Article snippet: Posted at 1:03 am on June 9, 2017 by Neil Stevens As I write this, the BBC projects the Conservative Party to win 316 seats out of 326 needed for a majority. With it that close, the right still wins, and here’s how. If the Conservatives win 316 seats, Labour 265, the Scottish National Party (SNP) 34, the Liberal Democrats (Lib-Dems) 13, it looks like a win for the array of left-wing parties against the right. But not so fast. Don’t forget Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland has its own political parties, as the politics are driven as much by the unionist-nationalist split, as they are by left-right. Northern Ireland’s 18 seats are split three ways: 10 to the right-wing, unionist Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), 7 to the left-wing nationalist Sinn Fein (SF), and 1 to a Unionist independent. Those seven Sinn Fein seats will go empty, as the party remains abstentionist with respect to Westminster, even while it will take its seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly and the Dail Eireann (Irish parliament). What this means is that in practice, instead of 650 members of Parliament, there are 643 members. That means 322 votes are needed for the barest majority. If the Conservatives vote in unison, and can win over 6 of the 10 DUP members, then they have the ability to govern. Just barely, but it means the left can be prevented from putting together a hodge-podge coalition of Labour, the SNP, and the Lib-Dems. It’s not the result the Conservatives wanted, but it will g... Link to the full article to read more
How the Right Still Wins in the United Kingdom (Barely)
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