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Voting Systems

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Page 1: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems

Page 2: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

The Election Campaign •On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the polling clerk. This person checks your name against the electoral roll – (a list of everyone eligible to vote).•Next you are given a ballot paperVoters choose the candidate they want to win by placing an X next to the candidate’s name – completed ballot papers are then placed in a ballot box.•At the end of the day, all of the ballot boxes are taken to a central location and the votes are counted.The candidate with the most votes is declared the winner.

Page 3: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems• There are two

main types of voting in the UK

1. The First Past the Post (FPTP) System

2. Proportional Representation (PR) Systems

Page 4: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems1. First Past the Post (FPTP)This is when the candidate with the

most votes is electedCONSERVATIVE

LABOUR

LIBERALDEMOCRATS

Page 5: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems2. Proportional

Representation (PR)

This is when the number of votes a party gets = a proportional number of seats

Page 6: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

What do we mean by proportional?

• If 4 people were to share a cake equally, each person would get one quarter or 25%

• Each gets a fair proportion

Page 7: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

What do we mean by proportional?

• With PR, the number of votes a party gets is roughly equal to the number of seats in parliament the party gets.

• E.g. if a party gets 25% of the vote, they get 25% of the seats

Page 8: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems2. Proportional

Representation (PR)

So in PR, you vote for a party rather than a candidate

The party chooses who gets the seat from a list of their best people

Page 9: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems in the Exam…

• Questions will be general – you can refer to any voting system used in the UK. Your options are:

1.First Past the Post (FPTP) – UK Parliament Elections

2.Additional Member System (AMS) – Scottish Parliament Elections

3.Single Transferable Vote (STV) – Scottish Local Authority (Council) Elections

Page 10: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Voting Systems in the Exam…

• We will focus mostly on AMS – your best bet it to focus essays on this voting system

• However, questions will generally involve you stating the pros and cons of a voting system so you will have to refer to FPTP as well

• AMS and STV are PROPORTIONAL SYSTEMS whilst FPTP is not.

Page 11: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Possible Questions…

1. Evaluate the effectiveness of an electoral system you have studied in providing fair representation.

12 marks

2. To what extent does the electoral system you have studied provide fair representation and choice.

20 marks

Page 12: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

First Past the Post (FPTP)

Page 13: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

FPTP• FPTP is easy to understand – the candidate in a

constituency with the most votes wins the seat• They become an MP in the Westminster/UK Parliament• There are 650 constituencies in the UK, therefore there

are 650 available seats• The party that wins the most seats overall usually

forms the government• FPTP usually produces majority governments, although

at the moment it is a coalition (Con/Lib Dem)• It is not a proportional system – many votes are wasted• Favours bigger parties – Labour and Conservative• Elections every 4 or 5 years (varies)• See voting systems hand-out for more information

Page 14: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_general_election,_2010 – full election results

Page 15: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the
Page 16: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Additional Member System (AMS)

Page 17: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

The Additional Member System• The voting system used for Scottish Parliament elections is the Additional Member

System (AMS).

• This is a form of Proportional Representation. The number of seats won by each party will be roughly equivalent to the number of votes it receives. (It is sometimes called a semi-proportional system).

• It is a HYBRID system – mixing FPTP and PR,• FPTP + PR = AMS

• Elections are held every 4 years.

• There are 129 MSPs.

• There are 2 different types of MSPs: ‘Constituency’ MSPs and ‘Regional List’ MSPs’.

• Voters vote twice to elect the different types of MSPs.

Page 18: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Constituency MSPs• There are 73 constituencies in Scotland.• Each constituency elects 1 MSP using FPTP.• A single ballot paper is used in the election - the

lilac (purple) colored side is used to elect constituency MSPs.

• You put a ‘x’ beside the name of the candidate you want to vote for.

Page 19: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Regional List MSPs

• For these MSPs, Scotland is divided into 8 regions: Highland and Islands, NE Scotland, Mid Scotland and Fife, West of Scotland, Glasgow, Central, Lothians and South of Scotland.

• There are 56 ‘List’ MSPs.• Each of the 8 regions has 7 ‘List’ MSPs.• The peach coloured side of the ballot paper is used for the regional vote.• Party List system of PR is used.• You put a cross beside the name of a party (or

independent candidate) you want to vote for.

Page 20: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

The Party List

• Each party supplies a list of candidates.

• Most favoured candidates are at the top of the list.

• 7 rounds of calculations take place using a formula. (A variation of the D’Hondt Formula)

http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/visitandlearn/Education/65978.aspx

The Result

Each person in Scotland is represented by a total

of 8 MSPs.

1 Constituency MSP +

7 Regional MSPs

Page 21: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

The D’Hondt Formula• You don’t need to know this for the

exam but it is worth knowing how it works…it is much more complicated that FPTP!

• The formula used is below, although in Scotland it is slightly adjusted:

In Scotland, “s” does not necessarily start at 0 but with the number of constituency seats a party has already won in a region.

Page 22: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

The D’Hondt Formula• See the site below for an

interactive explanation!

• http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/visitandlearn/Education/65978.aspx

Page 23: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Glasgow Provan Constituency

Paul Martin, Constituency MSP

Scottish Labour

Region: Glasgow

It is claimed that AMS is

unlikely to give one party complete power.

http://www.scottish.parliament.uk/msps/Glasgow.aspx

Page 24: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Example• In Glasgow in 2011 SP election, Paul Martin won more

votes than his rivals. He therefore become the constituency MSP.

• Under AMS, Glasgow is part of the Glasgow Region.• In order to compensate the parties who had a decent

number of votes across the wider region, list seats are allocated according to the proportion of vote each party receives.

• End result Paul Martin is the constituency MSP and there are an additional 7 MSPs for the region.

• If a constituent in Glasgow has an issue in the area that needs the MSPs attention they could got to Paul Martin to do something.

• In theory they could also approach a ‘list’ MSP, such as Ruth Davidson, a Conservative MSP for the Glasgow region.

Page 25: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Mock Party ListsLabour

1. John Grey

2. Diane Abbott

3. Margaret Curran

4. David Blunkett

5. Tony Benn

Conservative

1. Annabel Goldie

2. Ruth Davidson

3. Jackson Carlaw

4. David Cameron

Liberal Democrats

1. Nick Clegg

2. Paddy Ashdown

3. Charles Kennedy

4. Tavish ScottSNPSNP

1. John Mason

2. Nicola Sturgeon

3. Kenny MacAskill

4. John Swinney

Task

Write a list of the names of MSPs elected using the PR system.

Page 26: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Paper 2Peach

Voting for regional MSPs

1 X for a partyUses PR

Paper 1Purple

Voting for constituency MSP

1 X for 1 candidateUses FPTP

Page 27: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Part 1The first part of the ballot paper is to elect an MSP to represent the people in a constituency (FPTP)There are 73 constituencies for the Scottish Parliament.Voters put a cross against the name of the candidate they want to represent them in their constituency.

Page 28: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Part 2The second part of the ballot paper elects MSPs to the 8 regions of ScotlandEach region has 7 Regional MSPs or list MSPs as they are sometimes known.Voters put an X next to the party they want to represent them in the regionThe second ballot paper makes sure that the result of the election is fair, if a party gets 20% of the votes in this ballot it will get 20% of the seats.

Page 29: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Is AMS Fair?

• The short answer is…YES. At least it is fairer than FPTP.

• See your hand-out for pros and cons of AMS

• The following slides talk through a few basic pros and cons

Page 30: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

FORPROPORTIONALITY AMS produces a fairly proportional result but still maintains a clear link between the voters and their representatives. People have a constituency MSP who they can identify with and go to with their problems. COALITION GOVERNMENT Can be effective government that is willing to listen todifferent perspectives. The Labour/Liberal Democrat coalition in the Scottish Parliament (1999-2007) introduced a number of policies that are dramatically different from the views of Labour controlled Westminster. For example, an end to tuition fees for Scottish university students. Note 2007,2011 result produced a minority and majority Government respectively.

Page 31: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

WASTED VOTES Votes are not wasted under AMS. Even if a party has no chanceof winning a seat under the FPTP aspect, it can win party listseats as the Scottish Greens and Scottish Socialists have done. This may encourage more voters to participate.BETTER REPRESENTATION AMS allows a wider variety of views to be expressed. UnderFPTP, the system is dominated by the two largest parties Conservative and Labour. However, under AMS, smaller partiessuch as the Greens have gained representation.Glasgow region- 8 MSPs from a variety of different parties.

FOR

Page 32: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

AGAINSTCHOICE OF CANDIDATES As the party list aspect is used, some would argue that too much power is given to

the party in choosing candidates. Often people like to know WHO they are voting for – personality and personal qualities are important in politics.

Example• In the Scottish AMS, the voter has no say in the order a party ranks its

prospective List MSPs.• In most constituencies, being placed anything further down than 3rd or 4th in the

party list means a candidate is highly unlikely to get elected.• It is the political party that decides the order of the list.• This explains why, in 2003, Margo MacDonald, an experienced and popular MSP

resigned from the SNP and stood for election as an Independent candidate.• Due to internal party squabbling, she was placed a lowly 6th on the SNP’s list for

the Lothians region.• This meant that, if she did not resign and run as an Independent, she would have

had no realistic hope of being elected.• She ran as an Independent and won. She won again in 2007 and 2011.• But this is because she is a well known and popular personality in Edinburgh.

Page 33: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

• Had she been a “normal” candidate the party machine would, in all likelihood, have kept her out of politics.

• In 2011, the SNP did not register its list candidates on the ballot paper at all.

• Instead it placed the slogan "Alex Salmond for First Minister" where its list candidate's details should go.

• This achieved the effect of boosting the SNP vote as Alex Salmond is the SNP's biggest name.

• This was clever politics!• It broke no rules.• However, some argue that ethically, parties should

state who their List candidates really are.• It is argued it is unfair to the voters, who are kept in

the dark and who can end up with a  complete unknown as their List MSP.

Page 34: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

CONFLICT The system elects two types of representative – constituency MSPs and Regional MSPs. Ill feeling can result from one group claiming superiority over the other. For example, constituency MSPs may think they are more important because people elected them directly. Regional MSPs may believe they have a greater workload because they represent a larger area.

Example• In August 2003, the then Labour MP Brian Wilson described list

MSPs as “a waste of space”.• There is an element of rivalry between constituency and List

MSPs.• Constituency MSPs tend to see themselves as the "real" MSP

for the constituency.• List MSPs ‘elected through the back door’

AGAINST

Page 35: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

CONFUSION The Scottish Parliament has constituency and regional

MSPs. This may confuse people who may be unsure whom to contact if a problem arises. Also, people are put off voting because they do not understand the AMS.

EXTREMIST PARTIES Some people are worried that extremist parties may have some representatives elected. This may provide them with a platform for their extremist views and allow them to secure even more support. The British National Party is a good example.

AGAINST

Page 36: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

AMS and by-elections• The regular by-elections of FPTP give the voter the

chance to express a verdict on the performance of Government.

• Labour's loss of Glasgow East to the SNP in 2008 is a good example.

• With FPTP voters can punish an unpopular Government.

• It could be over handling of the economy, a foreign war, whatever.

• The voter gets a real chance to register a protest.

Page 37: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

The STV Voting System

Page 38: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Why STV?

• Reform of local government was on the agenda at the Scottish Parliament.

• In 2007, Local councillors became full time and salaried, rather than part-time, dependent on expenses.

• Attempt to ‘professionalise’ the job of councillor - broaden access in gender, race and age.

• Whether it was true or not many thought councillors were ‘in it for what they could get’ such as expenses.

• The voting system was also changed, away from the traditional ‘first past the post’ (FPTP) to the Single Transferable Vote (STV)

• STV favoured voting system of the Liberal Democrats. • It was their non-negotiable price for joining the 2003-2007

Coalition Government.

Page 39: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Why STV?

• Many Labour councillors were furious at their parliamentary colleagues, referring to the deal as ‘turkeys voting for Christmas’ - why?

• Labour dominated under FPTP - FPTP traditionally favours the big parties.

Page 40: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

How does it work? •In FPTP the voter has one vote and votes by placing an “X” next to the candidate of choice.

•IN STV the voter has more than vote.

•Rather than placing an “X” to the candidate of choice, the voter will have a number of choices, ranking the candidates in order of preference 1,2, 3 etc.

•So, the voter can choose not just between parties within them.

Page 41: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

How does it work? • Members are elected once they pass a certain

number of votes, known as a quota. Finding the winnersAn STV election proceeds according to the following

steps:• Any candidate who has reached or exceeded the

quota is declared elected. • If a candidate has more votes than the quota, that

candidate's surplus votes are transferred to other candidates. Votes that would have gone to the winner instead go to the next preference listed on their ballot.

• If no one new meets the quota, the candidate with the fewest votes is eliminated and that candidate's votes are transferred.

• This process repeats until either a winner is found for every seat or there are as many seats as remaining candidates.

Page 42: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

How does it work?

• In most of Scotland’s authorities, the major political parties will field a number of candidates on the voter’s ballot paper.

• So, a voter, if he/she wishes, could give a candidate of a party the number 1, but give a candidate from another party the number 2.

Page 43: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Is it fair?

• The short answer is…YES. At least it is fairer than FPTP.

• See your hand-out for pros and cons of STV

• The following slides talk through a few basic pros and cons

Page 44: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Advantages• The voter is more empowered . A person who

sees himself/herself as a Labour voter does not have to vote for Labour’s nominated candidate as there may be more than one Labour candidate.

• So, one Labour candidate who the voter may not like may not get a vote but another candidate from the same party may get the vote.

• In local elections, especially, where the personal factor matters; council candidates often live locally and will have a word of mouth reputation, STV provides an incentive for elected officials to work hard and puts more power in the hands of the voter.

• No safe seats - cannot become complacent.

Page 45: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

Advantages

• Better representation- STV constituencies are bigger and voters have more than one representative.

• Most of us have three councillors who represent us and they are usually from different political parties.

• Coalitions councils are more likely. After the 2012 result In Edinburgh city council Labour and SNP are in coalition.

• Ended Labour’s dominance in councils.

Page 46: Voting Systems. The Election Campaign On election day, voters go along to a polling station-usually a primary school or library etc and report to the

DisadvantagesMulti members confine voters• ‘Where does the buck stop?’• More than one elected representative - who is responsible? Coalitions can lead to instability• Like AMS, coalitions can be formed, and the voters could be

unhappy about the result. Edinburgh city council- Labour and SNP.

The Count• Process is long, results cannot be announced the same night as voting.

Confusing ballot papers• Large multi-member constituencies mean ballot papers can get quite

long.• Ranking can be difficult. • Can affect turnout- local government elections averages 50% turnout -

compared to 65% in general elections