GAH!

May. 3rd, 2011 11:25 am
andrewducker: (Default)
[personal profile] andrewducker
The BBC now has a "Best arguments for voting Yes or No" on AV page up.

And while I'm annoyed that the No campaign are still arguing that AV means
that some votes are counted more than others (clearly untrue - every round
counts all votes for people whose preferences are still in the running), I
am _furious_ at the awful arguments put forward by the Yes campaign.

The bit which seems to actually grab people (an end to the split vote
problem, where you can have 70% of people voting for an X-wing party, and a
Y-wing party gets the seat) is relegated to an aside in point 4, which 90%
of people will never see.

I am incredibly frustrated by their continued incompetence at getting their
message across.

Am I wrong? Do people really think that AV will make MPs work harder? Does
anyone really care about that? Is there any reason whatsoever for that to
be the top point?

Date: 2011-05-04 10:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undeadbydawn.livejournal.com
I'm 100% pro AV, but have mostly ignored the YES campaign since it's cringingly fucking awful and seems to be run by idiots with little or no idea of how to talk to the electorate.

I have been arguing AV to anyone that declares uncertainty. Whether that is helping, I do not know.

to answer your final question: no. it shouldn't even be on the list.

Date: 2011-05-04 10:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undeadbydawn.livejournal.com
to clarify:

the pro AV argument should be that you have a *much* stronger expression of who you want in Government, not that the people in it will behave differently.

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