The 2015 General Election produced an unexpected majority government, however it did so despite the rise of smaller parties such as the Greens and UKIP, who between them only won 2 seats, despite polling around 5 million votes. Chris Terry and Jess Garland argue that the result shows that the First Past the Post electoral system is now chronically out of date, with territorial and cultural divisions being hardened by a crude, majoritarian system
Of the many indicators of various kinds hosted on the constituency pages of the Democratic Dashboard...
With less than one week to go until polling day, and irrespective of the fact that the polls are ext...
The further fragmentation of the UK’s party system in 2015 is likely to lead to the most disproporti...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
The 2010 general election was notable in multiple respects, and will be recorded by history as the e...
The forthcoming election looks as though it will pose further questions about the continued merits o...
Historically, the electoral system has tended to help Labour in the way it translates votes into sea...
The 2015 General Election saw a Conservative majority government returned (al biet on a minority of ...
Electoral bias results in an asymmetrical seat distribution between parties with similar vote shares...
There is general agreement that first-past-the-post in single-member constituencies is one of the mo...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
The United Kingdom general election takes place next week, with current polling predicting no clear ...
The 2010 general election result was considerably biased in Labour’s favour: if they and Conservativ...
Alistair Clark and Toby S. James argue that many people overlook the exhaustive efforts that poll wo...
Of the many indicators of various kinds hosted on the constituency pages of the Democratic Dashboard...
With less than one week to go until polling day, and irrespective of the fact that the polls are ext...
The further fragmentation of the UK’s party system in 2015 is likely to lead to the most disproporti...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
The First Past The Post electoral system exacerbates divisions between the different parts of Britai...
The 2010 general election was notable in multiple respects, and will be recorded by history as the e...
The forthcoming election looks as though it will pose further questions about the continued merits o...
Historically, the electoral system has tended to help Labour in the way it translates votes into sea...
The 2015 General Election saw a Conservative majority government returned (al biet on a minority of ...
Electoral bias results in an asymmetrical seat distribution between parties with similar vote shares...
There is general agreement that first-past-the-post in single-member constituencies is one of the mo...
The previous Coalition government attempted to redraw the boundaries of the UK’s Parliamentary const...
The United Kingdom general election takes place next week, with current polling predicting no clear ...
The 2010 general election result was considerably biased in Labour’s favour: if they and Conservativ...
Alistair Clark and Toby S. James argue that many people overlook the exhaustive efforts that poll wo...
Of the many indicators of various kinds hosted on the constituency pages of the Democratic Dashboard...
With less than one week to go until polling day, and irrespective of the fact that the polls are ext...
The further fragmentation of the UK’s party system in 2015 is likely to lead to the most disproporti...