1.1 representative and direct democracy Flashcards

1
Q

What are the functions of democracy?

A

Representation- a means for people to express their views to the gov of the day
Accountability- there must be a way gov of the day can explain and take responsibility for its actions
Participation
Power dispersal- helps to avoid one person becoming overly dominant
Legitimacy- selection process should have legal authority
Education

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2
Q

What is a pluralist democracy?

A

Pluralism is the broad idea that there is competition between different groups who represent different concerns. Power is spread widely rather than in the hands of the elite. The government should be politically neutral and make decisions based on merits of competing arguments

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3
Q

What is direct democracy?

A

Citizens make decisions by themselves without operating through anyone else. Decisions are made of a majority vote

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4
Q

What does direct democracy require and why?

A

Because the process is continuous and ongoing, it requires high levels of engagement and education from the people

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5
Q

What are some of the forms of direct democracy and what triggers them?

A

Referendums- called by representatives or those in charge
Initiatives- proposed and called by a % of the population
Petitions - high levels of support from citizens

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6
Q

What are the arguments in favour of direct democracy

A

Purest form of democracy- no misrepresentation through representative
Education- people must be informed to make decisions
Works- Switzerland use is effectively regularly
Participation- turnout can be higher when people have more opportunities to be involved in issues that directly affect them
Engagement - public debates and discussion
Legitimate- support of the majority

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7
Q

What are the arguments against a direct democracy?

A

not Practical- too many issues and people
Emotional responses- rather than practical considerations
Tyranny of the majority
Populist outcomes- people vote on short term measures that benefit them, rather than considering what’s in the national interest
Undermines elected representatives
low Turnout- only small groups make decisions affecting everyone and so this undermines legitimacy

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8
Q

What is a representative democracy?

A

People elect someone to represent them in a legislative body

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9
Q

What are the benefits of representative democracy?

A

Pressure groups are widespread
Representation is universal through constituency
Universal suffrage
New groups easily created
Electoral commission works hard to make sure parties follow rules on campaigning and spending
FPTP is simple and provides a clear winner for each seat
Variety of parties in the UK

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10
Q

What are the disadvantages of representative democracy

A

FPTP means many MPs are not voted for by the majority of constituents
Regulations can contain loopholes that parties use
Elitist environment
Safe seats means lack of real choice
Hyper-pluralism, important issues can be drowned out by the number of campaigns
Franchise- 16/17s and prisoners as well as a disfranchised group through process of registration and homeless
relatively low Turnout, raising concerns on democratic legitimacy
Wasted votes and unrepresentative outcomes
Lack of choice as only two parties has a realistic chance of governing

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11
Q

What are the positive aspects of democracy in the UK?

A

Parliamentary sovereignty
Pressure groups
Party systems
Devolution
Universal suffrage
Free and fair elections
Turnout

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12
Q

What are the negative aspects of democracy in the UK, causing a democratic defecit?

A

Meaningful choice- lack of
Elitist pressure groups
Entrenched rights-lack of
Turnout
West Lothian Question and EVEL
Unelected elements
Weakness of electoral commission
Voting system

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13
Q

Discuss free and fair elections (why a positive, how is it maintained)?

A

free from gov manipulation because they are regulated by the electoral commission, which is independent of any party.
There are also laws in place about campaigning in and around ballot stations on the day.
Campaign spending limits and restrictions on the amount of broadcasting time, according to the number of votes a party won at the last election. They are then given the same amount of time accordingly and are each broadcasted at the same time of day.
Ban on campaigning during the purdah

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14
Q

Who are the electoral commission?

A

created in 2000 by the political parties, elections and referendums act, it’s responsible for overseeing democracy in the UK

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15
Q

What is the electoral commissions responsibilities?

A

-registering political parties
-ensuring parties comply with legal requirements
-set criteria for running of elections
-reporting and reviewing democracy with suggestions on how it can be improved
-approving the wording of referendums to ensure they’re fair

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16
Q

Why is turnout a positive in the UK’s democracy?

A

After hitting a historic low of 59% in 2001, turnout has steadily increased, rising to 69% by 2017. There was a slight dip in 2019 to 67%, but it was still above 2/3rds

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17
Q

Why is universal suffrage a positive in the UK?

A

Everyone over 18, who is not a prisoner and deemed mentally capable is allowed to vote on the basis of one person, one vote. Therefore all votes are equal regardless of background and lifestyle

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18
Q

Why is the party system a benefit in the UK?

A

There are 10 parties in the HOC with many more operating at local level. The variety provides a wide range of options for voters with a greater degree of representation. Parties are also responsible for education and so the more there are, the higher the profile of political issues

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19
Q

Why are pressure groups a benefit in the UK?

A

provide alternative avenue for representation, particularly on small or minority issues that don’t concern the whole of the UK. They are legally equal and free to compete, in theory allowing the government to make informed and balanced decisions

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20
Q

Why is devolution a positive in the UK

A

Allows decisions to be made on a local basis. Representatives are closer to the community and know what they want so can better represent them rather than having a remote and disconnected central gov

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21
Q

What are some of the unelected features of UK democracy and why is it negative?

A

unelected hereditary monarchy and unelected HOL undermine representative democracy. This means the public cannot hold them to account.
The appointment system is often accused of cronyism and even after reform 92 hereditary peers remain

22
Q

How can a peer be removed?

A

death, or following the House of Lords Reform Act 2014, resigning or being expelled for failing to attend an entire annual parliamentary session or committing a serious offence

23
Q

How are the powers of the Lords and monarch limited?

A

Through conventions, such as the Salisbury convention, which can be ignored by Lords if they so chose

24
Q

Why is turnout a negative in the UK’s democracy?

A

turnout is often low leading to questions of a participation crisis. Recent election turnouts are still much lower than historic averages of 75% or the 71% achieved in 97, while the slight drop in 2019 is also a concern. Below national elections, turnout drops significantly, raising questions on legitimacy

25
Q

What is the west Lothian question and why is it a negative in UK democracy?

A

‘why should Scottish MPs vote on issues that do not affect their constituents but do impact other people from outside their constituencies?’
MPs are making decisions about issues that affect people who cannot hold them accountable

26
Q

When did EVEL end and why?

A

English votes for English laws tried to address the imbalance of power that Scottish MPs had, but it ended in 2021 with fears it was creating two tiers of MPs

27
Q

Why is the voting system a negative in the UK’s democracy?

A

Wasted votes
Safe seats
Unrepresentative
Winner’s bonus
Discriminates against parties with widespread support
Minority constituencies

28
Q

Why is there a lack of meaningful choice in the UK’s democracy?

A

only two parties have a realistic chance of getting into power at Westminster, meaning many vote for one of the two. The two main parties often have similar policies, especially post-Thatcher. Even in devolved areas, the contest is based around two main parties, such as in Scotland the SNP competing Labour and more recently, the Conservatives

29
Q

Why are pressure groups sometimes elitist rather than pluralist?

A

they don’t compete on equal footing as some have more wealth, greater membership, public profile and an insider status. Therefore, a small number of groups tend to dominate the political debate at the expense of others

30
Q

Why is the weakness of the electoral commission a negative in the UK?

A

It’s often reactive rather than proactive and tends to pass judgement and sanctions after an event has happened, meaning the message has already had impact. There are loopholes in spending regulations and the use of social media which the commission has no power to regulate, other than imposing fines, which in context, are very small

31
Q

Why is a lack of entrenched rights an issue in UK politics?

A

Without a codified constitution, key rights can easily be overturned by the gov, without effective redress through the judicial system. This undermines the idea that citizen’s rights are protected from the government’s abuse

32
Q

What could be done to improve democracy?

A

Compulsory voting
Reform of the voting system
Reform of the HOL
Greater recall of MPs
Reform in the HOC
Reforming the devolved system
Reform the monarchy
Codifying the constitution
Digital Democracy

33
Q

How would compulsory voting in the UK improve democracy?

A

Through a system of fines, it would encourage more to vote. By adding a ‘none of the above’ option to ballot papers, people would not be forced to vote for a candidate against their wishes. This will increase legitimacy and people may be more engaged. The money from fines can go into greater education programmes

34
Q

Why is compulsory voting not a good idea?

A

It’s believed that with the right to vote, comes the right to not vote (gov by consent) and there is a risk people may just select a candidate at random or use donkey voting. Forced voting could lead to resentment and apathy

35
Q

How would changing the voting system improve democracy?

A

By changing it to a more proportionate system like STV, it would distribute votes more fairly, end the problem of safe seats and reduce the number of wasted votes. There may be greater engagement if everyone believed their vote mattered

36
Q

Why would changing the voting system not improve democracy?

A

They can be far more confusing and complicated systems and can lead to extremist parties gaining representation and can lose the link between constituent and MP. Evidence from where they are used elsewhere suggest they don’t increase turnout

37
Q

How would reforms to the HOL increase democracy?

A

Remove hereditary peers to increase legitimacy or make the chamber fully/partially elected to improve democracy and give them greater authority

38
Q

Why would reforming the HOL not improve democracy?

A

an elected upper chamber would simply reflect the HOC and could lead to gridlock. It would see a reduction in the number of experts and increase the number of professional politicians, leading to a loss of advice to gov legislation

39
Q

Why would greater recall of MPs improve legitimacy?

A

the current recall system remains limited and its success depends on an MP committing some sort of crime, rather than allowing voters to remove them if they have misrepresented them. A more rigorous system would make MPs more responsive of calls from constituents.

40
Q

Why is greater recall of MPs a bad idea?

A

it may hinder MPs in other aspects of their role such as attending parliament and voting with a three line whip. It would also undermine Burkean representation- an idea that MPs should be able to use their own judgement to vote and not just follow their constituents wishes. They may simply become just a spokesperson

41
Q

How would a reform of the HOC improve democracy?

A

Reform to make PMQs less adversarial, to make members of select committees elected by the whole house, to bestow more power to the speaker and to introduce modern technology to improve online questioning and public scrutiny stages

42
Q

Why would reform to the HOC not improve democracy?

A

These issues don’t face broad calls for reform and many would have to be tackled at a fundamental level such as adversarial politics.

43
Q

What is an example of greater devolution that could take place?

A

through regional assemblies or through an English parliament or assembly. Westminster would become a federal government

44
Q

Why reform the monarchy?

A

an unelected monarchy is undemocratic and introducing a head of state, by having an elected monarchy or presidency would make the UK more democratic

45
Q

Why is reforming the monarchy a waste of time?

A

Little popularity for this reform and the costs for a presidency would be far more than for a monarchy. An elected head of state would have more authority and so may undermine the principle of parliamentary sovereignty

46
Q

Why create a codified constitution to improve democracy?

A

Currently, rights are too easily overturned by gov and a codified constitution would help to entrench rights and might lead to greater public education

47
Q

Why is a codified constitution not a good idea?

A

Much more power would be transferred to an unelected judiciary and it might make desirable reforms more difficult.

48
Q

Why is digital democracy a good idea?

A

Would make it easier for people to vote, allow people to ask questions directly and would allow the public to give their thoughts on bills before its passed

49
Q

Why is digital democracy a bad idea?

A

Would be difficult to monitor and ensure free votes, would undermine the role of MPs and would undermine the legislative role of parliament and risk a tyranny of the minority

50
Q

How does the diversity of the HOL hinder democracy?

A

Only one hereditary peer is a women: the Countess of Mar and there are currently only 5 female bishops (this was enhanced by the 2015 Lords Spiritual Act, which fast tracks female bishops)
Only two peers appeared to all 156 days in session in the 2022 session