YES! To Fairer Votes


YES! To Fairer Votes was a political campaign in the United Kingdom whose purpose was to persuade the public to vote in favour of the Alternative Vote in the referendum on Thursday, 5 May 2011. YES! To Fairer Votes was unsuccessful in changing the voting system, with 32.1% of votes cast in favour. It was opposed by the anti-reform campaign No to AV.

Structure

YES! To Fairer Votes was a non-profit making organisation established as a company limited by guarantee called Yes In May 2011 Ltd. Its board was chaired by Katie Ghose. Other members were Pam Giddy, Neal Lawson, Vicky Seddon and John Sharkey.

Campaign funding

The Guardian's analysis also showed that the YES! To Fairer Votes campaign had outspent the anti-AV campaign by £3.4m to £2.6m, with most of the funding coming from the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust and the Electoral Reform Society. George Osborne the Conservative Chancellor of the Exchequer accused the ERS of having a vested interest in a yes vote, as their commercial subsidiary Electoral Reform Services Ltd was printing the postal ballots for the referendum. The Press Complaints Commission later ruled against this. The Sun and Mail subsequently had to print retractions.

Campaign criticism

A number of post mortems of the campaign were written, all highly critical of the way the campaign was run and of its major backers failure to deal with these issues.
The Electoral Reform Society's formal post mortem on the campaign led by Professor John Curtice of the University of Strathclyde identified that "The criticisms of AV put forward by the ‘No’ campaign were far more popular and proved more effective in shaping how people eventually voted on 5 May. The ‘Yes’ campaign’s key arguments were either lost or did not resonate with people in terms of why they should vote ‘yes’."
Andy May, a key member of the Yes Campaign, drew attention to a number of strategic blunders in the campaign and criticised the campaign director and senior staff. His view was corroborated by another insider account by former staff member James Graham. Anthony Barnett criticised one of the major funders, the Joseph Rowntree Reform trust for lack of oversight and scrutiny of its huge donation. Criticism of the Electoral Reform Society's role was also widespread and resulted in major changes to the organisation. In the council elections in 2011 there were 52 candidates for the 15 places available. Only four of the previous council were re-elected with eight of the new members having stood explicitly on a joint platform of reforming the society.

Political parties supporting YES! To Fairer Votes

The following parties supported the change to AV:
The Labour Party, despite its leader's pro-AV stance, did not campaign for a Yes vote in the referendum, and there were opposing Labour Yes and Labour NOtoAV campaigns.
Despite the Conservative Party's formal position against AV, party members aligned to Conservative Action for Electoral Reform, an internal party group in favour of electoral reform, did campaigning in favour.

Other organisations supporting YES! To Fairer Votes

The following people actively supported the campaign: