Home Accessibility Courses Diary The Mouth Forum Resources Site Map About Us Contact
General Election day, UK

It's the day of the general election - a chance for each of us to choose our representative for parliament in each of the 650 or so single-member seats (constituencies) throughout Great Britain and Northern Ireland.

In the majority of the seats, the incumbent (or his / her political party's appointed successor) should be elected without there being any "real" contest. The overall outcome - as to which party holds the majority of the seats - will be decided in perhaps 100 of the seats which are descibed as marginal, and in those seats each party has a core following of sheep who'll vote for them "come what may". The real decision comes down to the choice of perhaps 1 in 50 of the eligible voters in the country as a whole, and how effective each of the party's machines is in getting their supporters to bother.

In our Devizes seat, Michael Ancram of the Conservative Party won last time with 47% of the vote. That's a majority of nearly 12000 over the next canditate - the Labour party - with 25%. The Liberal Democrats got 21% (and yet there candidate this time tells us that she's "The only real alternative as Labour can't win here" - that's ... err ... and interesting piece of logic to say the least). I WILL be voting, although I'm not thrilled by any of the candidates. 63% of people in Devizes voted last time.

Once all the votes are in, they'll be counted - many overnight and some (for the more remote areas mostly) during tomorrow and results will be declared one by one. Once a single party has the majority of the seats, its leader will be invited to continue as (or to become) Prime Minister and he continues (or takes over) withe immediate effect. Very different to the system in, for example, the USA.

A thought. 47% of 63% last time was 25159 votes out of an electorate of 86000 - in other words, less than one person in 3 actually said they wanted Mr Ancram to represent them. Oh what a frail foundation underlies this supposedly solid seat.


(written 2005-05-05 07:26:16)

 
Associated topics are indexed under
Z300 - Politics and Religion

Back to
Dentist's Waiting Room Syndrome
Previous and next
or
Horse's mouth home
Forward to
Dining full circle
Some other Articles
Within about an hour
Training courses in the C language
Lambdas in Python
Dining full circle
General Election day, UK
Dentist's Waiting Room Syndrome
What - no switch or case statement?
Sharing pictures of Wiltshire
A reminder that the customer is King
Using a Python dictionary as a holder of object attributes
2259 posts, page by page
Link to page ... 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46 at 50 posts per page


This is a page archived from The Horse's Mouth at http://www.wellho.net/horse/ - the diary and writings of Graham Ellis. Every attempt was made to provide current information at the time the page was written, but things do move forward in our business - new software releases, price changes, new techniques. Please check back via our main site for current courses, prices, versions, etc - any mention of a price in "The Horse's Mouth" cannot be taken as an offer to supply at that price.

Link to Ezine home page (for reading).
Link to Blogging home page (to add comments).

© WELL HOUSE CONSULTANTS LTD., 2009: Well House Manor • 48 Spa Road • Melksham, Wiltshire • United Kingdom • SN12 7NY
PH: 01144 1225 708225 • FAX: 01144 1225 707126 • EMAIL: info@wellho.net • WEB: http://www.wellho.net • SKYPE: wellho