In my column in this week’s Cornish Guardian, I focused the
upcoming Euro-elections. It was as follows:
On 22nd May 2014 ,
voters will be going to the polls to elect Members of the European Parliament.
Mebyon Kernow has long campaigned for a separate MEP for Cornwall
but, next year, six MEPs will be elected from a massive ‘South West’
constituency, via a list form of proportional representation. As well as Cornwall ,
the seat will include Bristol , Devon ,
Dorset , Gloucestershire, Somerset ,
Wiltshire, and the island of Gibraltar .
At this stage, it is very unlikely that Mebyon Kernow will
be putting forward candidates.
The fact that Cornish voters make up a tenth of the
constituency poses great difficulties for MK, which only contests local and Westminster
elections within Cornwall .
To get an MEP elected in such a ‘South West’ seat, the MK
candidates would – based on past results – need to poll over 90% of the vote in
Cornwall .
But if that wasn’t bad enough, other aspects of the
electoral process are unfairly rigged against Mebyon Kernow.
To be allowed a party election broadcast, for example, MK
would have to stand in all (nine) euro-constituencies in England – an absolute nonsense
– whereas “regional” parties standing in the (single) Wales, Scotland and
Northern Ireland seats will be allowed their own broadcasts.
And in order to stand, a deposit of £5,000 has to be paid,
but this money is returned if the slate of candidates achieves more than 2.5%
of the vote across the whole of the “South West.” But MK would need to poll about
23% of the Cornish vote to simply save its deposit.
MK did contest the Euro-elections in 2009, which took place
on the same day as the first-ever elections to Cornwall Council, thanks to
donations from local party members.
In Cornwall –
the only area in which we campaigned – MK polled 11,534 votes (7% of the
total). Outside of Cornwall – where
the party did not campaign – it unsurprisingly averaged less than one quarter
of one percent (0.24%) and, therefore, across the constituency as a whole, MK
polled 1% of the total vote.
MK continues to challenge the Government and the Electoral Commission
to acknowledge the inequity of the situation, arguing that the authorities had
a moral obligation to return the £5,000 deposit to MK because of the number of
votes achieved in Cornwall , but they
have so far refused to even consider the issue.
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