I didn't say the Tories lost because of the electoral system. But Starmer's stinking majority on 34% of those who voted is down to a stinking electoral system that you think is fucked up.
I'm no fan of our current electoral system - I think I've made that pretty clear in the past.
But that isn't really relevant to my point - I'd be pretty confident that whatever electoral system was in place in July that the electorate would have done everything they could to kick out the tories, as they were sick and tired of the right wing populism we've had since 2015, which ramped up several notches from when Boris took over.
Of course had the electoral system been different we might not have had right wing populism over the past near decade, but that is another matter.
So my point is that the UK isn't at risk of a right wing populist government any time soon as we've had one for years and the electorate have recently chosen to throw them out (and I'd argue would have done so under any electoral system). And there is no chance that we will get another one until at least 2028 and by then many, many things may have changed, notably Farage may have got bored of UK politics yet again and flounced off.
Another point to note is that the current set of elections don't actually favour Reform. Under previous iterations they did very well in UK-wide EU elections, but these don't exist any more. They've never done well in local elections, because they work on the basis of national, rather than local on-the-ground campaigning. There may be the odd by-election but other than that they'll struggle to find an opportunity to make any sort of 'electoral' breakthrough until the next GE.