Tuesday 30 March 2010

What is a marginal seat?

What is a marginal seat?

The UK uses the ‘first past the post’ system of electing its MPs.
This means that a general election is really 646 local elections,
all being held at the same time.
The UK is divided into 646 ‘seats,’ or ‘constituencies.’
Each of these elects one Member of Parliament,
the one who gets the highest number votes out of all the candidates
standing in that constituency.

Most constituencies stay with the same party, election after election.
These are called ‘safe’ seats.
Most of the people living in a safe seat have similar views to each other.
They tend to vote the same way, decade after decade.

Only a few seats tend to change hands in an election.
These are the ones with a more balanced mix of viewpoints among
the voters.
In some of these seats, it only takes a shift of a few dozen votes for
the seat to ‘fall’ – i.e. to change hands.
These are called the ‘marginal seats.’

The parties put most of their time, effort and money into these seats,
because these are the ones that can be easily won or lost.


Therefore, if you live in a marginal seat, politicians take much more notice
of your views.

For example, Labour holds the seat of Crawley with a 37 vote majority
over Conservative.
Labour could lose this seat very easily at the next election.
Therefore, Labour politicians want to try very hard to please the people
In Crawley.
The Conservatives, too, want to woo these people, because only a few
of them would have to change their allegiance for the next Conservative
candidate to win the seat.

This website has been designed to help voters everywhere work out
how marginal their constituency is, and which parties are most
hotly contesting it.

The database that feeds the information to this site was designed by us
at justsolutions, from information obtained from the Electoral Commission.

Use the links below to search the database and find out which seats are
most likely to fall in the next election, and who the likely winners and
losers will be.

Click on link to go to Ray Galvin's great site

Posted via web from Hexham Matters

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