It is an article of faith amongst political reform campaigners that the existing First Past the Post (FPTP) electoral system needs to go if we are to improve Britain’s democracy. Here, Ed Straw describes the ‘unseen consequences’ of FPTP, and suggests that organisations such as Office for National Statistics and the Institute For Fiscal Studies to estimate these costs
The rise of anti-establishment movements and the growing disaffection with politics may be less rela...
A spirited argument has broken out on Democratic Audit UK and on other blogs regarding the implicati...
Explanations for the decline in political disengagement often focus on what can be loosely termed th...
The UK’s political and democratic system are under severe strain, with declining turnout and increas...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
Of the many indicators of various kinds hosted on the constituency pages of the Democratic Dashboard...
The 2015 General Election saw a Conservative majority government returned (al biet on a minority of ...
Election campaigns are an expensive business. In this post, Jess Garland discusses a new report on p...
UKIP’s rise has caught the establishment by surprise, with the main parties doing all they can to pr...
The United Kingdom, a nation that utilizes the plurality electoral system of First Past the Post (FP...
Just how strong is the Conservatives mandate? With only 24.7% of eligible voters opting to support t...
In recent decades, Britain has evolved into a multi-party system, but it still has an electoral syst...
Since the election last May, the coalition government has pursued a wide-ranging programme of consti...
The 2015 General Election produced an unexpected majority government, however it did so despite the ...
Who is at fault for Britain’s democratic crisis? While political parties seek to be the solution to ...
The rise of anti-establishment movements and the growing disaffection with politics may be less rela...
A spirited argument has broken out on Democratic Audit UK and on other blogs regarding the implicati...
Explanations for the decline in political disengagement often focus on what can be loosely termed th...
The UK’s political and democratic system are under severe strain, with declining turnout and increas...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
Of the many indicators of various kinds hosted on the constituency pages of the Democratic Dashboard...
The 2015 General Election saw a Conservative majority government returned (al biet on a minority of ...
Election campaigns are an expensive business. In this post, Jess Garland discusses a new report on p...
UKIP’s rise has caught the establishment by surprise, with the main parties doing all they can to pr...
The United Kingdom, a nation that utilizes the plurality electoral system of First Past the Post (FP...
Just how strong is the Conservatives mandate? With only 24.7% of eligible voters opting to support t...
In recent decades, Britain has evolved into a multi-party system, but it still has an electoral syst...
Since the election last May, the coalition government has pursued a wide-ranging programme of consti...
The 2015 General Election produced an unexpected majority government, however it did so despite the ...
Who is at fault for Britain’s democratic crisis? While political parties seek to be the solution to ...
The rise of anti-establishment movements and the growing disaffection with politics may be less rela...
A spirited argument has broken out on Democratic Audit UK and on other blogs regarding the implicati...
Explanations for the decline in political disengagement often focus on what can be loosely termed th...