Title: STUDENT NOTES 5
1STUDENT NOTES 5
- Ch. 2 The United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland
2IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS POLITICAL
PARTIES
- The Labour Party Loyal Opposition
- The largest party on the left
- Controlled the British government from 1997-2010
- Key Figures
- Tony Blair (PM 1997-2007)
- Won Elections of 1997, 2001, 2005
- Gordon Brown (PM 2007-2010)
- Created in 1906 to represent rights of working
class - Move toward center allowed it to win back
Parliament in 1997 on centrist platform and
Blairs New Labour platform
3IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS POLITICAL PARTIES
- Largest leftist party
- 1900 - Alliance of trade unions and socialist
groups working class - Public ownership of industries
- Gov. intervention in economy
- Redistribution of wealth
- Welfare state
- Publicly funded healthcare and education
4IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS POLITICAL PARTIES
- Early history of the party was defined by
controversial Clause 4 that called for
nationalization of the commanding heights of
British industry - Trade Union Council (TUC) a coalition of trade
unions generally associated with the Labour
Party, has traditionally been a force in British
politics - Growing moderation of the Labour Party was
reflected by removal of Clause 4 in early 1990s
5- The Labour Party is a democratic socialist party.
It believes that by the strength of our common
endeavour we achieve more than we achieve alone,
so as to create for each of us the means to
realise our true potential and for all of us a
community in which power, wealth and opportunity
are in the hands of the many, not the few, where
the rights we enjoy reflect the duties we owe,
and where we live together, freely, in a spirit
of solidarity, tolerance and respect.
6IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS POLITICAL PARTIES
- New Labour - Modernized and centered by PM Tony
Blair from 1997-2010 - Rebranding accept market economy
- Third Way
- Right wing economic policy with left wing social
policy
7BLAIRS LEGACY
- Created New Labour
- Tied UK with US foreign affairs in Iraq
- Led to demise under Brown
- Reduced House of Lords hereditary positions
- Devolved power
- Created government in London (mayor)
- Attracted more women to party
8Tony Blair New Labour
- Reforms
- Devolution to Scotland and Wales
- Elected Mayor and council for London
- Removal of voting rights of hereditary peers in
House of Lords - Incorporates Convention on Human Rights into
British law - Eliminates part of Clause IV of partys
constitution which committed party to seek the
common ownership of the means of production,
distribution, and exchange - Freedom of Information Act (passed in 2000)
- Downfall Iraq War seen as George W. Bushs
puppy
9IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS 2010 ELECTION
- LABOUR
- 255 (2010)
- Urban
- Unionized
- Working class
- progressive
- CONSERVATIVES
- 303 (2010)(326 makes a majority, awk)
- Upper class
- Suburban middle class
- Traditionalists
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11IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS POLITICAL PARTIES
- The Liberal Democrats
- Two partiesthe Liberals and the Social
Democrats-formed an alliance in the 1983 and 1987
elections - Parties formally merged in 1989.
- Goal of party was to establish a strong party in
the middle as a compromise to the politics of the
two major parties. - Key Figures
- Nick Cleg Current Party Leader
- Paddy Ashdown Party Leader 1992-1999
- Power declined in 1990s as both major parties
moved toward center. - In 2005, Liberal Democrats won 62 seats in
Parliament, even though they won 22 of the vote.
12THAT JUST HAPPENED!
- 2010 elections created coalition majority in
Parliament - Conservative-Liberal Democrat
- Conservative David Cameron (PM)
- Liberal Democrat Nick Clegg (Dep. PM)
13IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS COALITION
GOVERNMENT
- Coalition core principles
- Two parties together for partnership government
- Attempted to blend Conservative commitment to the
dynamism of free markets with the Liberal
Democrat commitment to decentralization
14IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS INTEREST GROUPS
- Lobby leaders and bureaucrats NOT MPs
- Sway public opinion
- STANDOUTS
- Confederation of British Industry (CBI)
- Associated with Tories
- Trade Union Congress (TUC)
- Associated with Labour
15IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS POLITICAL CULTURE
- Nationalism
- Multi-nationalism English dialects Catholic v.
Protestant - Insularity - Euroskepticism
- Geography island, small, limited land, no major
barriers - Individual rights
- Representative government deference to
Parliament - Rule of law
- Political traditions
16IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS CLEAVAGES
- Cross-cutting
- Wealth and income
- Social class
- Race and ethnicity
- Religion
- National identity
17IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS VOTING
- Electoral Register
- 18, citizen, no criminal record or mental
incapability - Partisan alignment and/or class alignment
- Voter turnout 55-65
- Lower turnout
- PP centralized
- Polling indicates conclusion
- Low efficacy/ignorance
18IV. SOCIETY, STATE AND CITIZENS ELECTIONS
- Max every 5 years
- 1/legislative district (over 650)/95,000
constituents - No residency requirements or primary elections
- Plurality (First Past the Post)
- Campaigns 4-6 weeks/first Thursday in May
19U.S. vs British Elections
United States Britain
Parties are less powerful
Members must live in districts
Party leaders run in their respective districts
Individual votes for four officials on the national level
Between 30 and 60 of eligible voters actually vote (more in recent elections)
Elections are by firs-past-the-post single-member districts almost no minor parties get representation
20Ethnic Minorities
- Make up about 8 of the British population come
from Commonwealth - Indian (23)
- Pakistani (16)
- Afro-Caribbean (13)
- Black African (11)
- Public opinion - limit number of immigrants
- White backlash British National Party
- Increase terrorists presence
- Solution sense of Britishness
- BUT minority ethnic population grew by 53
between 1991 2001 - Also, immigrants from Eastern European countries
(EU) has increased - 2nd most spoken language in UK Polish!
21- National Identity
- Decolonization has created a multiethnic Britain.
- Ethnic minority communities have experienced
police insensitivity, problems in access to the
best public housing, hate crimes, criticism
directed at immigrants and asylum seekers.
22Social Cleavages Treatment of Minorities
- Minorities have experience some discrimination
- Ethnic minorities disproportionately suffer
diminished opportunities - Unequal treatment by police (esp young men)
- Physical harassment by citizens
- Marginalization in education, job training,
housing labor - But some have also been very successful
- Among men of African, Asian, Chinese Indian
descent, the proportional representation in
managerial/professional ranks is actually higher
than that for white men - British South Asians (esp Indians) have high rate
of entrepreneurship
23THE MEDIA
- Britains television and radio networks and
printed media are far more centralized. - Newspapers broadsheets
- The Guardian, the Times, the Independent, the
Telegraph - BBC more widely listened to than equivalents
- Most political information comes from national
newspapers and television and radio stations. - There is very little local news on television.
- The five networks carry their national news
programs at different ?times.
24Political Economy
- World Wars, Industrial Strife, and the Depression
(19141945) - State involvement in economy increased during
World War I (19141918) - Nationalization of industries
- Price setting
- Restricted capital flow abroad
- Production aimed at war effort
- Limited trade union and worker movements
- Free market versus intervention conflict
continued through Great Depression (1929 through
much of the 1930s) and World War II (19391945).
25Political Economy
- Collective Consensus (19451979)
- Post war shared victory, common misery, dreams
of new prosperity and security - Collectivism majority agreement to expansion of
state economic responsibility and broad social
welfare - Government should enact policies of welfare
state. - Welfare stateset of policies designed to provide
health care, pensions, unemployment benefits, and
assistance to the poor. Also responsible for
economic growth, full employment. - Consensus unraveled by economic downturn and
political stagnation
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27POLITICAL ECONOMY AND DEVELOPMENT
- The Consensus Era
- After World War II, collectivist consensus
crystallized. - Followed Keynesian economics
- Keynesianismnamed after British economist John
Maynard Keynes, state economic policies used to
regulate economy to achieve stable economic
growth. - Became unpopular during 1970s with increased
labor unrest - Thatcherite Policy Orientation
- Rejected Keynesianism for monetarism
- Monetarisman approach to economic policy that
assumes a natural rate of unemployment,
determined by the labor market, and rejects the
instrument of government spending to run
budgetary deficits for stimulating the economy
and creating jobs.
28POLITICAL ECONOMY AND DEVELOPMENT
- New Labours Economic Policy Approach
- Gordon Brown as chancellor, then primate minister
established platform of stability - Low debt, low deficit, low inflation
- New Growth Theory
- Improve quality of labor
- through education and
- training
- Maintain labor market
- flexibility
- Attract investment
29POLITICAL ECONOMY AND DEVELOPMENT
- The Coalition Governments Economic Policy
Approach - Key cuts in spending
- Government subsidies for public housing
- Increased age for pensions
- Reduction in child benefits for middle-class
families - Reduction by 10 in social protection, welfare
benefits - Reduction by 20 public spending across the
board - Social Policy
- National Health Service (NHS)
- Provides comprehensive and universal medical care
- Low cost medical care to all British citizens as
matter of right. - Shake-up in January 2011
- Health care budgets turned over to general
practitioners