Mnemon: Uh. But we don't copy your system. Taking countries like Germany that by now, essentially, have five different major parties - coalitions do change and shift from election to election. That is the huge difference, really. More political flavours offer at least slightly more choice to find a party and manifesto that suits your own perception of what direction the country should take. Whether they realize the manifesto is a different matter; but it makes for a more diverse political landscape rather than a bi-partisan system where both parties go for exactly the same demographics [whoever catches most of swing voters wins.] Germany actually uses a mixture of voting systems (partially PR) in elections.
That's a common mistake that people make. You don't have any more choice than we do, it's just that you've got more labels for the choices than we have.
If you look at our parties, sure we have two, but within them you see a lot more disagreement than you typically would see in a party under the parliamentary system. Ultimately you get a similar spread of ideas in terms of elected officials. I don't think that one can seriously consider people that run and have no chance at all of picking up a seat, we've got them here too.
Rodzaju: For me personally, AV doesn't seem worth it.
It dos improve the standing of smaller parties.
However, most of the smaller parties that I have experienced are various flavours of nut-jobs. NOT people I want involved in runing the country.
By increasing the chances of smaller parties, it decreases the power of the larger parties, making hung parliaments more likely.
I'm more in favour of a strong majority government.
As it stands, there's basically conservative or labour.
These tend to counterbalance each other pretty well.
If the current gov makes a balls up of it, they will be replaced in a couple of years.
The 2 party system actually works well here.
The lib dems (& other minor parties) just give a veneer of wider democracy for the benefit of those that don't believe in the 2 party system.
That's part of the point. Minor parties are usually minor parties for a reason. Some systems like the one in the US mean that the minor parties get engulfed in a major party, but the policies that they advocate for tend not to be popular, hence why they aren't the major party.
It is nice to have a system where you've got at least some idea what you get based upon party affiliation, but at the end of the day, any system where you vote for a candidate and not party is going to result in politicians that don't tow the party line at times.