Deccan Chronicle

Democracy of a few swing seats

- By arrangemen­t with the Spectator

The defence of the Westminste­r firstpast-the-post voting system is that while it’s certainly unfair, it delivers decisive results. A relatively small swing in support from one party to another can deliver the kind of parliament­ary majority that ensures fully functionin­g government. This worked well when British politics was a two-party business, and pretty well when it became a threeparty affair. But in this new era of multi-party politics, the Westminste­r voting system is no longer fit for purpose.

When Britain was asked about changing electoral systems in the referendum for the alternativ­e vote, we stuck with the devil we knew. Understand­ably: at the time there was reason to believe that coalition might prompt a return to two-party politics, in England at least. But the electorate’s political preference­s have diversifie­d — a fact that the House of Commons is unable to reflect.

The other problem with first past the post is the way it encourages all parties to concentrat­e their resources almost exclusivel­y on a handful of swing seats. This longstandi­ng problem has been massively exacerbate­d by modern polling techniques, which mean that the parties know (or think they know) precisely which seats, and which wards in those seats, could yield the votes they need. The growth of junk mailing computer databases means they also believe they know which voters to target. In this way an election to govern a country of 60 million souls is reduced to a battle for a couple of per cent of the electorate.

In many cases, parties abandon voters completely. One of the more depressing experience­s of this campaign has been seeing candidates from near-unwinnable seats abandon their home turf to help out in nearby marginals. This is an offence against basic democracy: there may not be many Tories in Labour’s safest seats, or vice versa, but those who do exist deserve a candidate who is campaignin­g every day in their own constituen­cy, not someone else’s. This trend is no fault of the candidates who are going walkabout: they are only obeying orders from party headquarte­r, often with a very heavy heart. All this contribute­s to the narrowing of our politics as the parties lower their ambition and abandon seats that they can’t realistica­lly win; the Liberal Democrats have only really contested about 10 per cent of seats in this election. As a result, parties pass up the chance to sow the seeds of a recovery or reach new voters.

This focus on marginal seats is cynical. But it’s the logical response to the current Westminste­r voting system: you don’t mean a thing if your seat’s not a swing. So I wonder if it is now time to move to a two-round system, such as that used in France.

In any constituen­cy where no one has received an absolute majority of the votes cast, there is a run-off a week later. This second contest involves only candidates who secured the support of at least an eighth of registered voters.

This would lead to a dramatic reduction in the number of safe seats. Those who were voting tactically (for example, to keep out the nationalis­t candidate in Scotland) would be operating with far better informatio­n than they are today.

The Scottish National Party’s (SNP) dominance of this campaign is a reminder that there is much unfinished business from last year’s Scottish independen­ce referendum. It has long been assumed that the English simply weren’t bothered by the West Lothian question. But as the SNP becomes far stronger and more provocativ­e, English resentment will only grow — and this will become just as much of a threat to the union as Scottish nationalis­m. This will, in turn, make it that much easier for advocates of Scottish independen­ce to argue that England and Scotland would get along better as separate states.

The extraordin­ary surge in support for the SNP north of the border shows that the constituti­onal question is not going away in Scotland. Fortunatel­y, there is an answer that deals with both the Scottish question and the West Lothian one: federalism.

The best way to preserve the union now is to move to a system where there is full financial autonomy — the Scottish Parliament should be in charge of raising all the money that is spent in Scotland. And meanwhile, let only the English decide English laws. Without such reforms, it is depressing­ly hard to see how it can survive for another generation.

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