Reform supporters say that they ought to be given a go...
As much as I despise their policies, it is not right to use FPTP to deny them any say in how the country is run.
Why not give the whole system a different option in order to reflect the voices of all people rather than always a government of the minority!
Some thoughts which have occurred to me - none well thought
through yet, so just brainstorming really.
Raise the minimum age so that MPs are more likely to have real-life experience.
Elected 2nd chamber. Different timeframe to MPs? Longer interval between elections?
Elected head of state, written constitution, HoS with powers & responsibilities completely independent of all elected representatives.
No party may field more than x% of candidates who are/were lawyers, y% financiers, z% public school educated, etc It would be nice if there was a way to say they
must field a certain percentage who were teachers, healthcare, social services, emergency services, tradesmen, disabled, "clergy" from the main religions, ex-servicemen, local councillors, and so on, but I can't think how that would work without press-ganging.
No more General Elections - every year some seats come up for re-election, say 100, or 50 every 6 months, but not all at once. People wouldn't end up voting more often, and every MP would still have the same guarantee of remaining in post as they currently do, but there'd be a constant rolling refresh of Parliament. One benefit might also be that there'd be no way that party leaders and bigwigs would be able to campaign, as nationwide that would be far too much work, it would have to be just the people standing and their local party machine. No more media scrums, no more stupid photo-opp stunts.
There probably would have to be a way for the HoS to call a nationwide election in exceptional circumstances.
Have council elections at the same time. If in every local election people were also voting for their Westminster MP it might mean they become genuinely about local issues, and the candidates themselves, rather than proxies for Westminster.