No, it doesn't. Some Labourites are claiming to support it to get the Lib Dems on their side. They've never claimed to support it before, and it's definitely not in their interest to support it. Under PR, Labour would at best have to constantly govern with the Lib Dems. And if voting Lib Dem wasn't a "lost vote", then it's conceivable that they'd end up the junior partner in such coalitions. It also assumes that the Lib Dems would prefer to be in a coalition with Labour and not the Tories in the future. Do you think Labour is so stupid that it would change a system that has given them a significant advantage for the last century?
Hope is the denial of reality
In the future, the Berlin wall will be a mile high, and made of steel. You too will be made to crawl, to lick children's blood from jackboots. There will be no creativity, only productivity. Instead of love there will be fear and distrust, instead of surrender there will be submission. Contact will be replaced with isolation, and joy with shame. Hope will cease to exist as a concept. The Earth will be covered with steel and concrete. There will be an electronic policeman in every head. Your children will be born in chains, live only to serve, and die in anguish and ignorance.
The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil, no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference.
Given that the LD is the result of a merger of the Liberal Party and the Social Democrat Party it's a pretty safe bet that they are more inclined to join a leftish coalition than one with a Conservative Party that is as rabidly right as it is today.
Also, your claim that PR has no support in Labour is simply not true.
Congratulations America
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
Except that the old Liberal Party's last act in government was to be in a coalition with the Conservatives, post-war at first the Liberals and Conservatives didn't stand in each others seats in order to keep out Labour candidates . . . and to make a modern-day example, the first ever post-war, nay the first ever peacetime coalition since the old Liberal-Conservative one is going to be a Conservative/Lib-Dem one.
So why given both history and what is happening this weekend is it a 'safe bet' the LDs would align with Labour? If it was such a safe bet then they could if they wanted do so now, but they don't want to. The truth is they're already aligning with the Conservatives and if this coalition goes ahead as seems likely, then don't think Labour MPs in the future will be so quick to forget about that fact.
PS Warrington Council (where I live) has a Lib-Dem/Conservative coalition leading it.
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PR has negligible support in Labour. Labour are the single largest beneficiary of FPTP. At the last election Labour beat the Tory's by 3%, got less votes than the Tory's in England, got just 35.6% of the popular vote . . . and an absolute majority of 66 seats, more seats than the Tory's in England even.
This election the Conservatives beat Labour by 7%, got millions more votes than Labour across the country, got 36% (higher) of seats yet are 18 votes short of a majority.
The system favours Labour tremendously and they know it. They will never vote for PR. Alternative Vote (which they think will favour them even more) yes, but that's even less proportional than FPTP.
Which is why we have proportional representation today!
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
New Labour is centrist too, the only party that's not centrist of the big 3 are the Conservatives who now are not happy about a deal with a party as far to the left of them as the LD are. The people who are hitting it off are Cameron and Clegg, they after all have a pretty similar background. Their power base has an entirely different view of the compatibility.
Congratulations America
Support for changing it to PR?
There's support for changing it to AV, which they think would boost their support even further, but any Lib-Dems I know who are keen on PR dislike AV even more than FPTP. AV is less proportionate than FPTP, hence Labour's support for it.
Both parties want the system that is better for them and they are diametrically opposed.
WTF?
The Conservatives are the party making the deal. You're blind hatred for the Conservatives, clearly visible for many years, is blinding you to that. There is no real opposition to this deal whatsoever. While the far-left Labour party who have destroyed are economy are being left in the cold while the two centrist parties try to figure out how to boot Brown out and clear up his mess.
The late Robin Cook is not an influential member of the Labour Party today. In 2005 Cook's career was virtually over already, even without his untimely death.
He is one of a few lone voices to have ever made the case; only a single member of Labour's cabinet, Alan Johnson, has ever spoken up for PR.
From the Torygraph
Congratulations America
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
With a very impressive collection of chips, judging by that.
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
Indeed, but nothing's ever permanent. The mood at the time was anti-Tory - inevitably after 18 years of Tory government. After just 13 years of Labour, at a point where the Conservatives won another victory on (significantly better than Labour even in '97 based on votes), the situtation has changed dramatically and the mood is anti-Labour.
1992: Government 41.9%, opposition 34.4% and 17.8%
2010: Government 29.0%, opposition 36.1% and 23.0%
Labour in power isn't as popular as after decades of opposition, unsurprisingly.
Editorials by columnists don't usually represent the newspapers 'official take' on the subject, and are just presented as the opinion of that columnist only.
The light that once I thought compassion still casting shadows in your action
The words you shared were cold transactions that bring me to curse what you've done
When you're up there absorbed in greatness with such success you've grown complacent
I hope you scorch your many faces when you fly too close to the sun
Newspapers are partisan but that doesn't mean their columnists represent what a party thinks. I've never claimed that nor would be so obtuse.
Editorials represent one columnists opinion only. Even then that editorial isn't that negative calling the move "clever".
The Telegraph represents Telegraph readers - and within the Telegraph there is a wide variety of columnists, plenty who are not anti-Cameron.
Conservative supporting papers include (brackets who they supported in '05): The Telegraph (Con '05), The Sunday Telegraph (Con '05), The Times (Lab '05), The Sunday Times (Con '05), The Sun (Lab '05), The News of the World (Lab '05), The Mail (Con '05), The Mail on Sunday (Con '05), The Economist (Lab '05), The Financial Times (Lab '05).
There are more that I can't remember. The Telegraph is far from the sole paper backing the Conservatives now.
Just one paper set backed Labour at the 2010 election in fact: The Mirror/Sunday Mirror. Only. They even claimed it as an "Exclusive". The Lib-Dems had more papers backing them (Guardian/Observer and Independent/Independent on Sunday).