Published on 09/06/17
As voters descended on polling stations around the country yesterday, young voters also posted their ballots during the Stephen Perse Foundation’s mock elections.
In the Junior School, the Square, Circle, Rectangle, Pentagon and Triangle parties were standing for election.
Year 6 pupils gave presentations for each of the parties to get voters thinking about how they should cast their votes. On Thursday, pupils visited their own polling station – in the Junior School hall – to cast their votes.
Luckily it took just a few hours to declare the result, and after this the ‘real’ parties behind the names were revealed. The result was announced as follows:
1st – Pentagon – Green Party
2nd – Circle – Conservatives
3rd – Rectangle – Liberal Democrats
4th – Square – Labour
5th – Triangle – UKIP
Well done to all Year 6 pupils who gave a presentation trying to persuade pupils to vote for their parties.
Meanwhile in the Senior School, students created campaign videos for three of the main parties: the Green Party, Labour and the Liberal Democrats. The Conservatives and UKIP didn’t have a candidate and therefore didn’t have a campaign video but the parties were left on the ballot papers.
The Green party pledged to: hold a referendum on the terms of Brexit and the option to stay in the EU; scrap tuition fees, fund student grants and restore the education maintenance allowance; abolish SATS tests and lower the voting age amongst other policies.
The Labour party pledged to: make sure all children receive a good education, increase spending on schools, scrap tuition fees and others.
And the Lib Dem candidate pledged to: fight against a hard Brexit and hold a second referendum; give extra revenue from taxes to health and social care; eliminate the deficit in day to day spending; invest £7 billion into education and reinstate university maintenance grants, amongst others.
Students spared time during their lunch breaks to go to the Cabinet of Curiosities to cast their votes.
The result was announced as follows:
1st – Liberal Democrats – 85 votes
2nd – Green Party – 62 votes
3rd – Conservatives – 57 votes
4th – Labour – 35 votes
5th – UKIP – 5 votes
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