Thoughts on politics and life from a liberal perspective

Showing posts with label Malcolm Clark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Malcolm Clark. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 September 2009

Interview on electoral reform with Malcolm Clark, director of Make Votes Count

Last week at the Lib Dem Conference I met up with Malcolm Clark the director of Make Votes Count, a campaign group which seeks to bring together members of all parties and none who wish to see a fair electoral system for Westminster.


He very kindly agreed to be interviewed by me and I have included the footage of this below. I thought he answered my questions very well and we did cover a fair bit of ground. Despite the fact that I am also an advocate of electoral reform myself I did try to challenge him on certain points and ask him some questions that opponents of reform would ask.

I have split the interview into three parts. It is about 18 minutes in total.








Sunday, 24 May 2009

Electoral Reform - Referendum 2010 campaign launched

I received the following e-mail today from Malcolm Clark of "Make Votes Count":



Dear Mark,

We have already been active on this for the past week (and thanks for all the letters and emails already despatched to MPs and to the press), but today the public campaign is officially launched.  A broad range of civil society organisations and individuals have come together to call for a referendum on the day of the next general election to change the way we elect our MPs.

http://www.makemyvotecount.org.uk/referendum2010

- launch letter in The Observer: signed by a range of leading figures from across the cultural, academic, political and civil society worlds. http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/may/24/letters-mps-expenses

 - accompanying article and editorial in The Observer.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2009/may/24/mps-expenses-commons-reform

 - campaign webpages  http://www.makemyvotecount.org.uk/referendum2010 and http://www.electoral-reform.org.uk/article.php?id=153

 - campaign blog - which includes key facts, myth-busting, and all the latest reaction in the media, on the blogs, and beyond.

http://www.makemyvotecount.org.uk/blog/archives/referendum2010/index.html

 Our message is simple and strong: real change, not just new faces. An end to safe seats and seeming jobs for life for some MPs.  Remove the power that MPs have to decide how they are elected ... and give that to the voters instead.  Bring in greater accountability for those who represent us; and greater choice at the ballot box in the first place.

 At the next general election, we want to give voters the chance to register their feelings twice: once to get rid of a tainted MP; and once to get rid of a rotten system and change things for good. One vote to elect a fresh face to represent them; and one vote (in a nationwide referendum) to bring a fresh start to politics.

 Elections affect all of us; this campaign is about all of us. We want your vote to count the same wherever you live and whoever you are. A list of influential people may have been necessary to launch the campaign and get media coverage, but now it is your turn to star.

 What you can do:

 1) Show your support for the campaign - add your name to the list of signatories. Send us a quick email (malcolm@makevotescount.org.uk) with your name and postcode; or sign online in a few days time when the main campaign website goes live. Names will be published on that campaign site. If you'd rather sign anonymously, just indicate that.

 2) Promote the campaign to others - via word-of-mouth, email, facebook and twitter (use hashtag #ref2010).

 3) See our previous update for letter-writing and emailing we need you to do to your local MP and also to several Cabinet Ministers and newspapers. http://www.makemyvotecount.org.uk/opus26470.html

 4) Give a donation to MVC to enable us to more quickly push this campaign forward and get the messages out to more people.

http://www.makemyvotecount.org.uk/donate.html

 5) Keep on spreading the word about the positives of PR elections in general; especially that your vote counts in the European Parliamentary elections on 4 June.  See our dedicated website http://www.eurovotescount.org.uk

Best wishes on this sunny - and hopefully significant - day,

Malcolm

Malcolm Clark

Director, Make Votes Count


I am fully behind this campaign and feel it is the best way for the public to have their say in what should happen.

If you agree, please get involved as Malcom suggests!