Jump, Phil2019-09-252019-09-252016-11-183260950-1703http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/159484"The forthcoming General Election will be unlike any in living memory. Since WW2, we have gone to the polls almost certain that one of two large political parties will form our government. But as the countdown to polling day 2015 continues, this remains an election that no-one can call. The resurgence of SNP and the Greens; the anticipated demise of the Liberal Democrats; the advent of UKIP as a serious contender—all combine with a swing between Labour and Conservative to leave a political landscape of significant uncertainty. Predictions suggest that, in many constituencies, the ‘new parties’ are unlikely to win seats, but will deflect votes away from the incumbent to allow the previous runners-up to be first past the post"engWith permission of the license/copyright holderelectionLiberal DemocratsPreachingpoliticsPolitical ethicsEthics of political systemsGovernance and ethicsChristian denominationsBaptist, AdventistPreaching and the electionArticle