Saturday, 16 January 2010

Is Labour, like the Tories, turning against Fair Voting? - read Patrick Wintour in the Guardian

Ballot box

Campaigners for voting system reform say the electorate is keen to see a wider spread of parties at Westminster. Photograph: Matthew Fearn

Gordon Brown is fending off a cabinet-level revolt over his plans to reduce the power of the executive in parliament and to introduce laws entrenching a referendum on voting reform.

The government whips' office is trying to block reforms that would see it lose its domination of parliament's agenda. The Vote for a Change pressure group is also accusing Ed Balls, the schools secretary, of being behind moves to block a clause in the constitutional reform bill that would commit the government to a referendum on electoral reform after the election.

Both reforms to the voting system and parliament have been stalled for weeks. Brown promised a radical manifesto, including constitutional reform, this week. Labour MPs may discuss the issue of a referendum on voting systems on Monday at their weekly private meeting, with some MPs determined to block the move.

Vote for a Change is planning to put up a billboard in Balls's Normanton constituency accusing him of opposing political renewal. It says he is trying to garner votes among northern MPs in safe seats to improve his post-election leadership ambitions. In an email to its 40,000 members, the group accuses Balls of hypocrisy.

Click on link to read Patrick Wintour's article in the Guardian

Posted via web from sunwalking's posterous

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