Published in the Financial Times, 16th January 2026
Your leader “Britain’s prime ministerial carousel” (The FT View, January 6) notes: “It is hard to argue that this era of politics as blood sport serves the electorate. It can only deter investment and hiring as businesses wait to see what economic policies the next change will bring. It acts against long-term planning and implementation.”
We believe that it is not so much the “carousel” of prime ministers that is the problem, as the see-saw of policies, which is supported by our out of date and profoundly inequitable voting system. We consider that the electoral system no longer serves the interests of UK business in generating growth.
In today’s challenging world, economic success requires a positive partnership between government and business. And it is business that provides the basis for the prosperity of the country and of its citizens.
In the next general election we face the prospect of up to six parties fielding candidates, each party with wildly different ideologies, many ignoring long-term practical solutions, each striving to pass the post first. Whoever wins a majority of parliamentary seats, from perhaps fewer than 30 per cent of votes cast, and therefore the support of only a minority of the eligible electorate, in effect gains 100 per cent of the power and will probably force another ideological swing.
The UK’s consequent short-termist and unpredictable policies actively damage business confidence, creating the hesitancy to invest and discouraging the long-term planning your leader describes. Almost all of the countries with which the UK directly competes for inward investment (many with a higher GDP per capita) have stable consensus politics whose governments are formed by a coalition: as a British business leader recently noted, coalition governments foster a greater sense of cross-party agreement around big issues, “which means business can plan in budget cycles of five years and beyond”.
An electoral system that truly represents the electorate will be good for business, good for politics, and good for the British people, whether employed or not, and whether working in the public sector or dealing with the demands of commerce.
Signed in a personal capacity:
- Peter Norris: Chairman, Virgin Group
- Andrew Dixon: Director, ARC InterCapital Ltd
- Hugh Lenon: Senior Advisor, Phoenix Equity Partners
- Stephen Larkin: CEO, Africa New Energies Ltd
- Sean Hanafin: CEO, Silver Birch Finance
- Tilly McAuliffe: Owner, Director, Think Publishing Ltd
- Tracey-Ann Ginger: Managing Director, The Thrive Hive Talent Group Ltd
- David Barbour: CIO, Pallant Capital
- Geoff Eaton: Former Chairman, BPC
- Mike Harris: Founder, Cribstone Strategic Macro
- Alice Lankester: Director, Lankester Engineering
- Mark Petterson: Director, Warwick Energy Ltd
- Ash Nehru: Founder, Disguise Ltd
- Andy Parker: Managing Director, Elusive Brewing
- Frank McKenna: CEO & Group Chairman, Downtown in Business Ltd
- Pim Piers: NED, Palatine Growth Credit
- Sarah Walker-Smith: CEO, Ampa Group
- Ahmed Hindawi: CEO & Chairman, Nagwa
- Elizabeth Price: Co-founder, Carbon Re
- Naomi Smith: Co-Founder and Director, Cooler Heads Limited
- David Tarsh: Managing Director, Tarsh Consulting
- Roger Ward: Director, Applied Image Technology International Ltd