Title: The United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
1The United Kingdom of Great Britain Northern
Ireland
2The UK Whats in a Name?
- U.K. United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland - Jan 1, 1800 United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Ireland - Irish Republic gains independence, 1922
- 6 northern counties of N. Ireland (a.k.a. Ulster)
remain with UK - Other regions Scotland, Wales.
- British possess Jersey, Guernsey, and Isle of
Man. Hong Kong given back 7/1/1999. Also own
Diego Garcia in Indian Ocean and Gibraltar
3The UK Demographics
- Size of Oregon but very urban (90 urbanized)
- Population 61.1 million (2009 est.)--Growth rate
0.28 - England most prosperous, others Celtic and
poorer. Median age40.2 - Ethnicity White 92.1 (English 83.6, Scottish
8.6, Welsh 4.9, N. Irish 2.9) Black 2, Indian
1.8, Pakistani 1.3, mixed 1.2, other 1.6
(2001 census) - Christian (Anglican, Roman Catholic,
Presbyterian, Methodist) 71.6, Muslim 2.7,
Hindu 1, other 1.6, unspecified or none 23.1
(2001 census) - Unitary form of government with Parliamentary
Democracy - Life Expectancy 76.5/81.3/79 overall. 1.66
children/woman - 99 literacy rate
- Highest HS dropout rate in Europe only 10 aged
18-24 attend college/university - GNP 35,200, 2.2 Trillion economy, 80 in
services - Pax Britannica 17th-18th Cty, fell behind after
WW I
4Brief UK History
- 1215 Magna Carta
- 1532-36 Henry VIII breaks from Rome, Church of
England, reformation - 1642 Civil War (1649 Charles I beheaded)
- 1649-1658 Cromwell, disputes 1660 Charles II
- 1688 Glorious Revolution of William and Mary
- 1707 Union with Scotland, last veto by King,
King let PM control Cabinet starting in 1721
(Robert Walpole) - 1800 Union with Ireland
- 1832 Reform Act adds Middle Class voting (7),
also 1867 and 1884 Great Reform Act (all 21 men
vote) - 1911 House of Lords weakened
- 1914 Entered World War I
- 1918 Voting age now 21 for men, 30 for women
- 1922 Ireland gains independence
- 1928 All adults 21 and over may vote
- 1939-1945 World War II, Wartime coalition,
Pyrrhic victory - 1942 Beveridge Report and Collectivist consensus
- 1945 World War II ends, colonies begin gaining
independence - 1947 British India partitioned into
India/Pakistan, given independence
5UK History (Continued)
- 1948 National Health Service (NHS) formed
- 1949 NATO formed
- 1951 Churchill and Conservatives return to
power, do not dismantle NHS - 1956 Botched Suez Canal incident
- 1973 Finally joins EEC, forerunner to EU (FRA
had blocked) - 1979-1997 Thatcher/Major governments
(Conservatives) - 1982 Falklands Warvictory over Argentina
- 1990 Thatcher resigns, replaced by major after
Community Charge debacle - 1994 Chunnel opens
- 1997 Conservatives lose power after 18 yrs
Blair elected - 1999 Elected assemblies (devolution) for Wales,
Scotland, and Northern Ireland (suspended but
later restored) - 2000 Accepted ECHR as domestic law (1st real
Bill of Rights) - 2003 UK assists US in Iraq
- 2005 Blair narrowly holds on for third term
- May 31, 2007 Blair cedes power to Chancellor
Gordon Brown - 2008 Economic crisis begins, Northern Rock
nationalized - 2010 David Cameron and Conservatives return to
power in coalition with Liberal Democrats
6More about the UK
- NO Written Constitution. Only Custom, history,
tradition, and precedent (can include works of
authorities like Blackstone). Example Magna
Carta (1215). Now, includes European law. - Huge trust in government people of incremental
change. - In Britain, civil rights and liberties are
protected by political tradition and public
opinion establishment derives its political
power from public acceptance - British slower to integrate into Europe than
France, no Euro - Single member districts virtually guarantee two
party system - Handguns outlawed in 1998.
- Uses common law as opposed to civil law
- Common law judge-made law based on
tradition/precedent - Civil/code law law based on legal codes, former
church law
7Thinking about Britain Themes
- Britain has suffered from less unrest and has had
a more consensual history than any other country.
- Britains relative economic standing declined
dramatically in the second half of the 20th
century. - UK as dependent on world events rather than
master of them - The conservative governments of Margaret Thatcher
and John Major in the 1980s and 1990s redefined
political life. - Gradual change
- Relative economic decline
- Impact of Blair and New Labour
8Government Structure
- Constitutional Monarchy
- Queen has only ceremonial duties, symbol of unity
but stays informed has audiences with PM.
Access to secret documents. - Queen gives Speech from the Throne written by
new PM at each Parliament opening. Imitated in
Commonwealth countries. - House of Commons 646 members (change 2005)
- House of Lords 724 members (changed recently)
- Prime Minister heads govt, leads majority party
in Commons - PM names Cabinet of MPs In US, lack of fusion
causes problem Sec State and NSA often dont get
along! 5 year fixed theoretical term. PM calls
elections, can call them skillfully or not so
skillfully - Parliament can call for a vote of no
confidence if PM loses, must resign and call
new elections - If no party has majority, Queen names PM in
consultation with current PM, 3 times since 1952 - The British do not need to love their Prime
Minister. They love their Queen.
9The Electoral System
- Voters elect members of the House of Commons in
single-member districts. - Every 5 years, PM can call whenever
- 70-75 turnout
- Election campaigning limited to 3-4 weeks
- Carpetbaggers generally accepted
- System is first past the post just like US,
requires plurality (SINGLE MEMBER DISTRICTS) - In no election since 1935 has 1 party gotten a
majority - April 1997 Labour 43
- 1951 Conservatives won but had lower popular
vote - 1979 Thatcher 43
- By-elections occur when a member resigns or
dieswatched carefully as a political harbinger - European Parliament elections as well
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11Political Participation
- The British electorate
- Long time class-based politics upset by
radicalism and Thatcher victories - Rather than realignment, it was a dealignment
- Labour victories probably the result of voter
fatigue with Conservative government and
Labours success in appealing to middle class and
post-materialist voters - Labor has tried to increase support among women
by nominating them to elected and appointed
positions
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13Political Participation
- Interest groups
- Trades Union Council and Confederation of British
Industries are dominant peak associations - Lobbying must be done at highest levels where
bills are drafted
14House of Commons (646)
- Much like US House, debates, makes laws. But PM
and Cabinet, who are members, introduce all bills - Prime Minister Question Hour on Wednesdays!
- US debate filtered thru committees, not in
Britain - 14 select committees were established in 1979
- Salary about 70,000 (compare to 145K in US)
- Speaker of the House retains position in
Parliament, traditionally runs unopposed. - Party leaders usually tested ex-Cabinet
officials. Must deal with the show and the
substance - Cabinet/PM are primary initiators of legislation,
known as frontbenchers - Backbenchers have staged revolts, worked in 1990
against Thatcher. Vote of no confidence/issue
of confidence designation can also bring down a
government - Party whips enforce loyalty strictly
15House of Lords (724)
- 790 Hereditary peers, almost all eliminated in
1999. 92 left. - 500 Lifelong peers remain (granted by PM or
monarch) - Religious leaders 2 church archbishops and 24
bishops are members - 3 areas of power Immigration, Health Services,
and Transportation - Not elected, independentreelection concerns
dont preclude sticky issues (homosexuality,
abortion) - Members cant be expelled
- Limited legislative functions no veto power over
Commons, but debates and can delay legislation
(30 daysfinance, 1 year on other bills). Can
amend bills but a Commons vote can reverse - Law Lords serve as final court of appeals.
(Pinochet case, extradition to Spain) - Law Lords nominated from bar hear appeals but
cannot declare anything unconstitutional (Human
Rights Act makes this technically possible, but
we shall see)
16Prime Minister and Cabinet
- David Cameron (Conservative)2010
- In coalition with Liberal Democrats
- Lives _at_ 10 Downing Street head of majority party
in Commons. Votes less and less in Commons. - PM must balance cabinet for internal party
reasons Cabinet expected to be loyal - Most Cabinet members MPs, then junior ministers,
before ascending to Cabinet. At any one time,
100 MPs serve in the Executive branch. - More Cabinet members resign under duress than in
the United States (Pym under Thatcher) - Cabinet is directly accountable and more
harmonious. - Not always expert in their portfolio.
- More Presidential because of nuclear weapons,
television, growth of interest groups.
17Cabinet
- Chancellor of the Exchequer
- Foreign Secretary
- Defense Secretary
- Home Secretary (police, internal governance)
- Lord Chancellor (Law Lords, heads judiciary)
- Environment, Food and Rural Affairs
- International Development
- Work and Pensions
- Transport, Local Government, and the Regions
- Health
- Northern Ireland
- Wales
- Scotland
- Trade and Industry
- Education and Skills
- Culture, Media, and Sport
18British Prime Ministers Since World War II
- Clement Attlee 1945-1951 Labour, welfare state
- Winston Churchill 1951-1955 Tory
- Anthony Eden 1955-1957 Tory
- Harold MacMillan 1957-1963 Tory
- Alec Douglas-Home 1963-1964 Tory
- Harold Wilson 1964-1970 Labour
- Edward Heath 1970-1974 Tory
- Harold Wilson 1974-1979 Labour
- Margaret Thatcher 1979-1990 Tory
- John Major 1990-1997 Tory
- Tony Blair 1997-2007 Labour
- Gordon Brown 2007- 2010 Labour
- David Cameron 2010-present Tory
19Current UK Party Leaders
- Coalition leadership in govt since 2010
- Conservatives David Cameron
- Liberal Democrats Nick Clegg (Deputy PM in
coalition) - Labour Ed Miliband (since 2010)
- Plaid Cymru Plaid Cymru has three Members of
Parliament at Westminster, no 1 leader - Scottish National Party Angus Robertson
20The Conservatives
- Traditionally pragmatic politicians
- Historically practiced noblesse oblige
- Opening organization to more democratic processes
led to Thatchers election - Party strong during Thatcher years
- Since Thatcher, party struggled to find success
- Party has had five leaders since 1997
- Today they are stronger contenders because of
public dissatisfaction with Labour Partyand now
in power - Views on Europe not shared by majority of
British, aging party leadership (except Cameron) - They were flexible and changed policies
- They emphasized market forces but maintained
responsibility to poor - They have an elitist but effective organization
21The Labour Party
- Began as alliance of unions, socialists, and
cooperative associations in the early 20th
century. - Wanted three things originally 1) Home rule 2)
Minimum wage increase 3) Prohibition - Clause 4 Formally repudiated by Blair
- Economic crisis and New Left activists led to
leadership by partys left wing - Leaders more interested in electoral success than
ideology were chosen in mid-80s - New Labour Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, and
younger, more moderate leaders took over in
mid-1990s
22The Liberal Democrats
- Product of 1987 merger of Liberal and Social
Democratic parties - First past the post system prevent from winning
as many seats - Currently challenging as second-largest party
- It has capitalized on dissatisfaction with
conservatives to build base - The party has fared better under new leadership,
especially Nick Clegg
23Political ParticipationMinor Parties
- Rise in Scottish, Welsh, and Irish nationalism
has led to moderate growth in support for
regional parties - What is devolution?
- In recent general elections they have often come
second in their regions - Regional parties have always dominated Northern
Ireland - Other minor parties
24Margaret Thatcher
- British disease of de-industrialization, weak
economy led to Thatcher Revolution in 1979 - The Old Testament prophets did not say,
Brothers, I want a consensus. They said, this
is my faith, this is what I passionately believe.
If you believe it too, then come with me. - Strong relationship with Reagan/Bush
- Produce before you can consume
- Neo-Conservative, promoted home ownership, breaks
to entrepreneurs. Dry conservative, not Wet - Powerful wartime PM (Falklands)
25The Falklands War
- Argentine military Junta takes over in 1982, led
by General Galtieri. They try to play on public
opinion by seizing Falklands. Falklands
administered by Britain since 1833, all British
stock. - April 1982 Invades Falklands (Malvinas Islands
to Argentinians) - Margaret Thatcher determined to get islands back,
tries diplomacy and UNSC. Not much luck. US
plays mediator, but backs UK. - British naval expedition wins islands back
- Galtieri deposed by his own people soon after
- Thatcher soars in popularity.
26Margaret Thatcher contd
- Freed economy from state intervention
privatization and deregulation. Economy grew by
leaps and bounds. Silicon Glen - Euroskeptic favored common market but not a
superstate - Gave way to John Major in 1990 after domestic
issue turbulencepoll tax or tax for every
adult person to replace property tax. Major
rescinded the tax.
27Tony Blair
- Neil Kinnockmoved Labour towards center, paved
way for Blairs third way - Won 1997, 2001, and 2005 elections
- Came in with talk of change, delivered.
- Eliminated Clause 4 from Labor Party platform
(societal ownership of means of production) - Devolution for Welsh, Scottish, and Irish
(Parliaments) - Advocated House of Lords reform, eliminating
hereditary peers. - Sought to fortify US/Britain relationship (not
typical of Labour). - Favors judicial review being established
- Wanted Bill of Rights, got it indirectly thru
EUs ECHR - Banned handguns and fox hunting
- Semi-scandals with wife, oldest son
- Almost Presidentialnot prima inter pares
28The End of the Blair Decade
- Successes and popularity of first term did not
last - Dissatisfaction with Labour
- Unpopularity of Iraq war
- Gordon Brown became PM in June 2007
29Gordon Brown
- Former Chancellor of the Exchequer under PM Blair
1997-2007 - Prime Minister 2007-2010
- Kept UK out of Euro with Five Tests scheme
- Reneged on promise to hold referendum on Treaty
of Lisbon - Nationalized Northern Rock bank, 2008
- Popularity sank, doomed 2010 election
30David Cameron
- Prime Minister since 2010
- Devised Austerity budget to cut budget
deficitincluding military budget (RAF/Navy
squablle-won by Royal Navy) - 2.5 rise in VAT plus massive spending cuts
31British Bureaucracy
- Known as Whitehall DO NOT confuse with
Westminster (Parliament bldg.) - Highly specialized, oversees and fleshes out law.
Filters info, presents options. - Minister, Secretary, Undersecretaries appointed,
Permanent secretaries stay on job and are elites. - British top ministers rotated more frequently
(remember this was a goal of the U.S. SES) - No. 10 Downing Street links to No. 11
(Chancellor) and No. 12 (Party Whip), as wellas
Foreign Office
32Political Parties in the UK
- Labour Control since 1997, won 2002 elections
overwhelmingly. - Conservative (a.k.a Tories) Lost 1997
elections, controlled govt 1979-1997. Margaret
Thatcher and John Major. Current leader David
Cameron. Pro-status quo, pro-religion. Believes
in noblesse oblige (obligation of nobility to
help those less well off) - Liberal Democrats. Led by Nick Clegg.
- Ulster Unionist Party
- Scottish National Party
- Welsh parties (Plaid Cymru)
- Party not in power forms shadow cabinet
33British Political Culture
- Tony Blair has raised consciousness of population
to idea that they cannot forget Europe. - Most significant Lack of antagonism, no deep
ideological differences among people. Minor
disagreements only. Society operates on
consensus. - Party voting well disciplined party can deny
renomination - Referendums not used much in UK (circumvents
Parliament). Last big one Withdrawal from EC
(lost), also devolution - Overwhelming support for parliamentary system
- Minor rumblings about monarchy, North Sea oil,
written Constitution - Media more partisan than US papers, exposes
scandals. Even so, more strictly regulated than
US - UK Conservative, only tiny social movements
(Chartist movement of 1848). Trafalgar square
protests.
34Political Culture, contd
- Oxbridge/ public schools are the way to
leadership--education very elitist (3 years)
Also Rhodes Scholarships. - Britain used to be a good example of class
votingnot so much anymore (like Reagan Democrats
and Clinton Republicans in US). Swing votes key.
Deferential culture. - Heckling common in Parliament (Was even aimed at
Thatcher at the end, ditch.) - Irish Republican Army/Sinn Fein has become less
of a threat - 25 Unionized workforce Trades Union Congress is
most significant union group, opposed by
Confederation of British Industry (like US
Chamber of Commerce) - CBI mostly liked Thatcher, except for withdrawal
of subsidies. - Racism an issue, Islam fastest growing British
religion - National Health Service probably there to
staysome success, healthier but costs
skyrocketing - Created after WW II, British are healthier but
costs have skyrocketed - More bureaucrats than beds
- Private medical care now had by 13--quietly
returned legally - QUANGOs
35The politics of protest toward an uncivic
culture?
- growing unrest in 1970s
- Northern Ireland a battlefield
- Urban race riots
- Radicalization of unions in face of growing
unemployment and economic decline - Renewed activism of anti-nuclear, anti-war
movements - polarization of politics and alienation of the
center
36QUANGOS
- QUasi-Autonomous Non Governmental Organizations
- An ostensibly non-governmental organization which
performs governmental functions, often with
government funding or other support - The UK government's definition of a
non-departmental public body or quango in 1997
was - "A body which has a role in the processes of
national government, but is not a government
department or part of one, and which accordingly
operates to a greater or lesser extent at arm's
length from Ministers." - US has them Fannie Mae provides mortgage
insurance - In UK Press Council and the Law Society, among
about 600
37Foreign Policy
- 3 circles Former Colonies, USA, European Union
- British invest heavily in NA assets/interests
- Not expansion oriented
- Since 1945, relative ECN/POL decline, with that,
decline in prestige - Joined EEC, 1973 for tariff relief, elimination
of barriers to trade - UK joined EU. Why? 1) Practical necessity 3
trading blocks of 21st Century are NAFTA, EU,
Asian-Pacific 2) UK has European interests EU
moves as one. - Tidbit European Declaration of Human Rights is
first written guarantee of rights in UK! - Atlanticist Foreign Policy. April 1982 Falklands
War, Britain helps in Gulf War, War on Terrorism,
Iraq. - Special relationship with US
38Major Issues
- Terror War/Iraq
- Diplomacy with Iran
- Global warming
- Northern Ireland going to backburner Mitchell
Plan working. IRA disarming. (IRA is military
wing of Sinn Fein) - EU involvement, CFSP???
- Education
- Devolution
- Foxhunting
- Gay rights (Labour in favor)
39Constitutional Changes in the UK Since 1980s
40Will there always be a Britain?
- Identification with the UK has declined in past
40 years - Resurgence of support for regional parties in
Scotland and Wales - Devolution (regional parliaments)
- Monarchys loss of influence and prestige
- Increasing racial diversity (most born in the UK)
- Growing importance of the EU
41Learning ObjectivesAfter mastering the concepts
presented in this chapter, you will be able to
- Gain general knowledge of the history of the
political system in the United Kingdom.
Recognize the importance of Magna Carta and the
role of monarchy in Great Britain. - Understand the concept of gradualism while
analyzing the development of British political
system. - Define civic culture and civil society and assess
the importance of both in the British political
system. - Understand the position of Euroskeptics
- Recognize devolution and its impact on the
development of British state. - Define patterns of collective responsibility in
the British executive government. - Describe British cabinet government.
- Comprehend the role of the political opposition
in the British parliament and define the shadow
cabinet in the functionality of British
legislature. - Understand the nature of parliamentarian
sovereignty. - Describe the work of British parliament
- Recognize the specification of British electoral
system. Learn the difference between
winner-take-all and proportional representation
electoral systems. - Describe the impact of Margaret Thatcher and Tony
Blair governments on the political and economic
system in the United Kingdom. - Understand the impact of nationalization and
privatization on economic and political
development of the British state.
42Learning Objectives, continued
- Explain how the economic problems faced by
Britain have had such dramatic political
consequences. - Define and give examples of gradualism within the
context of British political history. - Describe examples of the changes made by Prime
Ministers Thatcher and Major to the
political/economic culture of Britain. - Describe how New Labour differed from Old
Labour and from Thatcherism. - Identify 4-6 major developments in the creation
of the current regime. - Describe the basic elements of the collectivist
consensus. - Describe several ways in which the civic culture
of the collectivist consensus broke down in the
1970s. - explain why the three major parties in Britain
are considered catch-all parties today. - identify the main characteristics of the
Conservative Party that ensured its success and
survival. - describe the conflict between ideological and
pragmatic politics within the Labour Party that
eventually led to Tony Blairs election as party
leader. - explain in general terms how interest groups
function in Britain. - explain the roles of the parliamentary party, the
shadow cabinet, and collective responsibility in
the functioning of Commons. - describe the basics of the debates in Britain
over the countrys relationship with Europe. - Be able to analyze the 2010 General Election and
why the voters removed the Labour Party from
power.