Britain has a strange and very peculiar democracy. It is a truly unique product of the country’s long history with some elements that are simply indefensible.
Every democrat will wince at the notion that a modern country still has a hereditary monarch as head of state, yet the Queen continues to have huge support: a recent poll put her popularity at 69%. How many politicians (British or otherwise) could boast as much?
Criticism can be levelled at the House of Lords, stuffed with party nominees who have never faced an electorate and in which Anglican Bishops sit, as of right, while other religious leaders are excluded.
All this is well known.
So too are the defects of the electoral system, which saw nearly 4 million people voting for the right-wing, anti-immigration party – UKIP – yet they won just a single seat. By contrast the Scottish National Party took fewer than 1.5 million votes but won 56 seats. Put another way, it took slightly fewer than 26,000 votes to elect a SNP member of parliament, but 3,881,100 to elect just one MP - Douglas Carswell - for UKIP.
How can anyone suggest it is right that any Commonwealth citizen (including South Africans) living in Britain can participate in UK elections, yet Europeans who have resided happily in Britain for decades are denied this democratic right?