UK Politics essay plan Flashcards

1
Q

Explain and analyse three features/ principles of the UK constitution.

A

P1: Uncodified,
Variety of sources (statute law: HRA 1998, authoritative works “Erskine may”)
Difficult to fully understand, diminishes rights
adaptive/flexible

P2: Unitary,
Central authority, pment
No parliament can bind successor, eg Brexit article 50 to undermine European communities act 1976
Delegated powers alters this slightly, devolution

P3: Rule of law
Equally subject to the law
One of A.V. Dicey’s ‘twin pillars’, magna carta 1215
‘Ultra vires’ e.g. 2016 restriction of legal aid to people born outside of the UK.

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2
Q

Explain and analyse three ways the British constitution upholds citizens’ rights.

A

Statute law:
Abortion act 1965
Same-sex marriage act 2013
All protected by parliamentary sovereignty
H/E no government can bind its successor eg article 50

Freedom of information act 200
Law which guarantees more transparency from government and companies, ensures things like user data or activities of institutions are protected and not hidden
11,042 requests July-sept 2020
h/e only 40% fully granted for privacy/ national security reasons

Supreme court
HRA 1998
Ensures law fits in with ECHR
Can issue DOIs, however, does not have to be followed through with the government
Factorame 1988

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3
Q

Three sources of the constitution

A

Statute law:
Representation of the people act 1969
HRA 1998
Pre Brexit also tied to European law
E.g. Lisbon treaty 2007 applied in UK

Conventions: Rules or norms; Salisbury convention (HoL); Collective/Individual responsibility - e.g. David Blunkett He had broken the ministerial code of conduct over paid work he took while out of the cabinet.; Rely on common agreement and are often disputed - breaking of conventions is classed as unconstitutional behaviour; if broken may become statute e.g. Parliament Act.

Authoritative works: An introduction to the Study of Law of the Constitution by Dicey & Erskine May & Cabinet Manual - written by constitutional experts. Cabinet manual comes under convention too, Priti Patel e.g. (This is not the first time Patel has been accused of breaching the ministerial code. She was forced to resign as international development secretary in November 2017 over unauthorised meetings with Israeli politicians, businessmen and officials.)

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4
Q

Explain and analyse three roles of backbench MPs.

A

P1: Rebelling; wanted a mainly elected HoL 2012 (91 Con); Abandoned 5G 2020 (38 Con). H/E is not always successful e.g. letters re. Johnson’s VoNC was withdrawn due to Ukraine but lost

P2: Select Committees; Public accounts committees chaired by Hillier in 2018 & Sarah Wollaston in 2014 (Health).

P3: Asking Qs; 5-week rota (There is a rota, and each Government department answers questions once every five sitting weeks.); 10% spent on topical Qs for ministers (can’t be prepared for); Qs re. Energy bills etc

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5
Q

Explain and analyse three ways in which parliament can hold the government to account.

A

P1: Question time/ PMQ; Blair’s “weak weak weak” against PM John major - After asking of John Major: “Is it not extraordinary that the prime minister of our country cannot even urge his party to support his own position?”
H/E - theatrical; Kaufman “Useless declamations”.

P2: Official Opposition; force votes/ amendments; alternative government in waiting; 20 days to raise interests in the schedule.
H/E a weak opposition can fail to effectively scrutinise; Starmer’s Lab has been widely criticised for being hesitant to oppose.

P3: Select committees; questions/”paper persons records”/proportional to commons/critical reports.
H/E Chosen by whips; lack of expertise often; no obligation to attend (brown & chancellor).

OR
P1: Voting against; May’s Brexit Bill.
P2: PMQs
P3: VoNC; Callaghan ‘nuclear option’ & May’s survival by one vote.

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6
Q

Explain and analyse the roles played by committees in the UK parliament.

A

P1: Investigative work & producing reports; education select - plan for adult skills; partygate.

P2: Witness; Cummings & health select.

P3: Scrutinising policy; Liaison qing BJ on covid response & economy.

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7
Q

Explain and analyse three ways the opposition scrutinises the exec.

A

P1: Voting against a bill: Lab & Police, Crime, Sentencing & Courts Bill 2021
H/E is sometimes forced to agree e.g. Covid rules.

P2: Q ministers/MPs; Blair called Major “weak weak weak”; Angela Rayner correcting Johnson on energy aid.

P3: Select committees; Cooper (Home affairs) & Hillier (public accounts).

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8
Q

Explain and analyse three types of opposition in Parliament.

A

P1: shadow party; e.g. Labour - Starmer “Bring your own Boos”.

P2: Backbenchers; e.g. Corbyn under Blair & Mainly elected HoL 2012; 91 Con rebellions

P3: Other parties; e.g. SNP & Lib Dems; Green party & Good Law Project.

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9
Q

Explain and analyse three limitations of Select Committees.

A

P1: Governing party = no obligation (out of 40,000 accepted amendments, 40% carried out).
H/E Opp chairing & BBs & must reply to reports in 60 days.

P2: Membership controlled by Whip; party allocation.
majority; Health Comm 6/11 are Con
H/E chairs elected by secret ballot.

P3: Gov control of civil servants; Osmotherly rules revised - 2016 HASC ejected Oliver Robbins for failing to respond adequately to Qs on border force budget; ‘balanced answers’.
H/E Requires to be as helpful as possible.

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10
Q

‘Government can dominate parliament in the UK’ Analyse and evaluate this statement.

A

P1: Party whipping & discipline ensure govt. Backed bills pass largely unamended. Control of parliamentary business awards backed bills with more time. E.g. 21 Tory rebels lost the party whip after voting to block no-deal Brexit.
H/E minority/coalition govt. have shown defeats e.g.. May’s Brexit deals.

P2: PMBs almost always require Govt. support & time - Benn & Cooper-Letwin Bills passed however were later overridden by Johnson’s Breixt bill (100-page bill passed in 2020 with just 11 days of scrutiny).
H/E Individual MPs can pass legislation; controversial e.g Abortion, disabled rights and death penalty. Also, Brexit Benn and Cooper Letwin Bills passed despite opposition.

P3: Select committee power is overestimated; 60% of reports/recommendations are rejected.
H/E SC are increasingly high profile and independent; chairs are now elected by a secret ballot as opposed to being chosen by party whips.
Public Accounts Committee - overview of Govt. spending; Launched inquiry into HS2.
Chaired by Lab BB Meg Hillier.
Extensive system of committees shadowing & Prime Minister is not exempt.

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11
Q

‘Backbench MPs have few ways to influence the government.’

A

P1: Backbench MPs debate and vote; Proposals by Govt or MPs & PMB. National area for political issues - every day of working week. Two forms (substantive & neutral - result v no result). NHS funding bill 2020 - assessed COVID-19s impact on the NHS.
H/E party whips often influence MPs into voting on party values, not personal/constituency values. When they rebel, they can lose the whip - 21 MPs coalition Tuition fees had whip removed.
Effective, but not consistently influential.

P2: Public Bill Committees & Select Committees; detailed scrutiny & amendments. Developments since 2006 - written evidence & hearings.
H/E PBC are temporary & short-lived which limits scrutiny & education.
Members are chosen by the committee of selection - dominated by whips.
Between 2000 & 2010 only 88 non-majority party amendments were passed out of 17500 suggestions.
Dr Sarah Wollaston was restricted from Health & Social Care Bill due to her past scrutiny of Govt choices.

P3: PMB enable policy-making; Ballot (20 names), 10-min and presentation bill w/ no debate; 1960s = golden age ~ Murder Act 65’ and Abortion Act 67’ (only 2 of 170 passed). Whereas between 2000 and 2010 only 48 were passed.
MPs who disagree with proposed PMBs cause debates to overrun or object during voting stages. Often on Fridays - voting pool is smaller as it is constituency day. Voyeurism Bill 2018 rejected by Chope as he reasoned there should be a ‘proper’ bill put forward not PMB.
Engage with issues e.g. disabled rights rejected creating public outcry causing Govt. bill.

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12
Q

‘The opposition plays the most significant role in scrutiny.’

A

P1: Official opposition: Alternative government in waiting; More Qs in PMQs; Blair ‘Weak, weak, weak’; Starmer on sleaze in CON
H/E; No power of veto; Theatrical; Kaufman - ‘exchange of pointless and useless declamations’.

P2: Select comms: Justice committee 2012 assessed presumptions of death with missing people. (experts, witnesses, personal accounts); Health + Science/tech committees and cummings; 2018 health committee and child obesity.
H/E 2010-2015 only 40% of modifications suggested were accepted.

P3: BB: Rebellions are a catalyst; BJ defeated in his first 6 commons votes; Blair had 4 in 10 years; Reflects poorly on party unity; 2010 reforms + introduction of BB business committee.
H/E; 2003 largest ever rebellion on Iraq war (139 Lab MPs)

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13
Q

Explain and analyse three ways in which the UK judiciary can exercise influence over the government.

A

P1: Challenge parliamentary sovereignty; The HRA & Declaration of Incompatibility under ECHR = swift amendments; Judges can review/strike down laws in devolved bodies that surpass powers granted by devolution. E.g. Factortame precedent 1988 - suspension of actions over breaches.
H/E No longer subject to EU Law.

P2: Judicial review can prevent arbitrary power/ultra vires issues.
E.g. Boddington v British Transport Police (incorrect administration = collateral challenge).
E.g. Good Law Project v Secretary of State for Health and Social Care 2021.
E.g. 2016 ruled govt had acted ultra vires by triggering article 50 without parliament’s permission
H/E Is not proactive but waits to be presented cases.
Becoming more prone to activism, but remains impartial on case presentation.

P3: Act as guardians of the rule of law; due to the Constitutional Reform Act 2005 (removal of HoLs). Relocation to Middlesex Guildhall created a physical separation of powers
H/E Striking down does not rule legislation & Cannot set aside primary legislation so ministers can circumvent it.

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14
Q

Explain and analyse three reasons why the UK Supreme Court was established.

A

P1: Concerns over the incomplete separation of powers in the UK.
Prior to the 1960s much more deferential to challenge e.g. Liversidge v Anderson (Home sec used Defence Regulations to imprison Liversidge with no reason. The Law Lords ruled that HomSec must have “reasonable cause”.
Become much more assertive e.g. 2016 Brexit Referendum; Miller v SecState for Exiting EU 2016; Case of Proclamations & BoR 1689 - CAN NOT use the prerogative to amend a statute EC1972
Assertive judiciary necessary for Rule of law.

P2: Criticism of Law Lord system & Confusion over work and status of Law Lords.
Judges are now chosen by an independent commission and there is no pressure for making the wrong decision.
H/E 2011 spending cuts on the courts system.

P3: Judicial influence on Govt.
Review; Principles of HRA 1998.

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15
Q

Explain and analyse three functions performed by UKSC.

A

P1: Final court of appeal.
E.g. 2020 Begum v Special Immigration Appeals Commission and Home Dep.

P2: Hear appeals from Scotland

P3: Hear appeals in cases where there is uncertainty and thereby clarify the meaning of the law.
E.g. 2011 Rawi v Security Service & 2020 Sutherland v HMA.

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16
Q

Explain and analyse three features of UK democracy.

A

P1: Representation; 650 MPs each represent around 68k people; access to MPs e.g. surgeries & response.

P2: Participation; GE & local-elections e.g. CCP & local council.

P3: Accountability; removal of govt via electorate e.g. Callaghan 1979.

17
Q

Explain and analyse three problems with UK democracy.

A

P1: Poor turnout; 2018 - Local council 34% & 2021 - Welsh 47%.

P2: Safe seats/wasted votes; 2019 general election 70.8% of votes were wasted on candidates who received surplus.

P3: Minority mandate; 2019 Cons received 44% of vote *67% turnout & 27% electoral vote for Con.

18
Q

Explain and analyse three historic landmarks in the development of UK democracy.

A

P1: Second Reform Act 1867; Broadened Great Reform Act 1832; Benjamin Disraeli; Working-class men (doubled electorate to one-third of men); the retained difference in the franchise of cities & countryside.

P2: Representation of the People Act 1918; post-WW1; David Lloyd (wartime govt.); all men over 21 & women 30+ w/ property qual.
ALSO Rep of the People 1928 (ALL people over 21).

P3: Representation of the People Act 1969; Voting age lowered from 21 to 18; Harold Wilson.
OR
1911/1949 Parliament Acts; the elected house has legislative supremacy.

19
Q

Explain and analyse three historic movements in the development of UK democracy.

A

P1: Chartists; first mass movement (working classes); grew following the 1832 RA; 6 demands - All men, secret ballot, annual elections, equal constituencies, MPs paid & property quals abolished for MPs; mass petitions/civil unrest; ignored/faded (by 1918 ⅚ succeeded).

P2: Suffragists; 1866 = first petition for women; NUWSS (Fawcett); internally democratic (middle class); peaceful/legal (pamphlets/petitions); grew (100,000 members by 1914; often ignored; war in 1914 suspended campaigns; following war women were enfranchised.

P3: Suffragettes; WSPU (Pankhurst) born out of frustration with NUWSS; working-class & female but broadened by 1906; violent/illegal (disruption, violence; arson); successful in profile-raising but disliked; following war (RotP 1918).

20
Q

‘Media support is crucial for achieving success in general elections.’ Analyse and evaluate this statement. & Analyse and evaluate the argument that the media shape public opinion and voting intentions.

A

Media:
1979: Thatcher v. Callaghan - First ‘modern’ election (mass media/ press conferences/ speeches & walkabouts). Leader-heavy (presidential); Thatcher = scrutiny (woman) but utilised to skew the Sun into her favour & Callaghan failed to reach out to media profiles.
1997: Blair v. Major - Conservative power for 18 years (sleaze scandals/EU) & Smith’s death. Blair met with Murdoch about New Labour’s future & the Sun reverted support to Labour. Employment of ‘spin doctors’ (innovative imaging). Major failed to entertain & mocked on satirical shows (Spitting Image) about sleaze. H/E 71% turnout (poor) due to apathy over campaign lengths.
2017: May v. Corbyn: EU ref & aftermath (PMs resigning etc). May was criticised for ‘dementia tax’ leading to U-turn & ‘May-bot’. Corbyn shown in large crowds chanting ‘Oh Jeremy Corbyn’ although the Sun & Mail released anti-Marxist campaigns against him. Television debates were shambolic (May refused to enter & parties attacked her). Joint negative coverage contributed to a hung parliament. A clear relationship between media & leadership.

Leadership image:
1979: Less effectual - Thatcher was seen as condescending & many voters struggled with a female PM. Avoidance of adversarial politics removed leader-heavy voting - instead policy focused e.g. ‘Labour isn’t working’.
1997: Narrative-based - Blair’s young & dynamic front was starkly contrasted withMajor’s dull/weak profile. Progressive role in the future.
2017: May & Corbyn dissimilarity made for comparison e.g. May Bot v. Eccentric Corbyn.

Context/issues:
1979: Aftermath of the ‘Winter of Discontent’ - Cons took advantage of this & emphasised the prosperity of Toryism (free-market/privatisation). Reduced electoral deflation.
1997: Beacon of hope following ‘plague’ of sleaze scandals, divisions over EU & death of John Smith. ‘Third-way policies’ advocated for the resolution of cynicism around public services.
2017: Lack of stability surrounding Brexit - ‘Get Brexit Done’. Terrorist attacks (damaged Cons) Manchester & Borough Market - Qs over policing & security competence.

21
Q

Explain and analyse three functions of political parties.

A

P1: Representation (aims to represent views on behalf of members/citizens).
Mass partisanship & alignment (divisions in class C1/C2/DE) e.g. 1900 94% of Labour reps committee = trade union congress.
H/E less prevalent in political parties due to dealignment. E.g. local elections 2021 Labour lost incumbent seat of 60+ years & Starmer claimed “lost the trust of the working people.”

P2: Provide strong & stable government with a clear manifesto & strong mandate.
Blair’s revolutionary transformation of Lab 1997 - New Labour = biggest landslide majority in UK political (418) e.g. Scotland Act 1998 (Devolution) & FOA2000.
H/E not consistent e.g. 2017 & May C&S deal with DUP.

P3: Encourage political engagement/participation.
1970s/80s - shift from One Nation to Thatcherism = dogmatic policies/neo-liberalistic ideology/monetarism = appeal to electorate following winter of discontent.
Blair’s appeal
Policy, candidates & leader selection.
H/E Fails this role - e.g. Cons 1950s = 2.5 mill v 2019 = 180k. Pressure groups!

22
Q

Explain and analyse three ways that ordinary members can play a role in one of the main political parties (internal democracy).

A

P1: Members can vote on leaders (OMOV)
Ultimate arbitrators of who becomes leader e.g. Starmer & Johnson.
H/E candidates can be successful without a vote if uncontested e.g. May in 2017 (undemocratic).

P2: Local parties select candidates from the shortlist.
Each party locally gets to voice opinions
H/E party leaders vet the shortlist & so say is reduced. E.g. A-lists & forced candidates Bridgend 2017.

P3: Require ordinary member support to get on the ballot.
Candidates don’t just have support from Party affiliates. E.g. Lab 5% CLPs or affiliated *two must be TUs).
H/E MPs still vet the shortlist (10% of Lab MPs have to support candidates). MPs in Con vote to narrow down-ballot.

23
Q

‘The UK’s main political parties are internally democratic.’ Analyse and evaluate this statement. (25)

A

Candidate Selection:

Theoretically democratic: three general stages -

  1. Put a name on a prospective list.
  2. The local party draws up a shortlist of approved candidates.
  3. Constituency party members vote for a preferred candidate.

Con & Lab have experimented with public hustings, primaries and diversity short-lists.

E.g. 2010 Gosport.

H/E - Short-lists are problematic; Peter Law 2005.

& Expensive (primaries - £40,000).

Leadership Selection

Each party allows members to vote for leaders on OMOV basis - e.g. Starmer & Johnson.

Members are the ultimate arbitrators of who becomes a leader.

H/E

Candidates can be successful without a vote - e.g. May in 2017 without being contested & Vince Cable in 2017.

Policy formulation:

Con - determined by the leader (Major - “It was all me” & 2013 David Cameron Free Vote on Marriage Act.

Lab - Conferences until 1997 (2-year policy-making cycle); Formalised at conventions etc!

Lib Dem - Local/national notions; Federal Policy Committee - motions.

LAB/LIB DEM more democratic!

H/E

Decrease in democratic ability due to modern reforms. Lib Dem is most consistent.

Lab - e.g. Ed Miliband is widely credited with drafting the party’s 2010 manifesto.

Judgement:

Theoretically but not practically.