Referendums Flashcards
What are referendums?
A vote conducted at a local, regional or national level in response to a question which has a simple ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer
Why are referendums used? (6)
- Key question solved by direct rather than representative democracy
- The people themselves solving an issue rather than representatives of the people
- The issue may be so crucial that only a popular vote can resolve it
- To solve an issue that is division for elected parliaments - political conflict mediated through a people’s vote - was the case for both 1975 and 2016
- Solving a conflict within the wider community, e.g., good Friday agreement 1998
- Liberal doctrine of ‘government by consent’ - the people give the government their power, and therefore should decide a fundamental change to their future
How does holding a referendum work?
1 - the governing party adopts a policy that one should be held on
2 - the precise wording is established
3 - legislation is passed in parliament, setting up the arrangements for one including the date
4 - one is held
5 - they are never legally binding - until the result becomes law, it is virtually unthinkable that a representative body should not obey the outcomes
In the campaign, there is an official recognition of…
the bodies that campaign on both sides of the question.
What does the electoral commission regulate, in relation to campaign bodies?
Their expenditure, as well as making sure they don’t falsify information.
What is an initiative?
- Occurs when the people themselves decide that a referendum should be held
- Doesn’t happen in the UK although people could protest for the government to call a referendum
- Initiatives are prevalent in some US states
What are some arguments for referendums?
- Helps make difficult decisions
- Helps parliament exit a stalemate
- Simple ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer
- Introduces elements of direct democracy
- Voting system is simple
- Involves the public in the political system and process
- Public can focus on one issue rather than a host of issues
- Public have a say between elections - holding government to account - Lord Hailsham calls it keeping in check the ‘elective dictatorship’
- Raise voter awareness
What are some arguments against referendums?
- Extremely divisive
- A challenge to parliamentary sovereignty
- Low participation if arguments are not explained clearly to the public
- There can be further conflict about the issue following the referendum, most notably on the EU and Scotland
- Governments can choose whether they want to hold a referendum – e.g., Blair and Brown denying the electorate a say on the Treaty of Lisbon of 2007, which extended the process of European Integration
- The government can technically ignore it - isn’t legally enforceable
- People being uninformed
- Party bias can impact referendum results