The ERS report on party funding looks at how to break down the stalemate by testing the latest recommendations
against voter preferences.
Not exact matches
Starting in 2015,
voters would mark their ballot papers 1, 2, 3 to indicate their order of
preference among the candidates, not «x»
against a single name.
Voters are required to place the number «1»
against their first choice of candidate, known as the «first
preference» or «primary vote».
But the Tories had not offered a guarantee of a referendum on introducing the alternative vote electoral system, in which
voters rank candidates on
preference rather than place a cross
against one candidate alone.