The Independent

New website to swap votes promises to ‘make it count’ in nearing general election

- JON STONE POLITICAL CORRESPOND­ENT

Under Britain’s antiquated first-past-the-post voting system, your vote doesn’t always count. As a result, people sometimes turn to tactical voting.

In 2017, the concept seems to be more in vogue than ever before. Chatter of a “progressiv­e alliance” on the left has reached fever pitch and some local parties have stood down in certain seats to give their allies a

better chance of winning. On the right, too, Ukip has stood down against strongly pro-Brexit, mostly Tory, candidates so as not to split the Euroscepti­c vote.

Such alliances are temporary solutions that would be unnecessar­y were Britain to overhaul its voting system to get rid of “wasted” votes. But the current setup mostly benefits the largest parties, and change is unlikely after voters rejected the Alternativ­e Vote in a referendum in 2011.

But what happens if there’s no alliance in your seat and you still want your single vote to count? Tom de Grunwald, a producer based in Cambridge, is taking electoral reform into his own hands to solve that problem.

Before the last election in 2015 Mr De Grunwald set up a website called Swap My Vote, a “hack” to create electoral reform “two votes at a time”. The idea is to match up people to swap their votes between constituen­cies, to bypass the problems with first-past-the-post. “Personally I would rather it not be necessary and there be a proportion­al system. I think it’s really important for democracy,” he told The Independen­t. But in the meanwhile, Swap My Vote fills a niche. “It’s essentiall­y about making people’s votes count for more by minimising wasted votes. Strategica­lly it’s about creating electoral reform – if we can’t have it in law, then at least we can create it ourselves.”

The service asks people what party they’d ideally like to vote for, and then the parties they’d be happy to vote for tactically in a trade. It then matches them with other voters who they can swap with. Someone who lives in a constituen­cy where Labour cannot win but wants to vote Labour can, for example, get someone else to vote Labour for them in a marginal seat where they have a chance; they in turn cast their own ballot for another party specified by the person they swapped with.

Importantl­y, the site isn’t aimed at supporters of a particular party, it’s simply an exchange service where voters who feel disenfranc­hised can meet. That’s what differenti­ates Swap My Vote from VoteSwap 2015, a similar service that operated at the last election on a specifical­ly partisan basis to swap Green and Labour voters.

The non-partisan approach leads Mr De Grunwald to see Swap My Vote as one example of a wider family of digital democracy tools – websites and services built to use technology to enhance politics.

Some of these online tools have proved revolution­ary that we can already scarcely imagine life without them. Until the advent of the internet it was surprising­ly difficult to find out how your own MP had voted on any given issue, with the division lists only available in physical printed form from Parliament. Now, websites such as Public Whip and TheyWorkFo­rYou bring informatio­n that is still difficult to find on Parliament’s own official sites to interested voters at the touch of a smartphone screen.

One possible dark side to this increased transparen­cy and access is that the ability to scrutinise an MP’s personal record has grown hand-in-hand with increased abuse of elected representa­tives on social media, with Parliament’s head of security warning earlier this year that ethnic minority and women MPs were most regularly targeted online. But these tools neverthele­ss empower voters and improve democracy.

Democracy Club CVs, which launched at the 2015 election, collects online versions of the CVs of parliament­ary candidates who voters might otherwise know little about. Another service, called Members Interests, provides a browser plug-in that highlights MPs’ names in any news articles that a user reads. Clicking on an MP’s name reveals who has given them money or gifts, as recorded in Parliament’s records. This can provide useful context when reading, say, an article where an MP is quoted talking about a country to which he’s already visited on an all expenses paid junket.

Swap My Vote isn’t yet as influentia­l as some of these other systems. But at the last election 10,000 votes were swapped between registered voters – potentiall­y enough to swing a key marginal or two.

A set of programmin­g standards known as an API is being drawn up by Mr De Grunwald and his coder cofounder, which would allow other sites to integrate with Swap My Vote. So a person might take a policy quiz on one website, be told party whose policies best matched up with their opinions, and then be directed to Swap My Vote if it was the most sensible way to vote for that party in their constituen­cy.

It all sounds interestin­g, but could it be open to abuse? Couldn’t someone say they’d vote one way on your behalf, and then not do it? “Ultimately, people casting their vote, it’s up to them to cast it and you can’t check up on that in any way,” Mr De Grunwald admits. But he says there are some safeguards built into the swapping system.

People tend to swap votes within the parties of the left or within the parties of the right, so the danger of outright fraud is reduced. The site also uses a bit of psychology, putting users in touch with each other on social media to personalis­e the experience and help voters to sniff out fakes. And, of course, these votes weren’t likely to count towards the final result anyway without the swap so the danger of exploitati­on is minimal.

Whether Swap My Vote changes the result in any constituen­cy is almost missing the point. The fact that such a service is necessary is a depressing commentary on the effectiven­ess of Britain’s old fashioned voting system.

 ??  ?? Voters are using the power of the web to make their ballots count in the first-past-the-post electoral system (PA)
Voters are using the power of the web to make their ballots count in the first-past-the-post electoral system (PA)

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