London Holds Its Third Mayoral Election with IRV
On May 1, London held its third mayoral election using a form of instant
runoff voting. The Conservative Party's Boris Johnson defeated Labor
Party incumbent Ken Livingstone, winning 53% to 47% in the instant
runoff. This election had the city's best turnout ever -- a 20% increase
compared to the 2004 elections.
Also known as the "supplementary vote," the London system limits voters to a first choice and second choice and moves directly to a second round of voting between the top two finishers. It was first implemented in 2000 after 72% of the London electorate approved direct mayoral elections with IRV by referendum. The system is increasingly popular in England: 12 cities use this form of IRV for mayoral elections.
Londoners also elected the London Assembly (14 members elected directly from constituencies and 11 seats at-large) through a mixed member proportional system. The Conservative and Labor Parties swept the 14 winner-take-all seats, but smaller parties won a total of six seats due to proportional voting.
Also known as the "supplementary vote," the London system limits voters to a first choice and second choice and moves directly to a second round of voting between the top two finishers. It was first implemented in 2000 after 72% of the London electorate approved direct mayoral elections with IRV by referendum. The system is increasingly popular in England: 12 cities use this form of IRV for mayoral elections.
Londoners also elected the London Assembly (14 members elected directly from constituencies and 11 seats at-large) through a mixed member proportional system. The Conservative and Labor Parties swept the 14 winner-take-all seats, but smaller parties won a total of six seats due to proportional voting.
[Official Results at London Elects]
[British Analysis Focused on the Assembly Results]
[Animated Guides on London Mayoral and Assembly Elections]
[The Guardian's Coverage]
[Evening Standard Article about Mayoral Election]
[Amy Ngai on the FairVote Blog]