Electoral Systems Flashcards

1
Q

Farrell

A

“the cogs which keep the wheels of democracy properly functioning”

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2
Q

Right to Vote

A

end of 20th cent- millions acquired right to vote
1994 - South Africa - disenfranchised millions - allowed right to vote
Even North Korea - allows narrow range of candidates - belong to same party

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3
Q

Types of Elections in Britain

A
General 
Local 
EU
Devolved 
By-Elections
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4
Q

By-Elections

A

Fill vacancies that arise when elected rep die/resign during their time of elected office.
Election - held in the individual constituency
2008 Crewe - Conservative victory in previously Labour seat - good barometer of public opinion towards gov

Copeland 2017 - Jamie Reed Labour seat lost to Trudy Harrison Conservative.

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5
Q

Value of Elections

A

Allow for political ppt

Opportunity to express opinion about those in gov & indicate whether change is wanted

Principal means of British citizens participating in the political process

Ensures gov are ultimately accountable to the electorate
Campaign period - voters are the masters deciding the fate of who rules

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6
Q

Plurality System

A

Candidate who gets a plurality of the votes is elected
i.e. more votes than anyone else
FPTP , SV

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7
Q

Majority System

A

Candidates get a majority of the votes is elected
i.e. more than 50%
AV

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8
Q

Proportional System

A

Multi-member constituencies
No. of seats a party gets in the legislature fairly represents the share of popular vote across the country
Not exactly proportional - tend to offer some modest bonus to largest party
List systems, Hybrid, STV

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9
Q

Jenkins Inquiry
Jack Straw
Examine the most appropriate way of electing MPs

A
  1. Observe the requirement for broad proportionality
  2. Need for a stable gov
  3. Extension of voter choice
  4. Maintenance of MP - constituency link
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10
Q

Does choice of electoral system really matter?

A

To a considerable degree - shapes how the body politic operates
Determines the nature of party systems, fate of individual parties, formation of gov and coalitions

“There can be nothing more fundamental in a democracy than proposals to change an electoral system”

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11
Q

Proportional Representation

A

“Encourages a proliferation of minor parties”
Success of smaller parties comes at the expense of larger parties, more difficult for one party to gain an overall majority
Coalition more likely - Weimar Germany - 24 parties in 1930 election - weak & unstable
Not all PR = multi-party - Malta uses STV but has 2 party system
Not just PR that encourages small parties - other factors - historical, social & personal - encourage the existence of several parties

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12
Q

PR in the UK

A

Devolved Elections - Scotland & Wales held under AMS

European Elections - closed party list system

NI - uses STV for local & EU elections

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13
Q

Devolved Elections

A

First 2 elections in Scotland delivered parliament that was representative of the people
First session - 6 diff parties &2 independents ‘rainbow parliament’
Voters see more point in voting small parties in devolved - vote may not be wasted
Greens who suffer in Westminster gained 6 seats 2016
2016 - 5 parties represented & 2 Independents

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14
Q

Voter Confusion

A

Scottish Parliament 2007
electing members of their parliament & local elections
AMS - Parliament
STV - local councils
Two diff designs on ballot papers
142,000 votes rejected in counting process

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15
Q

Single-Party (Majority)

A

Advantages - Pin points political responsibility
Associated w formation of strong, stable & durable administration capable of providing effective leadership
Usually known immediately after election which party will form a gov
Coalitions - clear disadvantage - unstable, weak , incapable of providing strong leadership

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16
Q

Coalition Government

A

Grand Coalition - gov including representatives of the two main parties - Angela Merkel in Germany since 2005
Multi-party coalition - country that lacks 2 predominant groups - Austria - Italy
Coalition - 1 major & 1 minor
Coalitions - alien to British tradition

17
Q

Mandate

A

electoral mandate - claimed by winning party
Claim the right to implement its programme as was set out in the election manifesto
Manifesto - often vague