point in principle but it is a pin prick compared to the huge injustice of our FPTP system.
GlynIt's a non-question because if we had PR, the present Labour party would split. Momentum would then effectively be a party itself.
Quote from: tommy toes on September 05, 2018, 07:28:09 pmAs was the Brexit vote..... its those who were too young to Vote I feel sorriest for particularly the 16 to 18 group (have to draw the line somewhere). They will be saddled* with the outcome of our EU departure without ever having a chance to vote* Saddled is assuming the outcome is negative to them and I accept the outcome may be favourable.
As was the Brexit vote.
By and large, people vote for the party, not the particular individual.
Quote from: albie on September 10, 2018, 09:55:22 amBy and large, people vote for the party, not the particular individual.Then by and large people don't understand the British Constitution.
Quote from: Glyn_Wigley on September 10, 2018, 12:39:00 pmQuote from: albie on September 10, 2018, 09:55:22 amBy and large, people vote for the party, not the particular individual.Then by and large people don't understand the British Constitution.This. Irritates the shit out of me when people speak as though we have some type of presidential system. "I'm not voting for Corbyn/May!/I've voted for Nigel Farage!". No. Just no.Though being pedantic, you could argue there's no such specific thing as the British constitution as it's unwritten...
Quote from: RedJ on September 10, 2018, 12:42:23 pmQuote from: Glyn_Wigley on September 10, 2018, 12:39:00 pmQuote from: albie on September 10, 2018, 09:55:22 amBy and large, people vote for the party, not the particular individual.Then by and large people don't understand the British Constitution.This. Irritates the shit out of me when people speak as though we have some type of presidential system. "I'm not voting for Corbyn/May!/I've voted for Nigel Farage!". No. Just no.Though being pedantic, you could argue there's no such specific thing as the British constitution as it's unwritten...RedGlyn is right though. You vote for a named individual in a GE. For the record, I do think there's a moral imperative on MPs who resign the whip to stand down and seek re election. In the case of Field (who I dislike and with whom I disagree on pretty much every policy issue) I'm not convinced that it would be good news for the leadership if he did force a by-election.