Sealink wrote:I suppose the other way to look at it is that 10,706,647 voted for Conservatives. 8,604,358 voted for Labour and 6,827,938 voted for LibDems. Thats a lot of non Conservative votes. So with the smaller parties added, say 16 million people voted for NOT Conservatives. Hardly unfair if Labour talk to the LibDems.
You could say that about any election really, in 2005 there was less than one million in the difference between Labour and the Conservatives and combined with Lib Dem there were more people in the country who voted for NOT Labour. It happens all the time and is hardly anything new.
With a PM in Gordon Brown, who I am convinced has had the most negative and biting media coverage than any PM before, and apparently hated by the nation, the Conservatives still can't get enough votes to get a majority in the Commons.
And that is because Labour actually hold the vast majority of Scottish seats however we are not getting into the Mid Lothian question today. I actually think one of the things that did not play well for Cameron was Clegg and the effect he had in the tv debates. A lot of people went to the polls and based on what the pollsters were saying and what they saw in the press/tv debates, voted Clegg believing that they would not be "wasting" their vote as in previous years. There is a quite strong school of thought that had Clegg not performed so well, less people would have voted for him and more votes would have gone to the Conservatives. Of course what happened was they voted for him which just diluted the vote and resulted in both the Conservatives not gaining as many seats and Labour holding onto more key marginals then they thought.
So it seems that the Conservatives are quite well served by the current voting system and aren't going to give it up easily. This is the same system that applied in the last election, but I don't recall it causing too much fuss back then.
And so are Labour. Lets not forget that this is another election manifesto pledge that Labour conveniently forgot about once they got into power (like the Euro). In 2001 they said they would hold a referendum on voting reform, it did not come because it did not suit their position in UK politics at the time.
I don't think the Tories have got the ringing endorsement they claim.
And by that school of thought nor do Labour or Lib Dem, IMHO Mark put it quite well earlier. Lets be honest, we will get some form of government followed by another election either in Oct or next May.
One thing is clear though, none of this is helping the markets.