The Government has been
accused of preparing to gerrymander the parliamentary system in the
Conservatives’ favour in a review of constituency boundaries that will cut the number
of MPs from 650 to 600.
The major political parties
will hold talks with the Boundary Commission when work gets under way later
this month on redrawing the parliamentary map.
It is due to come into force
at the 2020 general election and is expected disproportionately to affect
Labour MPs, who tend to represent constituencies with smaller electorates.
Eleven months ago the
Commons Political and Constitutional Reform Committee argued that the number of
MPs should be gradually reduced instead of scrapping 50 parliamentary seats at
a stroke.
It also called for greater
flexibility in the size of constituencies, arguing for electorates to be within
10 per cent of the national average, rather than the 5 per cent advocated by
the Government.
But Cabinet Office minister
Oliver Letwin rejected the cross-party committee’s key recommendations, saying
the subject had been “extensively debated and settled” in 2011 when legislation
was passed bringing the proposed cut in constituencies into effect.
In a furious response,
Labour MP Graham Allen, who chaired the committee during the last parliament,
denounced the Government’s response as “another affront to our democratic
process”.
He said: “It is appalling
that the Government has simply rejected the recommendations of PCRC out of
hand, especially seen as it had taken them nearly a whole year to reply. I will
be raising this matter with the Speaker.
“The Conservative Government
is quite clearly trying to fix the electoral system for its own party advantage
by ignoring the sensible recommendations made by the committee.”
Detailed work on drawing up
the new boundaries will follow the publication on 24 February of updated
statistics on the size of the electorate.
The Boundary Commission is
expected to stick closely to the map it published in 2013, when its
implementation was delayed by the Liberal Democrats. Under those proposals,
more than half the UK’s constituencies would have faced major changes.
Tory and Labour officials
have already discussed the impact of the expected changes in internal meetings
and will make detailed representations to the commission within weeks.
Most experts believe the
impact of the new constituencies will be to cost Labour 20 seats. If the
proposed new boundaries had been used in last May’s election, the Tories would
now enjoy an overall majority of 44 rather than 12, according to UK Polling
Report.
This post was
originally published here: Government Accused Of
'Fixing Electoral System' Over Constituency Boundary Review
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