Labour should support a “Yes” vote on AV

With a date now set for a referendum on switching the electoral system to the Alternative Vote, a debate will no doubt rage inside both the Labour and Conservative parties as to how they should campaign.

With a date now set for a referendum on switching the electoral system to the Alternative Vote, a debate will no doubt rage inside both the Labour and Conservative parties as to how they should campaign. Labour MPs and activists, regardless of their views on proportional representation, should support a “Yes” vote for three simple reasons.

First, the Alternative Vote is an intrinsically fairer system that first-past-the-post. Under Britain’s current electoral system only 33 per cent of MPs were elected with a clear majority (50%+1) of support in their constituencies – the lowest ever proportion. AV ensures that every MP would have this legitimacy by reallocating second preferences. But the system only changes the way votes are cast and counted meaning that any concerns about how some electoral systems remove the constituency link are not relevant.

Second, the Alternative Vote is popular while first-past-the-post is unpopular. A recent poll by ComRes for the Independent showed that 78 per cent of voters believe the current electoral system should be replaced while 56 per cent would back a switch to the AV system.

Third, the Alternative Vote is likely to help Labour at the expense of the Conservatives. Post-election research by US pollster Stanley Greenberg showed that 37 per cent of Lib Dem voters wanted a Labour-Lib Dem coalition compared to 29 per cent who supported a Tory-Lib Dem coalition, a further 21 per cent wanted a Unity government. Since the election, the Lib Dem vote has collapsed to 16 per cent – twice as many of these switchers have turned to Labour compared to the Tories. A projection by the Electoral Reform Society of the 2010 election outcome under the Alternative Vote showed the Tories on 281 (-26), Labour on 262 (+4), and Lib Dems (+22).

One final reason is that the Labour party already uses AV for the selection of its own leader. If it’s good enough for the party, it should be good enough for the country.

UPDATE 12.06:

Ed Miliband has put out the following statement:

“I strongly support the case for introducing the Alternative Vote, to ensure greater fairness for voters and greater legitimacy for our MPs in Westminster. Whenever the referendum takes place, I will campaign with other supporters across the political spectrum for this important change.”

Earlier today, David Miliband told Today listeners:

“I think that it’s important that we move to a system where every Member of Parliament has at least 50 per cent of the vote of their constituents.”

33 Responses to “Labour should support a “Yes” vote on AV”

  1. Mark Thompson

    On your final point, the Tories also do not trust FPTP to elect their own leaders. Instead they whittle them down round by round with the MPs as the electoral college (which is a bit like AV) until they reach the top two in this respect and then put the two candidates to a vote of the party membership.

    If FPTP is so wonderful they should have the courage of their convictions and put all candidates to a vote of the public with the one who gets the most votes winning. Even if that meant their leader only had 20% or 30% of the vote. Oh, and it could easily have ended up being someone like David Davis or even Liam Fox last time.

  2. @_Jock

    The AV proposals come with a redrawing of the current boundaries. These changes would be most damaging in places where Labour already has seats. So while you may think that AV would help Labour it would not.
    If Labour want’s to get reelected we should do it through winning support by communicating our morals and values, and representing the people who need us most. Not by playing games to stack the deck in our favour.

  3. Electoral Reform Soc

    RT @leftfootfwd: Labour should support a "Yes" vote on AV: http://bit.ly/bofIw1

  4. Molly Moggs

    RT @leftfootfwd: Labour should support a "Yes" vote on AV: http://bit.ly/bofIw1

  5. Chris Paul

    RT @HouseofTwits: RT @leftfootfwd Labour should support a "Yes" vote on AV: http://bit.ly/bofIw1

Comments are closed.