First Past The Post Essay

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Election Day arrives and we’re ready to vote. And the winner we say is the one who takes most. But when 13% goes down to point three. Is our system as fair as we believe it to be? First Past the Post is a common single winner voting system used in such countries as Canada, Nigeria, Bangladesh and the United Kingdom, in which whoever wins a plurality (the most) of first choice votes, wins. In First Past the Post, parties do not need a majority of votes, merely more than their competitors. Due to this parliament often does not represent the will of the masses. After years of struggle, of fighting, for votes for women, for votes for all, we still don’t have a democracy that values all. We don’t have a government that is fair. Consequently, I …show more content…

Minority rule is when a party that only received a small percentage of the overall votes gets total control in parliament, completely disregarding the true opinions of the majority of voters. This type of democratic rule is well in play under the use of First Past the Post as our electoral system. For example, in one of the more memorable UK elections, in 2015, the winning party the Conservatives received only 37% of the votes, which means that nearly 2/3 of the population voted for a different party than the one in control. Shockingly if you add up all of the differences in votes to seats in parliament, parliament as a whole has and misrepresentation error of over 50%. How can you be confident and trust in a governing body to make good decisions for your country when the very makeup of that body has that much of an error rate. This is important to address as this amount of misrepresentation can lead to the belief that all votes do not count the same and that people do not have any choice as to how the country runs and that is a serious flaw of First Past the Post. People have died for equality and still we support a system that prevents that? As journalist Andrew Coyne states in his article on minority rule, “Why should only the “winners” be represented in a democracy? The point of an election, surely, is to represent the people—all the people, not just some of

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