The 2010 general election was notable in multiple respects, and will be recorded by history as the election which saw Britain’s first post-war coalition government. Yet, perhaps just as notable is the breaking of the record for the vote won by ‘other’ parties outside the big three of Labour, Conservatives and Liberal Democrats. In this post, Chris Terry argues that this fragmentation of the party system is incompatible with the UK’s first-past-the-post electoral system
The United Kingdom general election takes place next week, with current polling predicting no clear ...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
The long periods between 1945 and 1970, and 1979 to 2010 proved that the British political system is...
The 2015 General Election produced an unexpected majority government, however it did so despite the ...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
Duverger’s law states that a first-past-the-post electoral system – such as the one in use in the UK...
Much is being written about the fragmentation of the British party system in the run-up to the 2015 ...
It is often said that ‘divided parties lose elections’, with the experience of the Conservatives in ...
The Liberal Democrats’ decline and fall is not just a result of political miscalculation over the la...
The further fragmentation of the UK’s party system in 2015 is likely to lead to the most disproporti...
The paper examines the main changes in the UK party system that have occurred in recent decades. It...
Single-member plurality is often thought to facilitate a two-party system of alternating single-part...
In this post, Niall Hughes argues that FPTP electoral system performs much better in the context of ...
Single-member plurality is often thought to facilitate a two-party system of alternating single-part...
Throughout the short campaign, this blog will publish a series of posts that focus on each of the el...
The United Kingdom general election takes place next week, with current polling predicting no clear ...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
The long periods between 1945 and 1970, and 1979 to 2010 proved that the British political system is...
The 2015 General Election produced an unexpected majority government, however it did so despite the ...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
Duverger’s law states that a first-past-the-post electoral system – such as the one in use in the UK...
Much is being written about the fragmentation of the British party system in the run-up to the 2015 ...
It is often said that ‘divided parties lose elections’, with the experience of the Conservatives in ...
The Liberal Democrats’ decline and fall is not just a result of political miscalculation over the la...
The further fragmentation of the UK’s party system in 2015 is likely to lead to the most disproporti...
The paper examines the main changes in the UK party system that have occurred in recent decades. It...
Single-member plurality is often thought to facilitate a two-party system of alternating single-part...
In this post, Niall Hughes argues that FPTP electoral system performs much better in the context of ...
Single-member plurality is often thought to facilitate a two-party system of alternating single-part...
Throughout the short campaign, this blog will publish a series of posts that focus on each of the el...
The United Kingdom general election takes place next week, with current polling predicting no clear ...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
The long periods between 1945 and 1970, and 1979 to 2010 proved that the British political system is...