MPs in safe seats are more likely to abuse the security by taking second jobs. Proportional Representation, anyone?

Last Updated: November 22, 2021By Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

 

Geoffrey Cox: he has a safe seat, so he felt perfectly comfortable taking a second job and treating his Parliamentary work as a hobby.

 

Suddenly proportional representation is looking like the wise choice after all – isn’t it, Britain?

Some might say the result of the 2011 referendum on whether to introduce proportional representation for Parliamentary elections in the UK was a dire warning of the corruption that we see in government today. Hindsight is a wonderful thing.

The bid to introduce a fairer voting system was resoundingly defeated by a 68 per cent of votes against to only 32 per cent for, on a turnout of 42 per cent of the electorate.

I wonder if the survivors of the other 58 per cent of registered voters at the time regret not bothering to turn up now they know that the result meant a continuation of “safe seats”, allowing the MPs who occupy them to corrupt themselves with second jobs with impunity.

You see, the current First Past The Post system lends itself to tribal voting, meaning that areas that traditionally vote for a particular party are likely to see that party’s representative into Parliament at every election, because there only needs to be enough of them to see off all the other contenders individually.

It means a minority of voters can impose their will – or, more realistically, the real plans behind the lies that their favoured party told to get elected – on the majority.

Do you think most of the UK wants the NHS carved up by a cabal of private corporations? Of course not – around 70 per cent of voters want full re-nationalisation. But that won’t stop the Tories taking it another step towards full privatisation – the exact opposite of what we want – on Tuesday.

By the same token, the individuals occupying those safe seats know that they’re unlikely to be voted out, so they know they can take second jobs and rake in the cash.

As the Guardian article states, the facts “undermine Boris Johnson’s suggestion that voters who disapprove of their MP’s outside work can simply unseat them at an election”.

Either that damned fool spoke without thinking (yet again), or he simply lied. Neither alternative is acceptable in a prime minister but – oh! He’s in a safe Tory seat! So you can’t vote him out.

You see how it works?

Pretty much all of the problems we have with our democracy today stem from the fact that in 2011 the UK voted not to have one.

Clive Lewis’s words (above) are absolutely true – but there is a fatal flaw.

The 2011 referendum was a once-in-a-lifetime situation, forced by the fact that the Tories had failed to win a majority in Parliament and a referendum was a condition of their coalition with the Liberal Democrats.

Now we live in a dictatorship where Boris Johnson lied his way to an 80-seat Conservative majority. Neither he nor any Tory who replaces him will ever allow another referendum because they know it would end the dictatorship they have lied so hard to achieve.

And we’re unlikely to see another hung Parliament for the foreseeable future because the main opposition party – Labour – is currently run by a red Tory wetwipe who probably couldn’t win an election if he was the only candidate.

Public opinion might push Johnson towards a gesture of some sort, but it won’t be much. He has already watered down plans to restrict MPs from holding second jobs.

And this week he can distract us all with the votes on the NHS and on asylum seekers.

Bread and circuses. It’s a tactic that has worked since Roman times – because you’re always going to fall for it. Or will you..?

Have YOU donated to my crowdfunding appeal, raising funds to fight false libel claims by TV celebrities who should know better? These court cases cost a lot of money so every penny will help ensure that wealth doesn’t beat justice.

https://www.crowdjustice.com/case/mike-sivier-libel-fight/


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5 Comments

  1. SteveH November 22, 2021 at 1:18 am - Reply

    The Tories have already acknowledged that FPTP works in their favour.

    Priti Patel has been accused of “utter disdain for devolution” after she announced plans to switch elections for the Mayor of London to the first-past-the-post system.
    The change would apply not only to the election of the capital’s mayor, but to votes for Police and Crime Commissioners in England and Wales and elected mayors in nine combined authorities in England.
    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/priti-patel-london-mayor-voting-b1818148.html

    Now that Unite has voted to change their policy to support PR and given that 80%+ of Labour members support PR it is almost certain that PR will be adopted as Labour Party Policy at next year’s conference.

    • Mike Sivier November 23, 2021 at 2:37 am - Reply

      I look forward to the day we can find out whether your prediction is accurate.

  2. Tony Crook November 22, 2021 at 4:56 am - Reply

    This is important: the 2011 referendum did NOT offer a choice between FPTP and PR. It offered a choice between FPTP and “that miserable little compromise” Alternative Vote (AV), which is NOT proportional.

    Indeed, polling after the referendum showed that many supporters of PR voted to retain the status quo (FPTP) in the hope that there would subsequently be a “proper” choice put to voters. They were naive and optimistic and, as can clearly be seen 10 years down the line, hopelessly foolish.

    There won’t be another referendum for decades.

  3. kateuk November 22, 2021 at 10:23 am - Reply

    The 2011 referendum wasn’t for Proportional Representation – it was for the Alternative Voting System that nobody wanted – not even supporters of PR. I know a lot of people that voted “no” precisely because AVS isn’t PR. But the Tories made sure that we wouldn’t get a vote on PR. I’m told that in the whole of Europe only the UK and Belarus still use the FPTP system, which says a lot, doesn’t it?

  4. Tony November 22, 2021 at 10:30 am - Reply

    His constituency was formerly held by the Liberal Democrats. It only acquired ‘safe’ status at the 2015 general election. Before then, his majorities were small.

    His position is not necessarily as secure as he thinks. His constituency could easily revert to its former status as a marginal.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torridge_and_West_Devon_(UK_Parliament_constituency)

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