Sunday, April 24, 2011

British Deputy Prime Minister Prime Minister Cameron award "for the defense of unreasonable things"

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British Deputy Prime Minister, Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg, David Cameron, the Prime Minister satisfied with the voting system reform, opposed the Conservative leader criticized the name of "defense of unreasonable things." 

Clegg in the British "Sunday Independent" 24 Cameron published an interview with the far-right political parties accused the British National Party leader Nick Griffin and other company, and maintain "reactionary interests" and oppose the implementation of the "optional voting system" 

Britain is scheduled for May 5 on whether to "optional voting system" instead of the current simple majority of the referendum held in the vote count. Liberal Democratic Party, the Labour Party and the Green Party and other opposition parties support the "optional voting system." 

Clegg said, "right wing group" to initiate "optional referendum" to say "no" campaign, the Conservative Party to participate, mostly from vested the power to. He charged that "no" campaign full of "lies, false information and deception." 

He said he hoped it was "the right-wing elite dying." 

Craig stressed that even though, as Deputy Prime Minister, he often appeared together with Cameron, but the ruling itself and the allies were not "a pair." 

Interpretation according to Agence France-Presse, Associated British Clegg's remarks show increasing rift within the government. After the parliamentary elections last May, the British Conservative Party and Liberal Democratic Party formed the first since World War II coalition government. 

UK current electoral system, each constituency to elect a simple majority of MPs. With the U.S. presidential election electoral college system, "winner takes all" similar to the candidates in their own constituency just get the relative majority of votes, whether or not a majority, can be elected. Under this electoral system, political parties and the final vote in the country to obtain the number of seats does not match, and this system generally in favor of large parties. 

"Optional voting system" and the Australian voting system similar to the federal parliamentary elections. Voters on several ballot candidates based on their "positive feeling towards the" order complete "first option" and "second option" ... ... count to see if a candidate has obtained the first "first option" more than half the number of , more than half of that election; if no more than half, was the "first option" at least candidates were eliminated, the candidate from the "first option" of the votes allocated to the same one vote from being "the second option" candidates; then recount to see if a candidate is the "first option" more than half the number; If not, repeat the process until one candidate has been the "first option" more than half.

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