Die Unterstützung für das Verhältniswahlrecht ist unter den Wählern von Reform UK zurückgegangen

https://yougov.co.uk/politics/articles/53890-support-for-proportional-representation-has-fallen-among-reform-uk-voters

Von coffeewalnut08

17 Kommentare

  1. coffeewalnut08 on

    Key takeaways

    • By 45% to 25%, Britons tend to prefer proportional representation (PR) over first past the post for UK general elections

    • Majorities of Labour, Lib Dem and Green voters back PR, as do 45% of Reform UK voters

    • Support for retaining FPTP among Reform UK voters has risen from 17% to 31% since January last year

    *For many years, one of the most prominent advocates for proportional representation (PR) in Britain was Nigel Farage, whose parties have historically been significantly underrepresented in parliament.*

    *At the 2024 election, for instance, Reform UK won less than 1% of seats despite winning 14% of the vote, as part of what was then the most disproportional general election result in British history.*

    *But with voting intention polls over the last year showing clear Reform UK leads, it is likely that our current first past the post system (FPTP) would cease to be a disadvantage for the party: YouGov’s MRP in September projected Reform could win 48% of seats on just 27% of the vote. This has led to some in the party dropping their support for electoral reform.*

  2. doublejay1999 on

    i would bet good money the number of people who could not give an approximate explaination of either system would be close to 70%

  3. LilacScentedStoat on

    Reform will end up actually reforming nothing.. except the broken pieces of the Tory party, which they’ll pick up and refrom under a new flag „The Reformative Party“

  4. Christian-Metal on

    AMS would be the way to go: You get the best of both PR AND FPTP and eliminate the worst aspects of both.

  5. Don’t want it now they’ve got a shot at the required amount to gain power?

  6. BobMonkhaus on

    The next election won’t be PR, if they win they don’t need it, if they lose they’ll once again call for it.

  7. NoLove_NoHope on

    I’d love to know the sentiment towards authoritarian leadership amongst Reform voters generally and then amongst those who don’t prefer PR.

    This isn’t to say that everyone against PR wants authoritarianism, that’s absurd. It’s just that in the past I remember reading some studies about personality traits, political leanings and beliefs that tend to be more common amongst those who are pro-authoritarianism. And I think it’s super important to have an eye on those things and their prevalence in society.

    Lest we end up more like America.

    Imo, more now than ever, things like Sociology are so important.

  8. OwlsAboutThatThen on

    Or the party has gained supporters who support FPtP at a greater rate than PR.

  9. long-lankin on

    Well, that’s predictable. Unfortunately a lot of „principles“ that people claim to espouse are really just based on naked self-interest. Think about, say, radical libertarians who want to slash taxes and cut welfare – that’s really just because they stand to benefit.

    And for a party like Reform, whose only real ideology is hollow populist xenophobia and social conservatism, that’s even more apparent. For the likes of Nigel Farage, their only real criticism of FPTP was that it prevented them from holding power and enacting their agenda. 

    Now that Reform are, by some polls, the most popular political party, it stands to benefit the most from FPTP, and so the complaints of its members and leadership have evaporated.

    On a different note, rather than „pure“ proportional representation (edit: specifically [Party List Proportional Representation](https://electoral-reform.org.uk/voting-systems/types-of-voting-system/party-list-pr/)), I’d instead advocate for the [Single Transferable Vote](https://electoral-reform.org.uk/voting-systems/types-of-voting-system/single-transferable-vote/) or STV. It uses multi-member constituencies and combines high proportionality with direct local representation and voter choice, and is favoured by the Electoral Reform Society.

  10. GhostRiders on

    I seriously doubt that the majority of Reform Voters actually know what proportional representation entails lol

  11. I’d like ranked preference voting. I’d rank Nigel’s parties dead last.

  12. People here are saying Reform abandon their principles when it suits them. Which I don’t disagree with.

    But another explanation for this headline is that as their support has risen in terms of absolute number, the *proportion* (appropriately enough) of people who support PR has declined because a lot of their new support comes from FPTP-supporting Tory (and perhaps Labour) voters.

  13. theGIRTHandtheGLORY8 on

    Reform voters are as thick as pig shit so that also needs to be taken into account.

  14. Past-Rooster-9437 on

    Ah now the question is, is this a case of people going „Oh now we might *win* with a minority we don’t want it!“ or is it that the voter base has expanded to include a lot of people opposed to PR?

  15. jaffacake202 on

    I’m genuinely concerned about reform in the next election. Where I live 60% voted conservatives, 15% reform and 3% Labour …. I wanted to vote Labour but the fear of reform having a higher result next time concerns me

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