quarta-feira, 21 de abril de 2010
BBC Blog asks: Is the election a three horse race? - A personal view
It certainly is a three horse race from a national share of votes standpoint. From the narrower local level winner-take-all perspective - on which the British electoral system is based - it is clearly a two horse one.
Unless a big swing is witnessed right across the country's counties' constituencies that radically alters long observed voting patterns.
Nevertheless, should the replication hold true it would call into question the virtues of a system that produces a winner with the least votes nationally.
The LibDems have long been more popular than their presence at Westminster suggests.
The party would stand to gain the most if ever the electoral system were changed to proportional representation.
Nick Clegg stood out in the groundbreaking first ever threesome TV debate.
His was the more comfortable position politically and he made sure to make the most of it.
I do not think that necessarily translates into votes on polling day.
The political debate is bound to heat up.
The three main parties have a lot of convincing to do.
Unless a big swing is witnessed right across the country's counties' constituencies that radically alters long observed voting patterns.
Nevertheless, should the replication hold true it would call into question the virtues of a system that produces a winner with the least votes nationally.
The LibDems have long been more popular than their presence at Westminster suggests.
The party would stand to gain the most if ever the electoral system were changed to proportional representation.
Nick Clegg stood out in the groundbreaking first ever threesome TV debate.
His was the more comfortable position politically and he made sure to make the most of it.
I do not think that necessarily translates into votes on polling day.
The political debate is bound to heat up.
The three main parties have a lot of convincing to do.
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