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Earlier today I
helped an older Labour Party member cast their vote online in the election for
Labour Leader. I was struck once more (as I had been when I voted) that the
elections for Leader and Labour Leader use a preferential voting system
(whereas the election for NEC members uses simple majority voting – or “first
past the post”).
That got me
thinking about the forthcoming election for UNISON General Secretary which (if
it follows previous form) will be conducted by simple majority vote, because no
one in the country’s largest trade union will consider any other method of
voting, although they could.
This blog used
to refer more frequently than it has recently to the UNISON Rule
Book. Schedule C.7 was always of interest to me. It gives the UNISON
National Executive Council (NEC) discretion to determine the method of voting
in internal union elections (including the election for General Secretary). In
fourteen eventful years as a member of that NEC I am afraid that I never found
any enthusiasm for the exercise of that discretion.
Five and a half
years ago, I set
out at (probably unnecessary) length the benefits (in my opinion) of using the
Single Transferable Vote (STV) rather than simple majority voting in
anticipation of the (then forthcoming) General Secretary election. Seven years
and three months earlier, I had reported
on discussions at the UNISON National Executive Council about proposals
from the Lambeth branch to use the Single Transferable Vote (STV) in national
UNISON elections. Eight and a half years later, I was still
banging on about this question.
A preferential
voting system , in an election for a single position (such as Leader of the
Labour Party or General Secretary of UNISON) means that a candidate can only
win if they secure the support (even if on subsequent preferences) of a majority
of those voting, whereas with simple majority voting a candidate wins if they
have a plurality (more votes than any other candidate but not a majority).
UNISON’s NEC
could adopt a preferential voting system for the next General Secretary
election within UNISON’s current rules – and give UNISON members the benefit of
the same method of voting that the Labour Party is using in our Leadership
election. This would also give the benefit that candidates could seek
nomination knowing that their candidacy would not deny their supporters the
opportunity to express other preferences.
I am sorry to
have to predict that the UNISON NEC will lack the imagination, the will, the
independence of spirit and the radicalism to take this step.
I wish I could
be proved wrong!
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