The general election of the British public relations system and our present system to election to include the first post (FPTP), only two parties, the Labor Party and the Conservative Party, the Liberal Democratic party potentially influential party You can do. In our "democratic" society, if you do not vote for one of these three, your vote will be in vain. In the case of Malvern labor voters or conservative voters of Ebber Vale, voting is basically wasted or shifted to another constituency, as regular seats in the House seats can be changed only to about 250 seats . Still you
FPTP is the only UK election system to be used for elections. Discuss. "Past past e-mails" are voting systems currently used by the UK for the general election, and the state elects parliament members to enter the House of Representatives. This special voting system is based on each field of electoral district represented by the elected member. The candidate with the highest number of votes in each constituency will be his members. I think that it depends on your own view on democracy, but I think that the main reason for inequality in FPTP elections can be elected as a representative of constituencies through a few votes. Obviously, I think that it does not actually reflect a large number of people who wish to represent constituencies. In addition, as voters have the potential to win in a few votes, many votes were wasted as voters did not vote for the candidate who won the election.
Proportional labeling is also called "publicity" and is a collective term for a kind of voting system that attempts to make the proportion of posts awarded to candidates as close as possible to the proportion of votes received in elections. It is the most widely used electoral system in the world and its variants can be found at a certain government level, including nearly all countries (some of which are elected using PR). The most direct PR activity is to open a parliament with the same proportion of parliament as simply voting. Therefore, if a party gains 40% of votes, it will acquire 40% of the seats. However, this system has obvious problems. Do they also represent the parties who can acquire only 0.001% of voting rights? What happens if the vote rate can not be converted to seats on average? If you earn 19.5% of votes, how do you give 19.5 seats?
The Proportional Representative (PR) voting system is used in the majority of the world's major democracies. According to public relations, participants are selected from multiple seats and are proportional to the number of votes received. Publicity guarantees that political parties and candidates have a proportion of legislative seats that reflect their public support. Parties or candidates need not first reserve seats. By contrast, in the United States, even if the candidate wins 49.9% of the votes, it will waste votes against failed candidates. This leaves an important group of voters not on the table. As voters are aware of this, we often vote for those who are most likely to win in reality, rather than vote for our favorite candidate. Or, we often do not intend to vote.