All posts tagged: MultiParty

Why the rise of multi-party politics is good for democracy

Why the rise of multi-party politics is good for democracy

If a general election were held today, many British voters would notice something that has been quietly changing for years. They have more choice on the ballot than they used to. The dominance of Labour and the Conservatives is being eroded by multi-party politics. The recent Gorton and Denton byelection clearly showed that the Green Party and Reform UK are emerging as serious forces. Elsewhere, Your Party is preparing to enter the race. These changes have already fuelled renewed calls for electoral reform, particularly for the introduction of proportional representation. But the significance of a shift towards multiparty politics goes beyond the rules of the electoral system. It also has the potential to change the democratic role of political competition in the UK. In any healthy democracy, it is essential that diverging opinions and different views about society and public policy can compete openly. Political parties express and organise this democratic competition. Yet in a two-party system, it is limited to a select few. Multiparty competition offers the possibility of a more open and inclusive …

Politics Home | Over 50 Academics Warn That Voting System Is Not Fit For Multi-Party Politics

Politics Home | Over 50 Academics Warn That Voting System Is Not Fit For Multi-Party Politics

The UK held a referendum on the Parliamentary voting system in 2011, in which the public voted to continue the first-past-the-post system (Alamy) 4 min read19 min Dozens of academics have written to the government to warn that the current voting system risks producing distorted results on an “unprecedented” scale at the next general election. The letter, coordinated with the All-Party Parliamentary Group for Fair Elections and campaign group Make Votes Matter, and shared exclusively with PoliticsHome, says that the first-past-the-post system will struggle to cope with the UK’s emerging multi-party politics. It warns that it will lead to “random and arbitrary” outcomes, which will risk undermining democratic legitimacy and further damaging public trust in politics. The group points to the 2024 general election, in which Labour and the Conservatives together secured their lowest combined vote share in a century. Since then, fragmentation has grown, not subsided, with polls regularly putting the two main parties below 40 per cent, with Reform UK and the Greens surging, and the Liberal Democrats on double digits. Under first-past-the-post, which is used at UK general elections, …