Originally posted by Dave2002
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Talking about the result in terms of electoral college votes (or seats gained) cloaks the real popularity (or unpopularity) of those elected. As a UK example: the last general election was seen as good for the Greens but not great for Ukip as the former won a seat and the latter did not. In nationwide terms the Greens polled 220,000 and Ukip 919,000.
The other cloak is talking about percentages. The Conservatives polled 36% in 2010. People registered to vote who did not polled 35%. The trend is for turnout to decline and the headline figures of the winning party to be smaller as well. The proportion who therefore get a government they support is thus dwarfed by the many, many more who do not.
The UK system 'worked' of a fashion when there were high turnouts and two parties dominating. It works less and less well now.
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