Not true her constituency voted her in as an MP. This arguably is as much as any PM, since the PM is chosen by the largest party (in whatever way that party decides) from the current MPs. We do not elect a prime minister, but individual MPs.True, but I think for a really small value of partially.
The much bigger problem is the 2 party system that is foisted upon the electorate by the FPTP voting system.
That is what is causing voter apathy and disenfranchisement.
Change to a multiparty system, use preferential voting and give the people voting a real choice that reflects their views and not a binary choice that means the majority of the people are unhappy whoever wins an election.
How would the election look if there were 2 candidates from each main party and a Green and a Liberal and nobodies vote was wasted?
The same **** happens here in the UK. The most recent General Election here was the least representative result in history. The conservatives got 37% of the actual votes, and 100% of the power. (and by a quirk of how our system works, and a small referendum that made a couple of headlines here and there, now the PM here is someone that none of the electorate voted for)
In the US election Trump got ~49% of the votes and wields 100% of the power.
On both sides of the pond there are candidates in safe seats where if you disagree with the party that always wins, your vote might as well not exist.
The US EC means that votes in some states carry more weight than votes in other states, which does skew things partially, but the bigger problem is that we only get to choose from 2 main parties, and that's a consequence of FPTP.
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Thank you for the translation - I've been trying to figure that out for a while now!