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A Guide to the 2010 General Election. Dr Justin Greaves Department of Politics University of Warwick. Outline of this talk. The basics (background and context) What is a ‘swing’? What is a ‘hung parliament’? The electoral system Opinion polls
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A Guide to the 2010 General Election Dr Justin Greaves Department of Politics University of Warwick
Outline of this talk • The basics (background and context) • What is a ‘swing’? • What is a ‘hung parliament’? • The electoral system • Opinion polls • The national debt (perhaps the main election issue?)
So, what are the basics? • More than 45 million people aged 18 or above vote for a new Member of Parliament (MP) for the area in which they live (Constituency) • Elections must be held at least every five years in Britain – up to PM to choose the date • Traditionally held on a Thursday
Why a Thursday? • One theory about its origins is that people were not paid until Fridays and so holding polls on Thursdays ensured they were not too drunk to vote
Two controversial issues • Should the voting age be reduced to 16? • Should we introduce compulsory voting (as in Australia)?
The TV debates • This is the first election in the UK where there have been TV debates between the three party leaders • Here is a clip from the 2nd debate
Too much celebrity? • Is it becoming too much like the X Factor or Britain’s Got Talent? • Leaders judged on how good they look on TV?
What is a ‘swing’? • Swing is a tool which helps explain how elections are won and lost • In simple terms it is a way of measuring how the public's support of political parties changes from one election to the next
The calculation • Step 1. Add the rise in one party's share in the vote to the fall in the second party's share of the vote. • Step 2. Divide your figure by two. The resulting figure is the swing.
An example • In the 2005 General Election the Labour Party had a lead of 3% over the Conservative Party • Let’s assume that in Thursday’s election, the result is a Con lead of 4% over Labour • This is a swing of 3.5% (3+4/2)
What to look out for • 1.6% swing against Labour: Labour lose their overall majority • 4.3% swing against Labour: The Conservatives become the largest party. They would still not have an overall majority. • 6.9% swing against Labour: The Conservatives gain an overall majority and therefore form the next government (but will a UNS operate?)
What is a ‘hung parliament’? • If one party has an absolute majority it means that it has more seats than all the other parties put together (326+)
If no party has such a majority then there is a hung parliament • The smaller parties can then join forces to out-vote the government • This makes it difficult to pass laws
There is a good chance of a hung parliament resulting from this election • The last time it happened was in February 1974
Options in a hung parliament • Formal coalition (alliance with another party) • Confidence and supply • Minority government • If none of these options work there would have to be another election
Why is it so rare? • Hung Parliaments and coalitions happen a lot in other countries • So why are they so rare in the UK? • This is mainly a result of our electoral system
Proportional Representation • Many countries have a proportional electoral system (eg: under PR if a party wins 30% of the votes, it will win approx 30% of the seats) • It is rare for any one party to get over 50% of the vote • Therefore, in these countries parties will have to work together
First past the post • Britain has a first past the post electoral system • Therefore, 650 constituencies • In each one, the candidate who gets the most votes wins (even if it is less than 50%) • EG: if the winner gets 36% of the vote they still take the seat
It is like a horse race • The winner of the race is the first to pass a particular point on the track
Strange results • FPP can throw up strange results: • A party with 35/40% support can get well over 50% of the seats • The party that wins most votes may not win most seats (eg: 1974) • The Lib Dems could come first in vote share and third in seats
Opinion polls • You may have seen opinion polls in the media • These may only interview 1000 people out of the whole population of Britain • If the sample is ‘representative’ these polls should be accurate
Polls usually have a margin of error of + or – 3% • 19 times out of 20 a poll should fall between this margin of error
Think, pair, share • What could cause an opinion poll to be biased or skewed in some way?
National debt and borrowing • One of the biggest election issues is the amount of money the government is borrowing (and Britain’s national debt) • Due to the recession the government had to borrow a lot of money
Another was to pay benefits to those who became unemployed • And if people are out of work the government also loses tax revenue
Party Policy • The Labour Party plans to reduce the amount we borrow by 50% over four years (starting in 2011) • The Conservative Party say this is not enough. They want to go cut faster and deeper
Debt statistics • Borrowing of £163 billion last year • The government forecasts that debt will soar to £1.1 trillion by 2011
Debt statistics (2) • We owe £14,480 for every man, woman and child • That's more than £31,254 for every person in employment • Every household will pay £1,898 this year, just to cover the interest