Title: Politics in Britain
1Politics in Britain
2Russia
U.S.
Domestic economy
Legislature
Court
Executive
Bureaucracies
Political parties
Interest groups
Domestic culture
Domestic society
France
Germany
3United Kingdom
- Size
- about two times that of the state of Mississippi
- Really all in a dense band from London to
Newcastle, much of the land is open. - Population
- about 59 million
- non-white immigration since WWII
- from South Asia, West Indies, and East Asia
- 4.6 million (8 of total population)
- Europeans?
4Key Institutions
5United Kingdom gt Great Britain
- United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland - created in 1801
- Great Britain
- England
- Scotland
- Wales
6Union Flag For the UK Cross of St. George
English flag for centuries, St. George
legendarily slayed some dragon. Welsh Flag-
Claims to be oldest in world, probably from Roman
calvary Cross of St. Andrew Scottish
Flag Unofficial Flag of Northern Ireland Irish
Flag, some republican parts of Northern Ireland
fly it as their flag as well.
7Historical evolution gradualism
- Historical challenges to all industrialized
democracies - Building the nation-state
- Defining the relationship between church and
state - Establishing liberal democracy
- Dealing with the impact of the industrial
revolution
8Monarch versus Parliament, History
- 1215 Magna Carta
- 1295 Convening of Model Parliament of Edward I,
the first representative Parliament - 1500s the Church of England
- 1529 Reformation Parliament of Henry VIII cuts
ties to Roman Catholic Church. - 1500s, defeat of Spanish Armada in 1588, perhaps
the high point of English culture with
Shakespeare. - 1628 Charles I forced to sign Petition of Right,
Parliaments first statement of civil rights in
return for funds - 1642-60 Civil War and Restoration
- 1688 Glorious Revolution
- 1689 Bill of Rights issued, est. constitutional
monarchy - 1701 Act of Settlement
- royal succession
- Early 1700s emergence of prime minister, 1721
Walpole the first - 1832-1867 Reform Acts passed extending vote to
all urban males and most of countryside - 1900 Labour Party est.
- 1916-1922 Anglo-Irish War fought, independent
Republic of Ireland formed - 1973 UK made a member of the EEC, now EU
- 1979-1990 Thatcher Era
- 1997- 2008 Blair Era
9Development
- Waves of invasions by Romans, Angles Saxons,
Danes, Celts, and finally Normans. British
culture a mix of all of these influences. - Celtic Fringe Wales, Scotland, Ireland have own
distinct languages. - English heavily influenced by French, French
Normans ruled England since 1066. Many of our
words are French heritage. - James I, a Scot, united England and Scotland but
brought on a century of power struggles beginning
in 1607. - 1714 House of Hannover, relied on a cabinet to
run the goernment - 19th century, the most powerful nation in
history. Naval power and technology and
industrialization made it the pre-eminent power.
Governed one quarter of the worlds population,
the sun never set, loss of empire was slow and
gradual.
10Democratization
- House of Lords represented high nobility,
Commons low aristocracy and merchants. Monarch
very powerful until the Germans came. - Political Parties Tories (pro-Monarch) vs Whigs
(against Monarch power, influenced American
Founders). - 1832 Reform Act
- Working Class that won the World Wars established
a collectivist consensus of social welfare
programs and the nationalization of the
commanding heights of the economy.
11Democratization continued
- 1832 Great Reform Act (mens suffrage)
- 1911 Reform of House of Lords
- 1928 Right to vote for all adults
12Collectivist Consensus
- Both Labour and Conservative gradually expanded
the role of government - Party identification, electoral behavior, and
occupation were strongly correlated - most of working class voted Labour
- most of middle class voted Conservative
13Unwritten constitution
- Lack of a written constitution
14Parliamentary system
- Parliament selects the prime minister
- prime minister is not elected by popular vote
- normally the head of majority party or coalition
- Cabinet responsibility to parliament
- major legislation and votes of confidence
Parliament
Majority party
Prime minister cabinet
voters
Minority party
15(No Transcript)
16British government
- Government
- Queens, Gordon Brown, or Labour government
- Whitehall Street
- executive agencies
- Downing Street
- prime ministers residence
- Westminster
- parliament
17Electoral system
- Single-member district
- First-past-the-post (winner-take-all) system
18Election results
19Parliament
- The House of Commons
- 659 members
- voting is 100 along party lines in most votes
- party versus constituency interests
- the House of Lords
- is not elected
- Heriditary
- Life peers
- reforms
20House of Commons
- the government gets its way
- MPs weigh political reputations
- MPs in the governing party have opportunities to
influence government - MPs talk about legislation
- MPs scrutinize administration of policies
- MPs publicizing issues
21Judicial System
- Minor role, no judicial review per se but courts
can strike down some legislation that violates
one of constitutional documents. - Mainly to make sure statutes are followed
- International Law increases power
- Judges come from distinguished jurists selected
by Lord Chancellor - Conservative bias
- Common Law
- Complex system of civil and criminal courts
- House of lords is highest court.
22Cabinet
- The real source of power
- Always present unified front
- Home Office, Foreign Office, and Chancellor of
the Exchequer - Shadow ministers
23Russia
U.S.
Domestic economy
Legislature
Court
Executive
Bureaucracies
Political parties
Interest groups
Domestic culture
Domestic society
France
Germany
24Parties and interest groups
- Postwar collectivist consensus until 1970s
- consensus about role of government for the
collective economic and social good - state should take expanded responsibility
- economic growth and full employment
- state should provide social welfare
- public education, health care, etc.
- publicly owned sector (1/5 of total production)
25Parties
- Labour Party Working class, stronger hints of
socialism, more like our democrats under Blair - Conservatives (Tories) More moderate right
party, do not disagree with all of collective
ideas. - Liberal Democrats mixture of social equality
and classical liberalism emphasis on weak state.
Most pro-EU, want proportional voter reforms. - Others- Scottish Nationalist Party control
Scottish legislature, Welsh Plaid Cymru, several
Northern Irish parties Ulster Union, Sinn Fein - Park Ridge Football Party- Lots of alcohol, lots
of fights, police support, parental limited
government.
26Margaret Thatcher
- Economic stagflation in 1970s
- Neither party was able to manage economy well
- 1978-79 winter of discontent strikes
- Thatchers alternative vision
- cut taxes, reduce social services
- stimulate the private sector
- market and businesslike methods
27Margaret Thatcher
- Served (1979 - 1990) longer without interruption
than any other British prime minister in 20th
century
28(No Transcript)
29Welfare state
- Even under Thatcher and Major, Britain
experienced real growth in both social services
and health care provisions
30Margaret Thatcher
- 1979-1984 government spending actually rose from
39 of GNP to 44 of GNP - 1890 8
- 1910 12
- 1920 26
- 1989 survey less than 1/3 approved of the
Thatcher revolution
31New Labour Party
- 1997 electoral victory
- the largest majority in parliament (419/659) that
the Labour Party has ever held - Conservative vote fell to its lowest share since
1832 - Tony Blair New Labour is a party of ideas and
ideals, but not of outdated ideology. What
counts is what works.
32Tony Blair Third Way
- Third way alternative to collectivism and
Thatcherism - rejected the historic ties between Labour
governments and the trade union movement - reversed the tendency to provide centralized
statist solutions to economic and social problem - A vague philosophy to draw support from across
the social-economic spectrum.
33(No Transcript)
34(No Transcript)
35 Voted for Labour Party
- Year Working class Women
- 1974 57 38
- 1979 50 35
- 1983 38 26
- 1987 42 32
- 1992 45 34
- 1997 58 49
36Hypothetical voter distribution
- n
- left social-economic spectrum right
37Interest groups
- Civil society
- institutions independent of government
- Interest groups influence politics
- not by contesting elections
- regardless of which party wins
- Distance between party and interest groups
- Interest groups criticize partisan allies
- Quangos though, polciy advisory boards.
38Interest groups
- Organizations of British businesses
- Confederation of British Industries
- dominated by large firms
- Organizations of British labour
- Trades Union Congress (TUC)
- 38 of workforce is unionized
- 90 of unionized workers are affiliated with TUC
- affiliation with the Labour Party
39Society
- Class Conflicts
- National and Ethnic Identity
- Culture considered pragmatic, tolerant, stable
- Slow political process despite power of any
majority party.
40Interest aggregation
- Political demands of individuals and groups are
combined into policy programs - farmers, environmentalists, business, etc.
- substantial political resources
- popular votes, campaign funds, legislative seats,
executive influence, etc. - competing policy goals are compromised to produce
a single governing program
41Interest aggregation
42Local Government
- Were powerful local councils, Thatcher abolished
them in 1986, this coupled with poll tax was one
of Thatchers most unpopular ideas. - 1997, Blair returns power to local governments to
some extent, particularly in London. - 1997 Scotland and Wales have their own
legislatures. Nationalist sentiment is strong in
Scotland. - 1998 Good Friday agreement, reestablishment of
the Northern Ireland Assembly. - Federalism?
- Still unitary for now.
43Current Issues
- Loss of Colonial Empire
- Devolution and Constitutional Reform
- Military power and closeness to US
44The Troubles
-Ireland dominated by the United Kingdom, union
with UK in 1801, but had been dominated by
English and Protestant landholders for centuries
since the 1600s. Penal laws restricted rights of
Catholic Irish. Irish Rebellion in 1798 resulted
in violence, and establishment of Society of
United Irishmen and the Orange Order of
Protestants to fight for loyalty to Crown and
William of Orange. -Irish Famine in the 1840s,
population declines by almost 30 through death
and emigration, many settle in US or cities like
Liverpool, Manchester and Edinburgh. -Charles
Stewart Parnell, agitates for limited home rule
by end of 18th century, much of his efforts are
blocked by House of Lords. Prime Minister
Gladstone wishes for reform of relationship with
Ireland. Several acts of disobedience including
a boycott help the cause. IPP party is formed
and plays a powerful role as kingmaker in
Parliament. -Easter Rising of 1918, movement
turns more violent. Eamon de Valera returns from
imprisonment and radicalizes movement. -War for
Independence 1919-1921, Sinn Fein and IRA lead
guerrilla war against British and Ulster
Unionists. -1921 peace is negotiated by
leadership lead by Michael Collins, but it
accepts partition of the island. De Valera
strongly opposes and a bitter feud ensues
45(No Transcript)
46Cont..
- Free Irish State of 1922 established, NI out.
- FIS Has dominion status within UK until 1949.
- 1949 Republic of Ireland established, dissolves
all ties with UK. - Economic challenges and poverty until 1992.
Joining EU and liberalisation helped greatly.
Since 1990s Ireland Celtic Tiger. - Country growing less socially conservative.
- 1998 Belfast Good Friday Agreements,
established a Northern Ireland Parliament with
power sharing between the sides. - Broke down in 2002, but was re-established in
2007 between Ian Paisley (Protestant) and Gerry
Adams (Catholic). - IRA agreed to disarm last summer.
- Ulster Project International to improve relations
between Protestant and Catholic families across
the country.
47Violence
- IRA resisted participation in the Republic,
angered over the partition of the island.
Various acts of violence on both sides. Was a
minority but affected many regular people. - Bombings continued from late 1960s to Belfast
agreement in late 1990s. Violence in Northern
Ireland, Ireland and in the UK and London. - UK officially claimed their forces were neutral
trying to uphold law and order and security, but
there was some cooperation with Unionist forces.
48Stats
- Deaths by status of victim2StatusNo.
- Civilian1855
- Members of security forces (and reserves)1123
- of whom
- British Army (excluding Northern Ireland
regiments)499 - Royal Ulster Constabulary301
- Ulster Defence Regiment197
- Northern Ireland Prison Service24
- Garda Síochána (Republic of Ireland police)9
- Royal Irish Regiment7
- Territorial Army7
- English police forces6
- Royal Air Force4
- Royal Navy2
- Irish Army1
- Members of Republican Paramilitary Groups394
- Members of Loyalist Paramilitary Groups151