For some of the rest of us, there has been a general election in the UK (there's also one on-going in France!) and, unsuprisingly, the Labour party has won a majority.
A big majority.
At the last election they won c.32.1% of the vote, and won 201 seats. The conservatives in 2019 won c.43.7% of the vote, and won 372 seats - a 47 majority.
This time round, Labour has won a whopping 33.7% of the vote - so 1.6% higher than last time round. Yet they have won a staggering 412 seats!! This will give them a c.174 seat majority. Which is massive.
So while Labour won a significant majority on a vote that only saw them as the largest minority at the last election, the Lib Dem's share went up 0.7% to 12.2% and their seats went up from 8 to 71!!
Reform UK won 14.3% of the vote - effectively ripping it from the Conservatives (Reform UK are sort of the MAGA equivalent - the most far right we have in the mainstream, and are led by Trump-buddy Farage) - so they got more vote than the Lib Dems, and have yet won only 5 seats.
This is because of our "First Past The Post" (FPTP) system, which throws out these weird results.
So we now have a party with a significant majority, yet 66% of the population of the population did not vote for them or what they stand for.
Time for reform (little "r" - I'm not advocating for "Reform UK") methinks, but the party that has benefitted the most from it will never give up that which put them in. All they really need to do is stoke the flames that help split Reform UK from the Conservatives, while not splitting themselves (between the more centrist and the far-left).
Interesting times... well, not really, unless you're into all this data analysis stuff.
A big majority.
At the last election they won c.32.1% of the vote, and won 201 seats. The conservatives in 2019 won c.43.7% of the vote, and won 372 seats - a 47 majority.
This time round, Labour has won a whopping 33.7% of the vote - so 1.6% higher than last time round. Yet they have won a staggering 412 seats!! This will give them a c.174 seat majority. Which is massive.
So while Labour won a significant majority on a vote that only saw them as the largest minority at the last election, the Lib Dem's share went up 0.7% to 12.2% and their seats went up from 8 to 71!!
Reform UK won 14.3% of the vote - effectively ripping it from the Conservatives (Reform UK are sort of the MAGA equivalent - the most far right we have in the mainstream, and are led by Trump-buddy Farage) - so they got more vote than the Lib Dems, and have yet won only 5 seats.
This is because of our "First Past The Post" (FPTP) system, which throws out these weird results.
So we now have a party with a significant majority, yet 66% of the population of the population did not vote for them or what they stand for.
Time for reform (little "r" - I'm not advocating for "Reform UK") methinks, but the party that has benefitted the most from it will never give up that which put them in. All they really need to do is stoke the flames that help split Reform UK from the Conservatives, while not splitting themselves (between the more centrist and the far-left).
Interesting times... well, not really, unless you're into all this data analysis stuff.