• @[email protected]M
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    211 months ago

    In practice, the Tories will only get wiped out if Labour win lots of seats. There’s no way you can realistically engineer your ideal situation with your one vote. If you want to get the Tories out, which we both do, then nearly everywhere in the country the answer is to vote Labour. We really can’t fuck around, here. Polls have been way out before and the Tories are doing what they can to suppress the vote. If we mess this up, we really could be stuck with the Tories for another five years.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 months ago

      Couldn’t Labour form a coalition with the left-leaning parties? I am not well-versed in British politics but I think that even if Labour doesn’t win a big majority, the Tories could still be shellacked with the combined votes for everyone else, right?

      If that’s not the case, please explain because I am genuinely curious

      • @[email protected]M
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        10 months ago

        In the UK, we vote by constituency. A party could actually come second in term of votes nationally but still win more constituencies, and thus have more MPs (as happened in 1951 and in February 1974). This has historically been a problem for Labour: They get lots of votes in safe seats, with MPs winning 60% of the vote or more, but then they lose more narrowly elsewhere, leading to lots of Labour votes translating into not a lot of Labour MPs.

        The second factor is that the left vote tends to be ‘split’ in the UK. If you have a constituency where the parties standing are:

        • Conservative
        • Green
        • Labour
        • Lib Dem
        • Reform

        You have a situation where the ‘left’ vote might split three ways (to Lab, LD and Green), but the ‘right’ vote splits only two ways (to Con and Reform). So, you could get a result like:

        • Con: 33%
        • Lab: 32%
        • Lib Dem: 13%
        • Green: 12%
        • Reform: 10%

        In that scenario, the majority of the voters (57%) have voted for left-leaning parties, and only a third have voted Conservative – but the Conservatives would win the seat.

        There are a lot of constituencies where the outcome looks broadly like what I’ve described. That’s why I’m saying that the best way to beat the Tories is almost always to vote Labour. Of course, people might have other reasons they don’t want to vote Labour (I certainly don’t agree with everything they do, that would be weird), but if the priority is ‘get the Tories out’, the answer is to vote Labour.

        • @[email protected]
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          10 months ago

          Okay, I see now, for some reason my mind completely skipped elections for individual MPs and thought only about the full parliament. I’ve wondered why, when people seem to loathe the Tory PMs who have been coming through the revolving door for the past several years, why people keep voting them in as a majority, but now it makes perfect sense. This is how even a parliamentary system with multiple parties gets wrecked, FPTP voting is always the wrong answer. Sorry for being dense and overlooking what should be an obvious answer.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        Yes, but bear in mind that at the last election, the majority of the British public voted against the Tories on most issues, yet we have a huge Tory majority. So it doesn’t work. Our democracy doesn’t work.

    • @[email protected]
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      011 months ago

      If you think Labour are shit, don’t vote for them. If that causes the Tories to get back in then that can’t be your fault. You shouldn’t have to have a deep understanding of the political machine to vote effectively. Vote for the party you want.

      • @[email protected]M
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        110 months ago

        I broadly agree with you. It’s just that there are a lot of people here saying ‘(1) I want the Tories out but (2) I won’t vote Labour’ and my point is that (1) and (2) are, for almost every voter, mutually exclusive. As we’ve learned over the last few years, you really can’t have your cake and eat it!