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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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OT - none of the above
I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for.
The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. I haven't worked out yet what would happen should a party member be elected, not how to police the "no manifesto, no campaigning" rule but a small price to pay for real(ish) democracy. Cheers Dave R PM in waiting. -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#2
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OT - none of the above
On Saturday, 2 May 2015 11:01:12 UTC+1, David wrote:
I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. http://rt.com/op-edge/249945-britain...key-questions/ NT |
#3
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OT - none of the above
David wrote
I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. Your vote is completely irrelevant to the result. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. You do actually. Just dont vote for any of those on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. I doubt they would have allowed that party name. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. See above. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote You've always had that. without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. I haven't worked out yet what would happen should a party member be elected, not how to police the "no manifesto, no campaigning" rule but a small price to pay for real(ish) democracy. Cheers Dave R PM in waiting. Best not hold your breath. On the other hand... |
#4
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OT - none of the above
On 2 May 2015 10:01:09 GMT
David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. I haven't worked out yet what would happen should a party member be elected, not how to police the "no manifesto, no campaigning" rule but a small price to pay for real(ish) democracy. Cheers Dave R PM in waiting. Having seen the Green Party Manifesto, voting for them might have the same pointless effect. Like most parties, they have some valid points, but also some really nutball ideas, such as stopping all road construction. But if only the Conservatives would take on that concept and bin HS2, that would be a real vote-winner, and free up 50 billion quid (or whatever the latest estimate is, especially if it goes to Scotland, per the SNP' desire). Just my view, of course. -- Davey. |
#5
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OT - none of the above
"Davey" wrote in message ... On 2 May 2015 10:01:09 GMT David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. I haven't worked out yet what would happen should a party member be elected, not how to police the "no manifesto, no campaigning" rule but a small price to pay for real(ish) democracy. Cheers Dave R PM in waiting. Having seen the Green Party Manifesto, voting for them might have the same pointless effect. Like most parties, they have some valid points, but also some really nutball ideas, such as stopping all road construction. But if only the Conservatives would take on that concept and bin HS2, that would be a real vote-winner, and free up 50 billion quid (or whatever the latest estimate is, especially if it goes to Scotland, per the SNP' desire). Just my view, of course. UKIP wants to bin HS2. So there you are. |
#6
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OT - none of the above
"harryagain" wrote in message ... "Davey" wrote in message ... On 2 May 2015 10:01:09 GMT David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. I haven't worked out yet what would happen should a party member be elected, not how to police the "no manifesto, no campaigning" rule but a small price to pay for real(ish) democracy. Cheers Dave R PM in waiting. Having seen the Green Party Manifesto, voting for them might have the same pointless effect. Like most parties, they have some valid points, but also some really nutball ideas, such as stopping all road construction. But if only the Conservatives would take on that concept and bin HS2, that would be a real vote-winner, and free up 50 billion quid (or whatever the latest estimate is, especially if it goes to Scotland, per the SNP' desire). Just my view, of course. UKIP wants to bin HS2. But haven't got a hope in hell of getting enough MP elected to have any say whatever on that, you watch. So there you are. Fraid not. |
#7
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OT - none of the above
"David" wrote in message
... I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. You do not use a tick when you vote. You just use Pounder's shaky illiterate handwritten signature. -- Adam |
#8
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OT - none of the above
On 02/05/15 11:01, David wrote:
I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. Well you sort of do: http://i.huffpost.com/gen/865898/thu...large570.jpg?4 Or draw a willy and "vote" for that. It will still be counted as spoiled and that indicates something if 5+% of people did that. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. That I would vote for! This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like. I haven't worked out yet what would happen should a party member be elected, not how to police the "no manifesto, no campaigning" rule but a small price to pay for real(ish) democracy. How about the "Cut out the middleman party" 'Vote for me and I'll fiddle all the expenses I can and spend it on beer and tarts. The difference is: you know what you're getting and I'll update it all on a website to save you the money in buying the Sun to find out the details.' Refreshingly honest... |
#9
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OT - none of the above
In message , David
writes We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. I've read all the manifestos seen "the Leaders" on T.V. arguing their policies, trying to impress me. The candidates leaflets come floating through the door, promising money for the N.H.S., education and the poor. They are going to cut the deficit, they plan for HS2, They are going to build more houses, find a job for me and you, they'll sort out immigration, and the E.U. With their promises and policies, there's very much to do. I really don't believe them, I've heard it all before, the promises are broken, we even went to war! So, when I enter the polling booth, this is what I'd love, a box where I can put my cross for NONE OF THE ABOVE. -- Graeme |
#10
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OT - none of the above
On 02/05/2015 11:01, David wrote:
.... We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like... What's wrong with voting OMRLP? They meet most of your criteria, except that they do have election promises, one of which is not to keep any election promises. -- Colin Bignell |
#11
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OT - none of the above
Well they could rename themselves as the none of the above, but in order to
be at the bottom of the ballot paper their candidates surname would need to begin with ZZ. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Nightjar .me.uk" "cpb"@ insert my surname here wrote in message ... On 02/05/2015 11:01, David wrote: ... We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. This would provide an avenue for a pure protest vote without having to tick Monster Raving Loony and the like... What's wrong with voting OMRLP? They meet most of your criteria, except that they do have election promises, one of which is not to keep any election promises. -- Colin Bignell |
#12
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OT - none of the above
On Sun, 3 May 2015 11:39:32 +0100
"Brian Gaff" wrote: Well they could rename themselves as the none of the above, but in order to be at the bottom of the ballot paper their candidates surname would need to begin with ZZ. Brian ZZ Top, er, Bottom? -- Davey. |
#13
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OT - none of the above
David wrote:
I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier ... My standard advice if you can't pick a party is to pick a person, but it seems you've already attempted that. We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. The None of The Above Party has already been formed. It is not legal to have a registered description "None of the above", so they are called "Above and Beyond". Their sole policy is to have "None of the above" placed on ballot papers. jgh |
#14
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#15
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On 05/05/15 21:10, Tim Watts wrote:
we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing constitutional paralysis. We need a monarch... -- Everything you read in newspapers is absolutely true, except for the rare story of which you happen to have first-hand knowledge. €“ Erwin Knoll |
#16
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OT - none of the above
On 05/05/15 21:23, The Natural Philosopher wrote:
On 05/05/15 21:10, Tim Watts wrote: we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing constitutional paralysis. We need a monarch... Yay for Liz |
#17
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OT - none of the above
The Natural Philosopher wrote:
Tim Watts wrote: we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing constitutional paralysis. We need a monarch... Maybe we should stop the buggers feeling the need to constantly churning out laws just because they've been elected. Texas seems to make do with no more than 140 days of law making every two years, they could then serve their constituents the rest of the time ... |
#18
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OT - none of the above
In article , Tim Streater
writes In article , Andy Burns wrote: The Natural Philosopher wrote: Tim Watts wrote: we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing constitutional paralysis. We need a monarch... Maybe we should stop the buggers feeling the need to constantly churning out laws just because they've been elected. Texas seems to make do with no more than 140 days of law making every two years, they could then serve their constituents the rest of the time ... Yeah and look at Texas. A place where you can get off murder if you can demonstrate that "the son of a bitch deserved to die". If our MPs only made laws for 70 days a year, you'd all be whinging about how they only work 70 days a year. That's nearly a grand a day - almost as much as a contract A&E consultant. -- bert |
#19
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OT - none of the above
On 05/05/15 21:10, Tim Watts wrote:
By all estimations, we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing as all politicians seem to do is break stuff. Hanging's too good for them :-) Stamp duty aside which they finally fixed - but that took long enough... Yay, might save me 4k when I finally get a viable buyer. |
#21
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OT - none of the above
On 07/05/15 11:49, bert wrote:
In article , Tim Watts writes On 05/05/15 19:04, wrote: David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier ... My standard advice if you can't pick a party is to pick a person, but it seems you've already attempted that. We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. The None of The Above Party has already been formed. It is not legal to have a registered description "None of the above", so they are called "Above and Beyond". Their sole policy is to have "None of the above" placed on ballot papers. By all estimations, we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing as all politicians seem to do is break stuff. Stamp duty aside which they finally fixed - but that took long enough... Given the number of laws already in existence one could ask why do we need a parliament constantly passing even more. The ought to repeal two for every one they pass. -- Everything you read in newspapers is absolutely true, except for the rare story of which you happen to have first-hand knowledge. €“ Erwin Knoll |
#22
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OT - none of the above
On 07/05/15 11:49, bert wrote:
In article , Tim Watts writes On 05/05/15 19:04, wrote: David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier ... My standard advice if you can't pick a party is to pick a person, but it seems you've already attempted that. We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. The None of The Above Party has already been formed. It is not legal to have a registered description "None of the above", so they are called "Above and Beyond". Their sole policy is to have "None of the above" placed on ballot papers. By all estimations, we're heading for a hung parliament - which might be a good thing as all politicians seem to do is break stuff. Stamp duty aside which they finally fixed - but that took long enough... Given the number of laws already in existence one could ask why do we need a parliament constantly passing even more. They did delete a few a while back... |
#23
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OT - none of the above
On Tue, 05 May 2015 11:04:22 -0700, jgh wrote:
David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier ... My standard advice if you can't pick a party is to pick a person, but it seems you've already attempted that. We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. The None of The Above Party has already been formed. It is not legal to have a registered description "None of the above", so they are called "Above and Beyond". Their sole policy is to have "None of the above" placed on ballot papers. Well, not exactly - from their web site their policy stretches a lot further than that including major constitutional reform. Far more ambitious than anything that I was considering. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#24
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OT - none of the above
On Sat, 02 May 2015 10:16:15 +0000, Huge wrote:
On 2015-05-02, David wrote: I'm finding it very hard to select a candidate to vote for. The choice of party might be slightly easier (though not as a positive thing) but the local candidate obviously doesn't have an effective media adviser and all the publicity photos scream "Don't trust your child (or pet, or...) to this person!". We don't have a "None of the Above" option on the ballot paper. If I had started earlier (with the time, money, inclination) I could have formed the None of the Above party. No manifesto. No promises at all of any kind. No campaigning. Just someone local with enough cash to pay the deposit and get the party name on the ballot paper. You can always spoil your paper by writing in a "NOTA" candidate. Such spoiled papers have to be shown to the candidates so they can agree it is not a valid vote. However they are unlikely to be included in the voting results - spoiled papers can be an accident. A vote for NOTA party should be clearly recorded and reported against all the other results. A bit like the Jedi religion in the last census. Jedi party????? Probably be scuppered by copyright. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#25
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OT - none of the above
On 2 May 2015 10:29:29 GMT, David wrote:
You can always spoil your paper by writing in a "NOTA" candidate. Such spoiled papers have to be shown to the candidates so they can agree it is not a valid vote. However they are unlikely to be included in the voting results - spoiled papers can be an accident. Pretty sure they'll be included in the full results that the Returning Officer produces. The media on the other hand don't bother to report them. If you really want a "None of the above" then simply make voting compulsory as it is in Australia(?). As to who to vote for. Assuming this is for your MP, vote for the person that actually represents and fights for the constituency and doesn't just sit on their fat arse being whipped. The ballot paper has the candidates address. Is it in the constituency? The Labour one for here, Penrith & Borders, lives in the Wirral... From memory of the ballot paper all the others actually live in or very close to the constituency. -- Cheers Dave. |
#26
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OT - none of the above
In message o.uk, Dave
Liquorice writes On 2 May 2015 10:29:29 GMT, David wrote: You can always spoil your paper by writing in a "NOTA" candidate. Such spoiled papers have to be shown to the candidates so they can agree it is not a valid vote. However they are unlikely to be included in the voting results - spoiled papers can be an accident. Pretty sure they'll be included in the full results that the Returning Officer produces. The media on the other hand don't bother to report them. If you really want a "None of the above" then simply make voting compulsory as it is in Australia(?). As to who to vote for. Assuming this is for your MP, vote for the person that actually represents and fights for the constituency and doesn't just sit on their fat arse being whipped. Depends on the constituency. If you live in a constituency which is a safe seat for one party - like ours, which is strongly conservative (neighbouring seat to Majors old one) then is essence, if you don't want to vote for them, who you vote for makes no difference to who will be the MP. The best really your vote can do is send some sort of message (FWIW). However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties (if the same situation occurs in 5 years time I suspect we will see real pressure for changes to the voting system -- Chris French |
#27
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On Sun, 3 May 2015 00:19:04 +0100
Chris French wrote: However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties ... ... which means the SNP might have an effective dominance over England. Not good, nor fair. -- Davey. |
#28
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OT - none of the above
In message , Davey
writes On Sun, 3 May 2015 00:19:04 +0100 Chris French wrote: However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties ... .. which means the SNP might have an effective dominance over England. Not good, nor fair. Will depend on what coalition is formed. But coalitions tend to give the smaller party(ies) greater influence than their size might suggest cos the bigger party needs to keep them sweet. Though most ISTM likely outcome will be another referendum sooner rather than later, with a yes vote more likely -- Chris French |
#29
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On 03/05/2015 00:19, Chris French wrote:
Depends on the constituency. If you live in a constituency which is a safe seat for one party - like ours, which is strongly conservative (neighbouring seat to Majors old one) then is essence, if you don't want to vote for them, who you vote for makes no difference to who will be the MP. The best really your vote can do is send some sort of message (FWIW). However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties (if the same situation occurs in 5 years time I suspect we will see real pressure for changes to the voting system And remember, the Limp Dems (or "I'll promise anything to stay in power" Clegg to be more accurate) totally reneged on his side of the coalition agreement that they made in May 2010 to allow the electoral boundaries commission to realign the constituency boundaries to take account of the gradual movements in demographic groups since 1994. These movements make it easier and easier for Labour MPs to be elected. It only needs a 3% shift to Labour to give them a majority. The Conservatives need a 12% swing in their favour. As it stands, 2015 will be the most undemocratic ballot we have had for decades. |
#30
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OT - none of the above
On Sun, 03 May 2015 13:53:57 +0100
Andrew wrote: On 03/05/2015 00:19, Chris French wrote: Depends on the constituency. If you live in a constituency which is a safe seat for one party - like ours, which is strongly conservative (neighbouring seat to Majors old one) then is essence, if you don't want to vote for them, who you vote for makes no difference to who will be the MP. The best really your vote can do is send some sort of message (FWIW). However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties (if the same situation occurs in 5 years time I suspect we will see real pressure for changes to the voting system And remember, the Limp Dems (or "I'll promise anything to stay in power" Clegg to be more accurate) totally reneged on his side of the coalition agreement that they made in May 2010 to allow the electoral boundaries commission to realign the constituency boundaries to take account of the gradual movements in demographic groups since 1994. These movements make it easier and easier for Labour MPs to be elected. It only needs a 3% shift to Labour to give them a majority. The Conservatives need a 12% swing in their favour. As it stands, 2015 will be the most undemocratic ballot we have had for decades. Amen to that. Clegg behaved like a spoiled schoolboy. -- Davey. |
#31
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OT - none of the above
Andrew wrote:
Clegg to be more accurate) totally reneged on his side of the coalition agreement that they made in May 2010 to allow the electoral boundaries commission to realign the constituency boundaries to take account of the gradual movements in demographic groups since 1994. That already happened in 2004-2006. How the hell has everybody forgetten that absolutely every news report in the run up to 2010 started with "on the new boundaries...." Parliamentary boundaries are reviewd every 15 years already. The only problem with the reviews is the data they use is so out of date. The boundaries used in the 2010 election were drawn in 2004-2006 using the electoral register from 2001. In contrast, the local boundary review we've just had for council elections in 2016 were drawn up in 2014-2015 using the electoral register from 2013 with projections to 2018. jgh |
#32
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OT - none of the above
On 03/05/15 00:19, Chris French wrote:
If you live in a constituency which is a safe seat for one party - like ours, which is strongly conservative (neighbouring seat to Majors old one) then is essence, if you don't want to vote for them, who you vote for makes no difference to who will be the MP. The best really your vote can do is send some sort of message (FWIW). However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties (if the same situation occurs in 5 years time I suspect we will see real pressure for changes to the voting system Yes, there are three way to look at it: 1) vote for the individual, or failing that party, who appears most worthy. If you live in a safe seat and the inevitable winner is not your choice then you have wasted your vote. 2) Consider, particularly in present circumstances, the effect of 'share of popular vote' on the subsequent negotiations and conduct of the government. 3) Believe in some mystic communion whereby your sentiments are somehow part and parcel of the outcome: ie how you vote will somehow be how the country votes. |
#33
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OT - none of the above
On 03/05/15 19:56, DJC wrote:
On 03/05/15 00:19, Chris French wrote: If you live in a constituency which is a safe seat for one party - like ours, which is strongly conservative (neighbouring seat to Majors old one) then is essence, if you don't want to vote for them, who you vote for makes no difference to who will be the MP. The best really your vote can do is send some sort of message (FWIW). However, this is shaping up to be the most interesting election for sometime, and the aftermath could be quite significant in the long term - the SNP dominating Scotland, the inability of Tories and labour to win a majority and hence giving more power to smaller parties (if the same situation occurs in 5 years time I suspect we will see real pressure for changes to the voting system Yes, there are three way to look at it: 1) vote for the individual, or failing that party, who appears most worthy. If you live in a safe seat and the inevitable winner is not your choice then you have wasted your vote. We've got an independent standing and his policies are all local and none are national. I'm tempted. 2) Consider, particularly in present circumstances, the effect of 'share of popular vote' on the subsequent negotiations and conduct of the government. 3) Believe in some mystic communion whereby your sentiments are somehow part and parcel of the outcome: ie how you vote will somehow be how the country votes. Or go on a vote swap website and try for a tactical approach of your personal favourite has zero chance in your area. |
#34
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OT - none of the above
On 03/05/15 19:56, DJC wrote:
Yes, there are three way to look at it: 1) vote for the individual, or failing that party, who appears most worthy. If you live in a safe seat and the inevitable winner is not your choice then you have wasted your vote. Not os. protest votes get noticed if they are large enough., 2) Consider, particularly in present circumstances, the effect of 'share of popular vote' on the subsequent negotiations and conduct of the government. Yes 3) Believe in some mystic communion whereby your sentiments are somehow part and parcel of the outcome: ie how you vote will somehow be how the country votes. Well of course at some level it will always be. -- Everything you read in newspapers is absolutely true, except for the rare story of which you happen to have first-hand knowledge. €“ Erwin Knoll |
#35
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OT - none of the above
On 03/05/15 20:59, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , DJC wrote: 1) vote for the individual, or failing that party, who appears most worthy. If you live in a safe seat and the inevitable winner is not your choice then you have wasted your vote. It's only safe because all those other people vote a particular way. Doesn't mean you shouldn't bother. all change starts with one person.. -- Everything you read in newspapers is absolutely true, except for the rare story of which you happen to have first-hand knowledge. €“ Erwin Knoll |
#36
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OT - none of the above
"Tim Streater" wrote in message .. . In article , DJC wrote: 1) vote for the individual, or failing that party, who appears most worthy. If you live in a safe seat and the inevitable winner is not your choice then you have wasted your vote. It's only safe because all those other people vote a particular way. Yes. Doesn't mean you shouldn't bother. Yes it does if it can't change the result. |
#37
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OT - none of the above
On Sat, 02 May 2015 23:04:16 +0100, Dave Liquorice wrote:
On 2 May 2015 10:29:29 GMT, David wrote: You can always spoil your paper by writing in a "NOTA" candidate. Such spoiled papers have to be shown to the candidates so they can agree it is not a valid vote. However they are unlikely to be included in the voting results - spoiled papers can be an accident. Pretty sure they'll be included in the full results that the Returning Officer produces. The media on the other hand don't bother to report them. If you really want a "None of the above" then simply make voting compulsory as it is in Australia(?). As to who to vote for. Assuming this is for your MP, vote for the person that actually represents and fights for the constituency and doesn't just sit on their fat arse being whipped. The ballot paper has the candidates address. Is it in the constituency? The Labour one for here, Penrith & Borders, lives in the Wirral... From memory of the ballot paper all the others actually live in or very close to the constituency. Spoiled papers may be included in the full results, but this isn't a clear indication that the vote was deliberately spoiled. Also, the returning officer would have to announce "none of the above" as part of the results and this would be a clear statement that someone took a positive decision to record a protest vote. I am not in favour of compulsory voting - granted you have the right to vote, that doesn't mean you should be forced to exercise the right. For an example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_the_City " There are a number of rights traditionally but apocryphally associated with freemen€”the right to drive sheep and cattle over London Bridge; to a silken rope, if hanged; to carry a naked sword in public; or that if the City of London Police finds a freeman drunk and incapable, they will bundle him or her into a taxi and send them home rather than throw them into a cell. While sheep have occasionally been driven over London Bridge on special occasions, the rest of these "privileges" are now effectively symbolic." All very noble, but I would not expect all freemen of the City of London to be FORCED to drive sheep and cattle over the bridges whilst carrying a naked sword on pain of prosecution. I think enforcement might turn ugly. To note, again from Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Compulsory_voting "As of August 2013, 22 countries were recorded as having laws for compulsory voting and 11 of these 22 countries as enforcing these laws in practice." So half the countries have the laws but are not enforcing them. We have enough "media sound bite" laws already which are unenforced and/or unenforceable without adding more. Those who do not wish to vote can live with the consequences. I think this may tend to keep politics fairly bland for the most part - so as not to upset the silent majority. Oh, and for Australia "At the 2010 Tasmanian state election, with a turnout of 335,353 voters, about 6,000 people were fined $26 for not voting, and about 2,000 paid the fine" So 2/3 who ignored the law also ignored the fine. Maximum respect for the law there. Cheers Dave R -- Windows 8.1 on PCSpecialist box |
#38
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OT - none of the above
On 3 May 2015 12:57:13 GMT, David wrote:
Those who do not wish to vote can live with the consequences. I think that ought to be rephrased to: "Those who choose not vote can live with the consequences." One may wish to vote but not be able to due to unforseen circumstances. As I don't know where I will be on a Polling Day I have postal vote. But to get a postal vote has about a 4 week deadline before the polling day. Oh, and for Australia "At the 2010 Tasmanian state election, with a turnout of 335,353 voters, about 6,000 people were fined $26 for not voting, and about 2,000 paid the fine" So 2/3 who ignored the law also ignored the fine. If some one is inclined to ignore the law, they doen't really care which laws they ignore. Maximum respect for the law there. Well $26 is bugger all and would cost a lot more to collect than would be raised. FFS the lowest Fixed Penalty is £50, most offences incur at £100 Fixed Penalty. That would seem a reasonable level for a failure to vote fine, plus court costs if you contest it and lose. -- Cheers Dave. |
#39
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OT - none of the above
"David" wrote in message ... On Sat, 02 May 2015 23:04:16 +0100, Dave Liquorice wrote: On 2 May 2015 10:29:29 GMT, David wrote: You can always spoil your paper by writing in a "NOTA" candidate. Such spoiled papers have to be shown to the candidates so they can agree it is not a valid vote. However they are unlikely to be included in the voting results - spoiled papers can be an accident. Pretty sure they'll be included in the full results that the Returning Officer produces. The media on the other hand don't bother to report them. If you really want a "None of the above" then simply make voting compulsory as it is in Australia(?). As to who to vote for. Assuming this is for your MP, vote for the person that actually represents and fights for the constituency and doesn't just sit on their fat arse being whipped. The ballot paper has the candidates address. Is it in the constituency? The Labour one for here, Penrith & Borders, lives in the Wirral... From memory of the ballot paper all the others actually live in or very close to the constituency. Spoiled papers may be included in the full results, but this isn't a clear indication that the vote was deliberately spoiled. Also, the returning officer would have to announce "none of the above" as part of the results and this would be a clear statement that someone took a positive decision to record a protest vote. I am not in favour of compulsory voting - granted you have the right to vote, that doesn't mean you should be forced to exercise the right. For an example: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_the_City " There are a number of rights traditionally but apocryphally associated with freemen€”the right to drive sheep and cattle over London Bridge; to a silken rope, if hanged; to carry a naked sword in public; or that if the City of London Police finds a freeman drunk and incapable, they will bundle him or her into a taxi and send them home rather than throw them into a cell. While sheep have occasionally been driven over London Bridge on special occasions, the rest of these "privileges" are now effectively symbolic." All very noble, but I would not expect all freemen of the City of London to be FORCED to drive sheep and cattle over the bridges whilst carrying a naked sword on pain of prosecution. I think enforcement might turn ugly. To note, again from Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Compulsory_voting "As of August 2013, 22 countries were recorded as having laws for compulsory voting and 11 of these 22 countries as enforcing these laws in practice." So half the countries have the laws but are not enforcing them. We have enough "media sound bite" laws already which are unenforced and/or unenforceable without adding more. Those who do not wish to vote can live with the consequences. I think this may tend to keep politics fairly bland for the most part - so as not to upset the silent majority. In fact there isn't any evidence that it does keep politics fairly bland for the most part given that those countrys that do not have compulsory voting tend to have the least bland politics. Oh, and for Australia "At the 2010 Tasmanian state election, with a turnout of 335,353 voters, about 6,000 people were fined $26 for not voting, and about 2,000 paid the fine" The fine is rather higher than that in the bigger states. So 2/3 who ignored the law also ignored the fine. Had a valid excuse, actually. Maximum respect for the law there. No. |
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