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Two-thirds of Parliament from a third of the votes: Are British elections out of whack?

When the Labour Party won in the British parliamentary election last week, leader Keir Starmer could have been forgiven for calling his victory a landslide. His party won 412 of the 650 seats in Parliament, more than three times as many as the Conservatives managed.

Yet a closer look at the numbers shows a different picture. Labour may have taken 64% of the seats, but it only won 34% of the vote. Smaller parties suffered even bigger anomalies: The populist, far-right Reform UK secured 14% of the vote but only five seats.

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The United Kingdom’s July 4 election revealed that the country’s smaller parties are winning a growing share of the popular vote, even as the two big parties dominate Parliament. So citizens are increasingly in favor of making the electoral system fairer.

By contrast, the Liberal Democrats, on the strength of just 12% of the vote, will become Parliament’s third-largest party, with 72 representatives.

“This election was the most disproportionate on record,” says Tom Brake, an advocate of electoral reform. And as more Britons turn away from the larger parties, such as Labour and Conservative, they are wondering whether the current system can represent the country’s widening spectrum of viewpoints.

A recent report found that a record 53% of respondents supported making the electoral system “fairer” to smaller parties.

But with the bigger parties relying on the current system to win big majorities, there is little incentive for either Labour or the Conservatives to change the rules.

When the Labour Party took power after the United Kingdom’s general election on July 4, its victory was hailed as a landslide.

The party took 412 of the 650 seats in the U.K.’s House of Commons – 211 more than in the 2019 election. The incumbent Conservatives watched their share tumble from 372 to 121, a record low for the party.

“You have given us a clear mandate,” said Labour Party leader Keir Starmer as he stood on the steps of the prime minister’s official residence, No. 10 Downing St. “We will use it to deliver change.”

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The United Kingdom’s July 4 election revealed that the country’s smaller parties are winning a growing share of the popular vote, even as the two big parties dominate Parliament. So citizens are increasingly in favor of making the electoral system fairer.

Yet a closer look at the statistics shows a different picture.

Labour may have taken 64% of the seats in Parliament, but it won only 34% of the vote. The disconnect between vote share and seats won was even more pronounced for smaller parties: The populist Reform UK secured 14% of the vote, but won only five seats. By contrast, the Liberal Democrats won a 12% share of the vote, but will become Parliament’s third-largest party, with 72 representatives.

These discrepancies have long been a part of U.K. elections, which are geared toward a two-party system. But as more Britons turn their backs on both Labour and the Conservatives, they are wondering whether the current system can represent the country’s widening spectrum of views.

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