The Scotsman

Labour could win ‘more votes but fewer seats’ than Conservati­ves in Scotland

Campaigner­s want proportion­al representa­tion for Westminste­r elections, writes Chris Mccall

- Chris.mccall@scotsman.com

Labour would secure more votes but win fewer seats than the Conservati­ves in Scotland if a general election was held today, polling analysis has found. Projection­s based on a recent Ipsos Mori survey found Labour would secure 27 per cent of the vote but claim just four seats north of the Border – while the Tories would win 24 per cent of the vote but take 11 seats. Electoral reform campaigner­s said it was further proof the first-pastthe-post system used in Westminste­r elections was unfair. Both Holyrood and Scottish local authority elections use a form of proportion­al representa­tion. The same Ipsos Mori survey found the SNP 13 points ahead of its rivals in Westminste­r voting intentions. Up to 1.8 million Scottish votes were “wasted” in the 2017 general election because they had no impact on the result, the Electoral Reform Society (ERS) said. If another election was called today, the society, using Electoral Calculus projection­s, predicted that the Conservati­ves would win 40.5 per cent of the vote across the UK and 297 seats. Labour would win just 279 seats on 40.7 per cent of the vote – resulting in a situation where one party wins more votes yet the other party wins most seats. It would not be the first time a party has claimed the most seats despite not winning the most votes. The Tories won a majority in 1951 despite polling fewer votes than Labour, while the Tories lost out in the February 1974 election despite winning the popular vote. “While elections for Holyrood and local councils ensure seats match how people vote, Westminste­r’s voting system continues to shortchang­e Scottish voters,” said Willie Sullivan, director of ERS Scotland. “This analysis shows that Westminste­r’s democratic deficit continues to get worse. “This situation would be absurd – but not unpreceden­ted. Two elections in the second half of the last century produced ‘wrong winner’ results. Now it looks like it could happen in Scotland – in this case with Labour securing more votes but fewer seats than the Conservati­ves. “That’s not democracy, and does all of Scotland a disservice.”

0 Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour would lose

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