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Can a party unilaterally change candidates in preparation for a General election?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
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Can a political party unilaterally change candidates in the run up to a general election campaign?
For example if too many MPs support policy X and this is seen as an electoral risk, can the party simply change candidate to find someone more “liked” by the electorate to have a better chance of winning?
united-kingdom election parties
add a comment |
Can a political party unilaterally change candidates in the run up to a general election campaign?
For example if too many MPs support policy X and this is seen as an electoral risk, can the party simply change candidate to find someone more “liked” by the electorate to have a better chance of winning?
united-kingdom election parties
add a comment |
Can a political party unilaterally change candidates in the run up to a general election campaign?
For example if too many MPs support policy X and this is seen as an electoral risk, can the party simply change candidate to find someone more “liked” by the electorate to have a better chance of winning?
united-kingdom election parties
Can a political party unilaterally change candidates in the run up to a general election campaign?
For example if too many MPs support policy X and this is seen as an electoral risk, can the party simply change candidate to find someone more “liked” by the electorate to have a better chance of winning?
united-kingdom election parties
united-kingdom election parties
edited 8 hours ago
DJClayworth
5,6872140
5,6872140
asked 16 hours ago
BenBen
3,3571541
3,3571541
add a comment |
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
There is no law preventing it
To become an MP representing a main political party a candidate must be authorised to do so by the party's nominating officer.
Parties are free to choose candidates by their own means in the UK. They are governed by their own internal procedures, which vary by party. The process of an incumbent candidate being refused the nomination is known as deselection (and has been a controversial issue lately, especially in the Labour party.)
This is generally carried out at the local level, with a constituency party deciding who is nominated as their candidate. That said, a party could write their rules such that it was done centrally by the party leadership.
add a comment |
Yes. It is called "deselection".
Parties can stand whatever candidate they like in each constituency. It is empirically the case that the previous incumbent, running as the same parties' candidate, is more likely to win, than a replacement, so the normal practice is to run the incumbent again if they desire.
Having been deselected against ones will, it is perfectly possible to run against the other selected candidate. This will either be as an independent, or for a different party. This does have the problem of splitting the vote, and often means someone else wins.
Threats of this kind are currently being used by constituency Labour parties1, to align "Blarite" and "Brownite" MPs to become more "Corbynite". This pressure was named as a reason why some of MPs left Labour (to form "The Independant Group" with some ex-Conservatives)
Also currently facing deselection is the Conservative MP Nick Boles, for being too "Remain".
1 Under Labour rules, local party members get much of the choice of whom to stand as the official Labour candidate.
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
add a comment |
To become nominated as a candidate at a UK Parliamentary general election in Great Britain, you need to submit a completed set of nomination papers to the place fixed by the (Acting) Returning Officer by 4pm on the 19th working day before the poll. This deadline is set out in law and cannot be changed for any reason
From the Electoral Commission. This is true of parties and independents.
Up until that deadline, the parties are free to operate according to their own rules on candidate selection. After that deadline, the candidates are locked in. I believe there have been cases where someone died between nomination and the election, and remained as the candidate and even got votes.
Obviously the candidate selection doesn't change the incumbent, who remains MP until after the election.
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
There is no law preventing it
To become an MP representing a main political party a candidate must be authorised to do so by the party's nominating officer.
Parties are free to choose candidates by their own means in the UK. They are governed by their own internal procedures, which vary by party. The process of an incumbent candidate being refused the nomination is known as deselection (and has been a controversial issue lately, especially in the Labour party.)
This is generally carried out at the local level, with a constituency party deciding who is nominated as their candidate. That said, a party could write their rules such that it was done centrally by the party leadership.
add a comment |
There is no law preventing it
To become an MP representing a main political party a candidate must be authorised to do so by the party's nominating officer.
Parties are free to choose candidates by their own means in the UK. They are governed by their own internal procedures, which vary by party. The process of an incumbent candidate being refused the nomination is known as deselection (and has been a controversial issue lately, especially in the Labour party.)
This is generally carried out at the local level, with a constituency party deciding who is nominated as their candidate. That said, a party could write their rules such that it was done centrally by the party leadership.
add a comment |
There is no law preventing it
To become an MP representing a main political party a candidate must be authorised to do so by the party's nominating officer.
Parties are free to choose candidates by their own means in the UK. They are governed by their own internal procedures, which vary by party. The process of an incumbent candidate being refused the nomination is known as deselection (and has been a controversial issue lately, especially in the Labour party.)
This is generally carried out at the local level, with a constituency party deciding who is nominated as their candidate. That said, a party could write their rules such that it was done centrally by the party leadership.
There is no law preventing it
To become an MP representing a main political party a candidate must be authorised to do so by the party's nominating officer.
Parties are free to choose candidates by their own means in the UK. They are governed by their own internal procedures, which vary by party. The process of an incumbent candidate being refused the nomination is known as deselection (and has been a controversial issue lately, especially in the Labour party.)
This is generally carried out at the local level, with a constituency party deciding who is nominated as their candidate. That said, a party could write their rules such that it was done centrally by the party leadership.
edited 15 hours ago
answered 15 hours ago
CoedRhyfelwrCoedRhyfelwr
2,57121026
2,57121026
add a comment |
add a comment |
Yes. It is called "deselection".
Parties can stand whatever candidate they like in each constituency. It is empirically the case that the previous incumbent, running as the same parties' candidate, is more likely to win, than a replacement, so the normal practice is to run the incumbent again if they desire.
Having been deselected against ones will, it is perfectly possible to run against the other selected candidate. This will either be as an independent, or for a different party. This does have the problem of splitting the vote, and often means someone else wins.
Threats of this kind are currently being used by constituency Labour parties1, to align "Blarite" and "Brownite" MPs to become more "Corbynite". This pressure was named as a reason why some of MPs left Labour (to form "The Independant Group" with some ex-Conservatives)
Also currently facing deselection is the Conservative MP Nick Boles, for being too "Remain".
1 Under Labour rules, local party members get much of the choice of whom to stand as the official Labour candidate.
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
add a comment |
Yes. It is called "deselection".
Parties can stand whatever candidate they like in each constituency. It is empirically the case that the previous incumbent, running as the same parties' candidate, is more likely to win, than a replacement, so the normal practice is to run the incumbent again if they desire.
Having been deselected against ones will, it is perfectly possible to run against the other selected candidate. This will either be as an independent, or for a different party. This does have the problem of splitting the vote, and often means someone else wins.
Threats of this kind are currently being used by constituency Labour parties1, to align "Blarite" and "Brownite" MPs to become more "Corbynite". This pressure was named as a reason why some of MPs left Labour (to form "The Independant Group" with some ex-Conservatives)
Also currently facing deselection is the Conservative MP Nick Boles, for being too "Remain".
1 Under Labour rules, local party members get much of the choice of whom to stand as the official Labour candidate.
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
add a comment |
Yes. It is called "deselection".
Parties can stand whatever candidate they like in each constituency. It is empirically the case that the previous incumbent, running as the same parties' candidate, is more likely to win, than a replacement, so the normal practice is to run the incumbent again if they desire.
Having been deselected against ones will, it is perfectly possible to run against the other selected candidate. This will either be as an independent, or for a different party. This does have the problem of splitting the vote, and often means someone else wins.
Threats of this kind are currently being used by constituency Labour parties1, to align "Blarite" and "Brownite" MPs to become more "Corbynite". This pressure was named as a reason why some of MPs left Labour (to form "The Independant Group" with some ex-Conservatives)
Also currently facing deselection is the Conservative MP Nick Boles, for being too "Remain".
1 Under Labour rules, local party members get much of the choice of whom to stand as the official Labour candidate.
Yes. It is called "deselection".
Parties can stand whatever candidate they like in each constituency. It is empirically the case that the previous incumbent, running as the same parties' candidate, is more likely to win, than a replacement, so the normal practice is to run the incumbent again if they desire.
Having been deselected against ones will, it is perfectly possible to run against the other selected candidate. This will either be as an independent, or for a different party. This does have the problem of splitting the vote, and often means someone else wins.
Threats of this kind are currently being used by constituency Labour parties1, to align "Blarite" and "Brownite" MPs to become more "Corbynite". This pressure was named as a reason why some of MPs left Labour (to form "The Independant Group" with some ex-Conservatives)
Also currently facing deselection is the Conservative MP Nick Boles, for being too "Remain".
1 Under Labour rules, local party members get much of the choice of whom to stand as the official Labour candidate.
edited 14 hours ago
answered 15 hours ago
CalethCaleth
859510
859510
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
add a comment |
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
FYI, deselection threats have also been used against Conservative members, such as Nick Boles
– The Forest And The Trees
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
Has this actually happened to anyone, or is it just threats of deselection to keep party members in line?
– Mason Wheeler
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
@MasonWheeler iirc Nick has been deselected. Obviously there is time to be re-selected again. I think votes have been taken in some Labour constituencies, but all been won by the incumbent.
– Caleth
14 hours ago
add a comment |
To become nominated as a candidate at a UK Parliamentary general election in Great Britain, you need to submit a completed set of nomination papers to the place fixed by the (Acting) Returning Officer by 4pm on the 19th working day before the poll. This deadline is set out in law and cannot be changed for any reason
From the Electoral Commission. This is true of parties and independents.
Up until that deadline, the parties are free to operate according to their own rules on candidate selection. After that deadline, the candidates are locked in. I believe there have been cases where someone died between nomination and the election, and remained as the candidate and even got votes.
Obviously the candidate selection doesn't change the incumbent, who remains MP until after the election.
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
add a comment |
To become nominated as a candidate at a UK Parliamentary general election in Great Britain, you need to submit a completed set of nomination papers to the place fixed by the (Acting) Returning Officer by 4pm on the 19th working day before the poll. This deadline is set out in law and cannot be changed for any reason
From the Electoral Commission. This is true of parties and independents.
Up until that deadline, the parties are free to operate according to their own rules on candidate selection. After that deadline, the candidates are locked in. I believe there have been cases where someone died between nomination and the election, and remained as the candidate and even got votes.
Obviously the candidate selection doesn't change the incumbent, who remains MP until after the election.
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
add a comment |
To become nominated as a candidate at a UK Parliamentary general election in Great Britain, you need to submit a completed set of nomination papers to the place fixed by the (Acting) Returning Officer by 4pm on the 19th working day before the poll. This deadline is set out in law and cannot be changed for any reason
From the Electoral Commission. This is true of parties and independents.
Up until that deadline, the parties are free to operate according to their own rules on candidate selection. After that deadline, the candidates are locked in. I believe there have been cases where someone died between nomination and the election, and remained as the candidate and even got votes.
Obviously the candidate selection doesn't change the incumbent, who remains MP until after the election.
To become nominated as a candidate at a UK Parliamentary general election in Great Britain, you need to submit a completed set of nomination papers to the place fixed by the (Acting) Returning Officer by 4pm on the 19th working day before the poll. This deadline is set out in law and cannot be changed for any reason
From the Electoral Commission. This is true of parties and independents.
Up until that deadline, the parties are free to operate according to their own rules on candidate selection. After that deadline, the candidates are locked in. I believe there have been cases where someone died between nomination and the election, and remained as the candidate and even got votes.
Obviously the candidate selection doesn't change the incumbent, who remains MP until after the election.
answered 15 hours ago
pjc50pjc50
9,16912040
9,16912040
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
add a comment |
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
From Wikipedia: "Unless the deceased candidate was standing as an independent, their death results in the election being postponed [for 28 days] whether it is a general election or a by-election. The poll is stopped immediately even if voting has closed and the votes are being counted, unless the death occurs after the declaration of the result."
– Steve Melnikoff
15 hours ago
add a comment |
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