Crazyfool01 Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 1 minute ago, Neil said: i agree it needs sorting, but with the current system, the idea is that the individual is elected to exercise their personal judgement* and it's not the party that's elected. (*rather than unthinkingly following the party line like a sheep -it's just the SNP who does that), they all tow the party line anyway , my MP has done that in every vote . but get what you are saying Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Neil Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 1 minute ago, Crazyfool01 said: they all tow the party line anyway , my MP has done that in every vote . but get what you are saying they don't all - corbyn was lauded for voting with the tories. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crazyfool01 Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 3 minutes ago, Neil said: they don't all - corbyn was lauded for voting with the tories. but I guess he wasn't consulting constituents on every vote so renders it kind of pointless Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nobody Interesting Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 6 minutes ago, Crazyfool01 said: they all tow the party line anyway , my MP has done that in every vote . but get what you are saying |Every MP of every party follows the party line and if they might not they get whipped to do it. The Tories and LAbour when in power both removed the whip form MP's who voted against. Far from just one party north of the border that does it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Neil Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 Just now, Crazyfool01 said: but I guess he wasn't consulting constituents on every vote so renders it kind of pointless after they'd voted him in a few times they knew they were getting the vain anti-semite. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Neil Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 Just now, Nobody Interesting said: The Tories and LAbour when in power both removed the whip form MP's who voted against. its not normal to remove the whip for voting against the party line, those with govt positions - ministers, etc, are expected to resign that ministerial position Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crazyfool01 Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 1 minute ago, Nobody Interesting said: |Every MP of every party follows the party line and if they might not they get whipped to do it. The Tories and LAbour when in power both removed the whip form MP's who voted against. Far from just one party north of the border that does it just had a quick k look to see what the portion of free votes is ... couldn't see it Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nobody Interesting Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 1 minute ago, Crazyfool01 said: just had a quick k look to see what the portion of free votes is ... couldn't see it Probably a lot less than 0.5%. Free votes are very rare. Governments use whips but 99% of the time they, and opposition, don't need them as the MP's do what they are told and vote the way they are told to. It's why 'pairing' works so well - one yey and one nay 'pair' and do not turn up for the vote. The whole thing is a staged farce from centuries ago and really needs modernising. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 I don't know...if you're in a party then really you're expected to vote with that party, right? It's why it's a bit unfair to judge MPs by their voting record, they might not actually be voting for things they agree with all the time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 7 minutes ago, steviewevie said: I don't know...if you're in a party then really you're expected to vote with that party, right? It's why it's a bit unfair to judge MPs by their voting record, they might not actually be voting for things they agree with all the time. Rory Stewart makes that point on his podcast, they vote because they are expected too and if it’s a 3 line whip then they potentially will lose the whip and the Party’s support (financial etc) if they go against the whip. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Nobody Interesting Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 9 minutes ago, steviewevie said: I don't know...if you're in a party then really you're expected to vote with that party, right? It's why it's a bit unfair to judge MPs by their voting record, they might not actually be voting for things they agree with all the time. Why do we need 650 humans on high salaries to vote when if the PM says vote yes they vote yes? Get rid of half of them and nobody would notice and maybe we can get rid of the nutters and dangerous ones like Anderson Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lost Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 9 minutes ago, steviewevie said: I don't know...if you're in a party then really you're expected to vote with that party, right? Issue could be that parties change their position and some people get elected for national government campaigning on a very specific local issue. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crazyfool01 Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 11 minutes ago, steviewevie said: I don't know...if you're in a party then really you're expected to vote with that party, right? It's why it's a bit unfair to judge MPs by their voting record, they might not actually be voting for things they agree with all the time. What’s the point in my MP an environment minister voting against policy’s that protect the environment its bonkers … she’s currently posting videos about the clean water areas having voted for sewage dumping . It beggars belief Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 8 minutes ago, lost said: Issue could be that parties change their position and some people get elected for national government campaigning on a very specific local issue. well yeah...and that might happen a lot....and I guess up to the MP what to do...and if people are unhappy about it they can vote them out next time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 16 minutes ago, Nobody Interesting said: Why do we need 650 humans on high salaries to vote when if the PM says vote yes they vote yes? Get rid of half of them and nobody would notice and maybe we can get rid of the nutters and dangerous ones like Anderson because as well as voting for an individual human, you are voting for a party. And I expect more people are voting for party rather than their MP...a lot of people probably don't know or care who their MP is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 23 minutes ago, Ozanne said: Rory Stewart makes that point on his podcast, they vote because they are expected too and if it’s a 3 line whip then they potentially will lose the whip and the Party’s support (financial etc) if they go against the whip. finding out individual MPs voting record is a relatively new thing? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Neil Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 44 minutes ago, Nobody Interesting said: Probably a lot less than 0.5%. Free votes are very rare. Governments use whips but 99% of the time they, and opposition, don't need them as the MP's do what they are told and vote the way they are told to. It's why 'pairing' works so well - one yey and one nay 'pair' and do not turn up for the vote. The whole thing is a staged farce from centuries ago and really needs modernising. If someone stands for election on the party programme it's not out of order to expect them to support that party programme. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Neil Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 31 minutes ago, Nobody Interesting said: Why do we need 650 humans on high salaries to vote when if the PM says vote yes they vote yes? Get rid of half of them and nobody would notice and maybe we can get rid of the nutters and dangerous ones like Anderson More partisan bollocks - they shouldnt allow views you disagree with Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pink_triangle Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 44 minutes ago, steviewevie said: I don't know...if you're in a party then really you're expected to vote with that party, right? It's why it's a bit unfair to judge MPs by their voting record, they might not actually be voting for things they agree with all the time. The reality is most of these won the seat because of their rosette and not individual talent. I suspect if everyone voted the way they wanted nothing would get done. If you want to vote how you choose stand as an independent and see how far you get. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 13 minutes ago, steviewevie said: finding out individual MPs voting record is a relatively new thing? I’m not sure about that, it was probably always available from the HoC Library or somewhere but the internet has definitely made them more readily available. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pink_triangle Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 1 hour ago, Ozanne said: Sadly not, constituents can only force a by-election via a recall petition in very specific circumstances such as a suspension of more than 10 days. Switching parties isn’t one of those reasons. It’s pretty silly. If changing parties caused a by-election the MP would just unofficially switch and vote with the new party, it would make no practical difference. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 Priority: Growing Economy (23%) Reducing Inflation (22%) Investing in Public Services (12%) Cutting Taxes (11%) Reduce National Debt (8%). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
steviewevie Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 3 minutes ago, pink_triangle said: If changing parties caused a by-election the MP would just unofficially switch and vote with the new party, it would make no practical difference. unless it's Reform who have no MPs at moment... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pink_triangle Posted February 27 Report Share Posted February 27 6 minutes ago, steviewevie said: unless it's Reform who have no MPs at moment... Probably just call themselves independent reform mp. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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