Cameron at least is able to form a stable government
His counterpart in Israel has had to watch as chickens come to roost ...
All of the complaints about the FPTP effect really do seem to miss the point that the rise of a dynamic of attaining the sort of dangerous levels of power through stealing an election by gaming oddities of demographics was a foreseeable consequence of 19th century reforms that was really brought to full fruit in 1911. The altar worship of commons and "absolute democracy" was warned against by (among others) Acton (whose focus was on liberty) and Dicey (whose focus was on the rule of law) - Dicey being particularly interesting as the cited authority on Parliamentary Sovereignty (or supremacy in some contexts) coupled with his rather peculiar sexist and racialist views - who each identified that FPTP was less in sync with absolute democracy than proportional representation but that PR would accelerate the erosion of liberty and the sanctity of common law. An identical debate was held in the turn of the century in SA, Australia, Canada etc ...
Perhaps the real lesson is Parliament ought to be Sovereign but not take itself too seriously, nor should any party read an election result as licence to in one generation shove a manifesto to the expense of 1000 years of British history - as pretty much every thumping victory at the polls has triggered in the last 120 odd years
His counterpart in Israel has had to watch as chickens come to roost ...
All of the complaints about the FPTP effect really do seem to miss the point that the rise of a dynamic of attaining the sort of dangerous levels of power through stealing an election by gaming oddities of demographics was a foreseeable consequence of 19th century reforms that was really brought to full fruit in 1911. The altar worship of commons and "absolute democracy" was warned against by (among others) Acton (whose focus was on liberty) and Dicey (whose focus was on the rule of law) - Dicey being particularly interesting as the cited authority on Parliamentary Sovereignty (or supremacy in some contexts) coupled with his rather peculiar sexist and racialist views - who each identified that FPTP was less in sync with absolute democracy than proportional representation but that PR would accelerate the erosion of liberty and the sanctity of common law. An identical debate was held in the turn of the century in SA, Australia, Canada etc ...
Perhaps the real lesson is Parliament ought to be Sovereign but not take itself too seriously, nor should any party read an election result as licence to in one generation shove a manifesto to the expense of 1000 years of British history - as pretty much every thumping victory at the polls has triggered in the last 120 odd years