3.3 - Referendums Flashcards

1
Q

What is a referendum?

A

A ‘yes’ or ‘no’ to vote offered to the public on a single issue.

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2
Q

Why have referendums been used in the UK?

A
  • Give more power to the Welsh Assembly
  • Consider replacing FPTP
  • Give Scotland a vote on independence
  • Give the UK public a vote on leaving the EU
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3
Q

Why did the EU referendum cause such problems?

A

Only giving two choices of ‘remain’ or ‘leave’ ensured the decision would be enforced by Parliament.

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4
Q

Why might a government call a referendum?

A
  • In response to public pressure.
  • To resolve controversial issues within a party.
  • As part of an agreement between two parties.
  • Lend legitimacy to constitutional changes.
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5
Q

What is an example of a government calling a referendum due to public pressure?

A
  • 2014 Scottish Indy Ref due to majority SNP government.
  • 2016 EU Ref due to UKIP arguing for leaving EU and promising a referendum, the Conservative Party offered a referendum to not lose it’s voters to UKIP.
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6
Q

What is a feature of a referendum that most tend to neglect?

A

As Parliament is sovereign, they can just ignore a referendum’s results as it is simply advisory.

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7
Q

Why does the Supreme Courts case ensuring that parliament would follow the EU referendum mean little?

A

Parliament could pass another law that ignores the Supreme Court as sovereignty lies with Parliament.

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8
Q

Why has Parliament followed the result of every referendum in UK history?

A

Public pressure would make not following the result highly unadvisable.

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9
Q

What were the conclusions of the Investigation into Vote Leave?

A
  • Referendum spending was £7,449,079.34, exceeding the spending limit of £7,000,000.
  • The spending return was inaccurate for 43 items of spending, totalling to £236,501.44
  • BeLeave exceeded the spending limit of £10,000 by more than £666,000.
  • Vote Leave failed to comply with an investigation notice.
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10
Q

What are the notable consequences of referendum usage in the UK?

A

The public now expect far more referendums than before.

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11
Q

Why has the public’s expectation of more referendums occured?

A

The UK constitution is uncodified and unentrenched.

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12
Q

What was a common demand after the Brexit referendum?

A

Another referendum on EU membership.

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13
Q

Why was the second EU referendum opposed by then-PM Theresa May?

A

She argued that to not deliver on the original referendum would threaten social cohesion by ignoring the democratic will of the people.

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14
Q

What is a referendum an example of?

A

Direct democracy.

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15
Q

What problems does added direct democracy cause?

A

There might be considerable conflict between the public and the elected officials, particularly in light of misleading campaigns.

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16
Q

What does a referendum involve?

A
  • A vote on a narrow issue
  • A ‘yes’ or ‘no’ vote
  • Called when the government wishes
  • The result is not legally binding
  • An example of direct democracy
17
Q

What does the UK representative democracy hinge upon?

A

The ‘trustee model’, with elected officials being allowed to use their conscience to act in the best interests of the governed.

18
Q

Are referendums good for the UK? (Yes)

A
  • Encourage participation and education.
  • Provided a clear answer to political issues.
  • Enhanced liberal democracy.
  • The management of referendums is overseen by an independent Electoral Commission.
  • Enhanced representation in the UK.
  • Accepted constitutional convention.
19
Q

Are referendums good for the UK? (No)

A
  • Turnout for some has been low, undermining legitimacy of result.
  • Close results are more divisive than settling.
  • Some campaigns have been massively misleading.
  • Government decides when to call a referendum, meaning power is concentrated in the government.
  • Undermines representative democracy.
  • Issues are often complex with voters lacking necessary information.
  • Parliamentary sovereignty is undermined in reality as pressure from the people to honour the will of the people.