ddt
Mafia Penguin
http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/05/26/european-elections-2014-r_n_5391365.html?utm_hp_ref=uk
I'm a bit curious about how this works.
A party that got 7.9% of the vote got 3 seats, and one that got 6.9% got one.
Another that got 0.7% also got one, and a party that got 2.4% got 2.
A party called "An Independence From Europe" got 1.5% of the vote. Isn't that UKIP's issue? Why two different parties? There's even a "NO2EU" party. Same thing?
The EU prescribes that European Elections are to be conducted with some form of Proportional Representation (PR). To that end, the UK has decided to divide the country into 11 multi-seat electoral districts. Depending on population size, in a district there are between 3 (e.g., North East) and 10 (South East) seats to be divided. So, what matters is how you perform in each district, not nation-wide.
A party that has a strong regional showing thus can easily grab seats: e.g., the SNP which only stood in Scotland, got 2 of the 6 seats there, but on a national scale only has 2.4% of the vote. Likewise with Plaid Cymru in Wales, or Sinn Fein in NI. A party that has 6% of the vote spread all over the country, falls out in every district.
The LibDem vote is spread out quite evenly over the country; that's why they only got a seat in the SouthEast, which has the most seats to divide. The Greens performed better in the South of England than in the rest of the country, that's why they were able to pick up seats there.
ETA:
Here is the BBC page with the results. You can click on the names of the electoral districts in the table to the right to see the result per district. It's not so much that the Green vote is much more concentrated than the LibDem vote; they actually nowhere had enough votes for a whole seat either. But they did outperform the LibDems in all those districts, and so they were earlier in line to pick up rest seats. See D'Hondt method for the method used for allocation of seats (exceptfor Northern Ireland which used STV). That method favours bigger parties; to give a concrete example, for picking up a rest seat, a party that polled just over 3 seats will win out in picking up a 4th seat over a party that polled 0.75 seat, to get its first seat.
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