Factors Affecting Voting Behaviours Flashcards
What is a deviant/floating voter? - Voting Behaviours
A deviant voter is someone who votes unpredictability based on their social characteristics and the expected political choices of those characteristics.
What is class dealignment and how has it affected voting behaviours? - Voting Behaviours
Class dealignment is the process whereby fewer people consider themselves to be a distinct part of a social class that they would have traditionally been a part of. This reduces the impact of social class on voting behaviour and makes trends difficult to identify based on class.
What is partisan dealignment? Where can this be seen in the UK? - Voting Behaviours
Partisan dealignment is the process by which a person begins to vote away from the party that their social class has traditionally supported. This can be seen in the modern day UK, where many C2DE voters support the Conservative Party.
What is valence? - Voting Behaviours
Valence is where the overall governing competency of a party is judged by the electorate, playing a major role in whether that party is elected or not.
What have been the impacts of class dealignment on political parties in the UK? - Voting Behaviours
Class dealignment has resulted in many parties losing a core support base at which they can target their policies and ideas, meaning that more centrist policies have been adopted, with these policies increasingly homogenised.
Why have the Conservatives begun to draw increasing support from the working classes in modern Britain? - Voting Behaviours
The Conservative party has begun to draw increasing support from the working class on account of their holding of more traditional social values and of the aspiration to become middle class. This can also be linked to DEFERENCE, where a ruling class of higher social standing is accepted and encouraged.
How can gender be said to have influence over voting behaviour? (In the past and present) - Voting Behaviours
In the post-war period, Labour appealed to male-dominated trade unionism while under Heath and Thatcher, the Conservative Party tried to make an impression upon housewives and women living ‘traditional lives’. Nowadays, it is recognised that there are minimal discrepancies between male and female voting.
How can age be said to have influence over voting behaviour? (Voting turnout and decisions) - Voting Behaviours
Younger voters tend to be more liberal and outgoing on account of a rebellious nature and limited living experience, yet older voters are more conservative due to the desire to protect assets and secure economic prosperity. Younger people are also more apathetic towards voting, whereas turnout increases with age.
How can ethnicity be said to be influential over voting behaviour? - Voting Behaviours
Different ethnic communities largely fall into one social group or another, with many immigrants to the UK voting Labour as they mainly fall within the C2DE class, while Indian and (now) Jewish Communities are more inclined towards the Conservatives.
How does region affect how people vote in Scotland and Northern Ireland respectively? - Voting Behaviours
Scotland has seen a heavy SNP/other left wing party leaning based around calls for Scottish independence from the UK.
Northern Ireland is represented by its own group of parties which represent the factional nature of society and government in the country.
How does region affect how people vote in Wales and Northern England respectively? - Voting Behaviours
In Wales, Labour is dominant as a working class area, with post-industrial towns dominated by the left. Also has a nationalist presence with Plaid Cymru. Northern England was previously a bastion for Labour for similar reasons as Wales is, yet in 2019 fell to the Conservatives due to their stance on Brexit.
How does region affect how people vote in London and Southern England? - Voting Behaviours
In London, the area is perceived as a liberal and metropolitan part of the country, leaning towards Labour and the Lib Dems rather than the Conservatives.
The South is a Conservative dominated zone, with the area being the wealthiest in England and having high home ownership.
What is instrumental voting? - Voting Behaviours
Instrumental voting is where someone votes based entirely on self-interest. They vote for a party which they believe will be the best at supporting them through their policies.
What is altruistic voting? - Voting Behaviours
Altruistic voting is the practice by which individuals vote for the party which they believe will have the best collective impacts on society as a whole.
How has Brexit changed voting patterns in terms of social class? - Voting Behaviours
The Brexit Referendum has seen working classes (who mainly voted to Leave) shift decisively towards the Brexit-supporting Conservative Party and away from Labour (who were seen to have been reluctant to take a solid stance on Brexit), with this changing the traditional working class support of Labour to the Conservatives.