Is it? (a worthy cause.)
As someone who uses their private vehicle for less than 8,000 miles per year, I'd support the two year proposal, or rather a system based on usage rather than a calendar.
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Most cars fail on defects which can help prevent accidents such as bald tyres (do you check your tyres regularly or wait for the MOT?), brakes (how often do you check your brake pads, shoes and brake fluid?) and lights. Have you ever had a near miss or even an accident when it seemed the person wasn’t indicating, but it just turned out their indicator bulb had blown on that side?
To take each point in turn.
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Most cars fail on defects which can help prevent accidents such as bald tyres
Being flippant. 'Slicks' are quite good on dry roads. Rarely do tyres reach the stage of being 'bald'. Whilst I would agree that insufficient tread depth does pose a danger, I find the language used is sensationalist.
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brakes (how often do you check your brake pads, shoes and brake fluid?)
Quite often. But the car also has sensors that monitor fluid levels and pad wear. It has just topped 100,000 miles and has only recently had it's third set of pads replaced, front only, and only because the sensor indicated wear, but having stripped them down, they were well within permitted tolerances, but, as I had gone that far, I decided to replace them anyway.
On that basis, a 4 yearly test would have been quite sufficient.
In fact, thinking about it. The last time that I had a vehicle that suffered a 'brake failure' was in the early 1970's.
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Have you ever had a near miss or even an accident when it seemed the person wasn’t indicating, but it just turned out their indicator bulb had blown on that side?
Many times, but not because of a blown bulb, morelike the numpty hadn't the 'wit' to indicate in the first place.

Again, my car has a display to indicate failed bulbs. In fact, systems that detect an indicator bulb failure have been in existence for nigh on 40 years. The 'flasher unit' operates at a faster speed.
I read some figures somewhere that stated that the main reason for a 'lighting' failure at MOT time was concerned with headlamp alignment. Headlamps do not mis-align themselves. Someone changes a bulb and fails to ensure that it is seated correctly.
The MOT is, and always has been, a statement that the vehicle was at the required standard, on the date and time that it was tested. Modern vehicles, whilst being of greater complexity, are also able to 'self-diagnose' faults before they reach the point of becoming dangerous.
I once stopped a Private Hire Taxi late one Friday evening. He had three lighting defects. IIRC, a tail light, a number plate light, and a stop lamp. Whilst he thought the matters of little consequence, after I explained to him that he had a 'duty' to his customers that they be conveyed in a roadworthy vehicle, I gave him an hour to re-present the vehicle, otherwise I would come and find him and impose a 'prohibition' that couldn't be lifted until the council offices opened on the Monday. Hence he would 'lose' the lucrative part of Friday and ALL of Saturday.
An hour later, he was back.
Rather than just looking at the calendar age of the vehicle, perhaps there is an argument for testing vehicles according to, for instance, Insurance classes, or even, 'Green' issues. After all, a High Performance vehicle covering a high mileage should be tested more frequently than a low mileage 'City runabout'.
We have a numbering system for Insurance groups. Why not a 'numbering' system that determines when vehicles need to be tested, based on the multiplier of 'group' x 'mileage'.
No. It's not a website that I would support.