UK Constitution and Government/Elections

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Jump to navigation Jump to search


Presentation

Devolved Administrations
Devolved Administrations
Elections
British Monarchs
British Monarchs
List of Topics
List of Topics
 
British Monarchs
British Monarchs

 

Elections


Previous Chapter



General Elections

Members of the House of Commons are elected in General Elections. General Elections are called by the Prime Minister. General Elections are held at least once every five years. The maximum term that a parliament can exist before a new election interrupts it is defined by parliament. Currently, the Parliament Act states that five years is the maximum length.

Local Elections

From 2007 Scotland will use Single Transferable Vote to elect all of its local councillors. England and Wales use first past the post or multiple-member first past the post for local elections. Northern Ireland uses STV for its local elections.

European Elections

Members of the European Parliament for Northern Ireland are elected using Single Transferable Vote (STV). MEPs for England, Scotland and Wales are elected using the D'Hondt method.