Election Results

Jun 08, 2009 12:47

So, I woke up this morning to discover that the BNP have been elected to a seat in the North-West. As far I am aware, the North-West isn't actually full of BNP supporters, although there are a few and they have the right to vote to express their views ( Read more... )

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hmmm_tea June 8 2009, 15:55:25 UTC
Fair point

Interestingly the makeup of the seats for London and the North-west are 7/8th the same (3 Conservatives, 2 Labour, 1 Lib Dem, 1 UKIP + 1 other - BNP in North-west, Green in London), so they aren't actually that different in terms of results, it's just the North West gives the bigger news storey.

And, yes, the BNP got a sizeable proportion of the votes here too (the BBC has it as even worst then you at 86,000 or 4.9% of the votes), so it could easily of happened here too.

It seems worth highlighting it though as an effect of voter apathy, so those that choose not to know clearly what the result of that decision was.

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hmmm_tea June 8 2009, 16:34:53 UTC
I believe I just agreed with that?

I certainly wouldn't put all the blame for these attitudes towards the north. As I said in the post, I'm fairly certain the north isn't full of BNP supporters anymore than the south is.

It could have just as easily happened here, it just happened to happen there. However, wherever it happens, both now and in the future, it needs to be shown to those that chose not to vote as a consequence of their choice, but, yes, it is worth highlighting to those who didn't vote elsewhere as a potential consequence for them too.

I don't actually intend to go and slap anyone with a wet fish though. If nothign else it would be really cruel to the fish as they really had nothing to do with the BNP getting in.

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hmmm_tea June 8 2009, 15:57:56 UTC
The BNP also polled lower than the Swedish Pirate party according to @ Bengoldacre

I guess that's voter apathy for you...

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feanelwa June 8 2009, 16:25:50 UTC
Well, you really can complain about people voting for extremist parties, if the extremist party in question want to expel everybody who's a little bit brown and are on record as saying there's no such thing as rape. They're almost certainly scarier than whoever you voted for.

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hmmm_tea June 8 2009, 23:03:47 UTC
Yes, although the objectives of the SPGB are somewhat extreme, they do seem a bit friendlier then those of the BNP :-)

However, the main issue is not with the number of BNP supporters who are voting, but the number of non-BNP voters who aren't.

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passage June 9 2009, 06:50:30 UTC
Interesting assumptions about the apathy of different groups, how would you back that up?

I've generally suspected that voter apathy may be a useful way of giving the informed and passionate more say than the ignorant and undecided.

I'm not saying I'm happy the BNP are in, just that I think the primary cause of them being in is people voting for them.

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hmmm_tea June 9 2009, 18:41:54 UTC
It's certainly not an uncommon view, although admittedly that doesn't make it true.

However, if you hold extreme views (which you clearly do if your a BNP supporter), you are by definition not apathetic about them. It would seem likely that people who are not apathetic about their views would be less likely to be apathetic about voting for them.

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passage June 9 2009, 19:11:24 UTC
It's a comforting thing to believe - it let's us keep thinking of the BNP as a tiny, almost irrelavent, minority - so I'm not at all surprised that it's a popular thing to believe.

I'm not sure why agreeing with a position which is very different from the mainstream (which is all extreme means in this context) would make one by definition hold them with extreme vigour, but perhaps we could argue that anyone who didn't would probably give them up in the face of so much opposition.

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