64 Labour MPs Back Electoral Reform Commission in Challenge to First-Past-the-Post
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 19
64 Labour MPs Back Electoral Reform Commission in Challenge to First-Past-the-Post
4 articles · Updated · BBC.com · May 19
Sixty-four Labour MPs signed an amendment to the Representation of the People Bill calling for a national commission to review UK electoral reform.
The push argues first-past-the-post is "broken" in a more fragmented multi-party landscape, where candidates can win seats on relatively low vote shares.
Alex Sobel tabled the amendment before the bill returns to the Commons next month; the bill itself would extend voting rights to 16- and 17-year-olds.
The move increases pressure on Keir Starmer, who backed electoral reform in 2020 but dropped the pledge from Labour's 2024 election manifesto.
Electoral reform has support from smaller UK parties, Labour's 2022 conference and 8 of its 11 affiliated unions, but Conservatives still back the current system.
As Labour's leader opposes reform, can this cross-party rebellion actually change the UK's 'broken' voting system?
With the UK now a multi-party system, could electoral reform prevent future 'loveless landslide' election results?
Beyond a 'pathetic cliché' commission, what specific voting system could finally win public support and fix UK politics?