Electoral reform means making changes to the current system of elections to improve fairness, transparency, and effectiveness. It aims to improve the way people participate in elections and ensure that votes are accurately represented. It may involve modifying voting methods, redrawing district boundaries, or changing campaign financing rules to make elections more democratic and representative of the people's choices.
Full definition
I agree that I'd like to see
electoral reform as one of the issues debated in the leadership contest.
What is needed is proper debate
about electoral reform so that everyone can see the best arguments for different options.
And the one that we thought was the really good narrative and had such an impact was the issue
over electoral reform.
Yet, while the Conservatives have benefited most from first past the post they actually have strong reasons for
supporting electoral reform.
They don't see it as
real electoral reform; they don't notice that it could actually severely undermine real democracy.
It is a project on the part of civil society to collect signatures to
demand electoral reform and a real choice in elections.
State and local laws vary widely, and various campaign finance reforms, as well as
other electoral reforms, have been enacted in a variety of states.
His comments come after a senior party official has
said electoral reform was «not a deal maker and not a deal breaker» for a possible coalition deal.
I have been a supporter of
electoral reform since I first came across the issues, certainly a year or two before the 1992 election, when I was 18.
Left leaning parties need to set aside their differences and collaborate around
electoral reform just for the next election.
I have
proposed electoral reforms to reduce the power political parties have to deny us alternative choices for candidates for public offices.
For a long time I've been under the impression that support for
full electoral reform tends to diminish the higher up you get in the party.
It would help to
address electoral reform in the context of a broader constitutional settlement: very few on either side try to do this.
This majority report is a road map for the Liberal government to make good on its clear and oft -
repeated electoral reform promise.
The political science shows that just about any place, any time, anywhere, politicians will
approach electoral reform in the spirit of what gives party advantage.
A much better approach than seeking to achieve every objective through a complex, hybrid voting system would be to
link electoral reform with a broader democracy agenda.
The main motive for this
round electoral reform, do not forget, was not any evidence of fraud carried out by individual voters.
The hard - fought referendum
on electoral reform was defeated by a huge majority of voters on a turnout of above 40 %, effectively ending the issue for a generation.
It is no closely guarded secret that most proponents
of electoral reform wanted to see some form of proportional representation (PR) on the table in the upcoming referendum.
Just considering this fact, it is likely that many of those first exposed to the prospects of
electoral reform in 2011 will be more open to consider alternative methods in the future.
If electoral reform can enhance that function, then it really shouldn't require a constitutional amendment at all.
Carwyn Jones raised his opposition to Cheryl Gillan's Green Paper on
electoral reform at a meeting chaired by Nick Clegg earlier.
Phrases with «electoral reform»