Democracy Flashcards
What is legitimacy?
Whether or not the government is elected and governs with the consent of the people with the rule of law
What is representative democracy?
A system in which the voter elects representatives to make decisions on their behalf. In an election parties will put forward policies and the voter makes a choice.
What is direct democracy?
The system where the voters decide on separate individual issues themselves such as in a referendum
What is an example of a modern and historical direct democracy?
Modern - Switzerland
Historical - Ancient Greece
What is parliamentary sovereignty?
The power of parliament to make or unmake any law that it wants, it has this sovereignty because it has been elected by the people.
What is popular sovereignty?
The power of the people to elect governments and to vote them out if they are unsatisfied
What is democratic participation?
Opportunities for, and tendencies of, the people to become involved in the political process.
What are the pros of direct democracy?
- All votes have equal weight, representative democracy may make some votes less and more important based on constituency size
- It encourages popular participation
- Take responsibility for their own decisions, no need to entrust someone else to take action for you
- Encourages genuine debate
What are the cons of direct democracy?
- Often impractical in a large modern state
- Many voters lack specific knowledge or time to research every single new proposal sufficiently
- Public are open to manipulation by clever and well spoken people that wish to trick people into voting with them
- Minority viewpoints are disregarded due to no mediation by parliament
What is the role of direct democracy in the UK?
- Not a tradition in the UK (it is a representative democracy) though there has been some use in more recent years
- 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum (rejected 55% to 45%)
- 2016 EU Withdrawal Referendum (leave 52% to remain 48%)
What are the pros of representative democracy?
- It entrusts those whose livings are to make decisions for the people to make decisions for the people
- We have elections where political parties put forward manifestos so people know what they are voting for, parties very rarely break their manifesto
- Politicians have direct knowledge on political issues
What are cons of representative democracy?
- Puts a large amount of power in the hands of a small amount of trusted individuals who may be acting in their own self interest
- Sometimes politicians will make decisions on what is politically popular as opposed to tackling the big issues
- Sometimes politicians take decisions on big issues without consulting the people or having their opinion made well known before their election
How is power (sovereignty) distributed in the UK?
The queen is the sovereign and hands power to the PM and gov’t through the royal prerogative, they can make policy but it must be approved by parliament. Parliament has parliamentary sovereignty so is therefore the supreme law making body.
What is the fixed term parliament act of 2010?
- Election times are fixed to May every 5 years
- If a snap election is to be called then 2/3s of MPs must vote on this in the House of Commons
- There were snap elections in 2017 and 19, both times it was the conservatives trying to get a majority
What is voter turnout?
The number of people that use their vote in elections (%)