Politics Paper 1

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Last updated 5:15 PM on 6/1/26
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271 Terms

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Direct democracy

all individuals express their opinions themselves and not through representatives acting on their behalf

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Representative democracy

an individual selects a person to act on their behalf

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Similarities of representative and direct democracy

based on a majority

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Differences of direct and representative democracy

direct is not elective,

direct is for individuals,

direct has more citizen involvement

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Legitimacy

the right to exercise power

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Democratic deficit

a deficiency in the way a democratic body works

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Positives of UK's democracy

fair and free elections,

free from intimidation,

wide choice of parties,

press freedom,

independant judiciary

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Negatives of UK's democracy

under representation of minorities,

can't vote for lords,

doesn't protect rights

press is owned by millionaires

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Examples of declining participation

2001 turnout was lowest since WWII (59.4%),

conservative party has lost members (124,000 members in 2018)

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Examples of rising participation

labour biggest party in europe (552,000 members),

turnout rising (68.6% 2017),

e-democracy

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Franchise / suffrage

the ability to vote in public elections

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Pluralism

lots of people have a say

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Elitism

only a select few have a say

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To be able to vote you must:

be 18+,

be a registered british/irish citizen

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To be able to vote you cannot:

be under 18,

be a member of the house of lords,

be convicted of illegal electoral practise,

detained in a psychiatric hospital

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Great reform act 1832

created 67 new constituencies, included small land owners, tenant farmers and shopkeepers in the property qualification and gave the vote to all householders who paid a yearly rent of £10+

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Representation of the people act 1918

allowed men 21+ (with/without property) and women 30+ who live in the constituency or owned land worth £5+ to vote

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Representation of the people act 1928

gave women electoral equality (21+ with/without property)

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Representation of the people act 1948

abolished plural voting (2 separate uni votes) and increased MP's to 613

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Representation of the people act 1969

voting age reduced to 18 to reflect change in view on adulthood

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For lowering voting age to 16:

already trusted with legal rights (leave school, work, army),

have to learn about politics in school,

voting earlier increases chance of involvement,

affects their future

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Against lowering voting age to 16:

some lack maturity,

may be influenced by parents,

scottish referendum isn't fair because it had an unusually high turnout,

only a few countries allow 16 year olds to vote

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Electoral Reform Society

longest standing pro democracy organization (1884), formed to provide better democracy where everyone votes and is treated equally, works with activists and politicians

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Electoral reform society campaigns

elected house of lords,

votes at 16,

local democracy,

replace FPTP with STV

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Votes at 16

formed in january 2003, want the voting age lowered to 16 as it affects young people's future

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Pressure group

an organised group that seeks to influence government policy or legislation

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Pluralism

the recognition and affirmation of diversity within a political body which permits the peaceful coexistence of different interests, convictions and lifestyles

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Pressure group features:

want to influence policy,

usually single issue,

more of them,

represent an issue that isn't supported by the wider public

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Political parties features:

want to make policy and run the country,

aim to win power,

few parties,

have a wide range of policies to accommodate a wide range of views,

create laws

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Sectional pressure groups

a specific group that promotes the interest of an occupation or group in society

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Sectional pressure group examples

trade unions, national union of teachers, british medical association

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Cause pressure groups

aims to change opinions and attitudes, open to everyone

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Cause pressure groups examples

greenpeace, PDSA, RSPCA

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Sectional cause pressure groups

the membership are different to the group it represents

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Sectional cause pressure groups examples

NSPCC, WWF

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Attitude cause pressure groups

aims to change the public's attitude towards an issue

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Attitude cause pressure groups examples

greenpeace, campaign for nuclear disarmament

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Political cause pressure groups

aim to get legislation created or changed

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Political cause pressure groups examples

electoral reform society, 38 degrees

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Insider pressure group

relies on contact with ministers and civil servants to achieve their aims and can have close links to the government

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Insider pressure groups examples

BMA, dogs trust, RSPCA

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Outsider pressure groups

are not consulted by the government because their methods may be unlawful

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Outsider pressure groups examples

fathers 4 justice, amnesty international

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Influence the drafting of legislation (pressure group methods)

able to offer specialised knowledge (NFU) but the public aren't aware and it slows government

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Influence the public (pressure group methods)

helped by events (1996 snowdrop campaign) but outsider groups have less influence than insider (HS2 - Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Wildlife trust vs CBI)

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Direct action (pressure group methods)

stunts raise media profile (f4j batman on m25 in 2008) but aren't always peaceful (2010 student demonstrations)

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Lobbyists

members of professional organisations who are paid by clients seeking access to government

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Lobbying methods

meeting with ministers/government (the police federation often meets with home office),

emailing/meeting local MP's to ask questions,

sitting on committees or giving evidence to reports about policy,

target lords to create legislation

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Lobbying scandal 2010

former labour cabinet ministers stephen byers, geoff hoon and pratricia hewitt were caught by channel 4

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Transparency of lobbying, non party campaigning and trade union administration act 2014

registration of consultant lobbyists, non party campaigners and trade union members

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Factors affecting pressure groups - tactics (strengths)

can join with other groups

needs to known the government access points

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Factors affecting pressure groups - tactics (weaknesses)

may not agree with other groups

may slow process

may lose public support

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Factors affecting pressure groups - tactics (examples)

RSPCA, league against cruel sports and international fund for animal welfare joined to ban hunting

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Factors affecting pressure groups - resources (strengths)

a large membership can afford to run offices, pay staff and have publicity

size persuades government

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Factors affecting pressure groups - resources (weaknesses)

can't rely on passive support - CND had 110,000 members but thatcher gov ignored

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Factors affecting pressure groups - resources (examples)

RSPCA employs 1600 people, has volunteers and can run full page/TV ads

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Factors affecting pressure groups . -public's support (strengths)

have favourable media support

can be endorsed by celebrities (joanna lumley gurkhas right to settle if retired before 1997)

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Factors affecting pressure groups - public's support (weaknesses)

support can be quickly reduced by one event (violence at 2010 student protests)

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Factors affecting pressure groups - public's support (examples)

1996 snowdrop - 750,000 signatures in 6 weeks, 23,000 firearms surrendered

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Factors affecting pressure groups - government attitude (strengths)

insider contacts are a key to success

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Factors affecting pressure groups - government attitude (weaknesses)

only works if change is accepted (feb 2003, est 3m marched against iraq war with CND)

makes groups loyal to one party

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Factors affecting pressure groups - government attitudes (examples)

NFU links to DEFRA led to 2013 badger cull

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Consultation

asking advice from key insider groups when drafting new legislation

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Think tanks

groups of experts from different backgrounds who are brought together to investigate particular topics and to offer solutions to complicated economic, social or political views

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Demos (think tank)

cross party

equal distribution of power

education and welfare reform

started commission on assisted death

'tale of two classrooms' research of education gap between disadvantaged students

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Habeas corpus

a court order to produce a person before a court so that it can be determined if they have been lawfully detained

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Negative rights

rights that exist in the absence of any laws forbidding individuals from exercising them

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Derogated

parts or all can be ignored in certain cases if the government says so (national security outweighs individual rights)

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Abrogation

can be repealed/replaced after a majority vote in the commons

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Judicial review

a procedure by which a court can review an administrative action by a public body

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Acted ultra vires

gone beyond their authority as outlined in statute law

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ECHR article 8 vs 10

8: promotes respect for the individual's private and family life

10: enshrines the right to political freedom

judges prefer 8 over 10

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2010 equality act

legally protects people from discrimination in the workplace based on gender/race/religion

joined the equal pay act 1970, the sec discrimination act 1976, the race relations act 1976, the disability act 1995 and 3 major statutory instruments

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Extraordinary rendition

flying people abroad to allow torture with less punishment (guantanamo bay, cuba)

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Individual rights weaknesses

anti terrorism laws are abused to imprison innocent people (brazillian david miranda in heathrow - part 7 of terrorism act)

terrorism act 2000 is too broad (part 7 allows airport police to detain anyone for terrorism without evidence/suspicion)

police compare peaceful protests to terrorism

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Responsibilities weaknesses

HRA 1998 has helped 28 terrorists stay in the UK (abu hamza)

extraordinary rendition (2010 gibson comission into british torture - afghanistan)

one person vs multiple civillians

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Human rights act 1998

makes ECHR into domestic law so you can seek justice in britain

new laws are compatible

section 4 and 10 allows courts to declare legislation incompatible

section 6 defines courts as public bodies

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Positives of the UK's democratic system

devolved governments

wide range of political parties and pressure groups

free media

free and fair elections

independant judiciary

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Negatives of UK's democratic system

media controlled by the wealthy (rupert murdoch - the sun)

house of lords lacks democracy

lacks protection of rights

underrepresentation of minority views

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Political party

an organised group of people with shared policies and goals who aim to be elected to political office

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Ideology

a system of ideas and ideals, especially one which forms the basis of economic or political theory and policy

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Old labour policies (1900-1997)

Economic: nationalism - clause IV

welfare: NHS - 1948

law and order: attack social deprivation to prevent crime - 1979

foreign: nuclear disarmament - 1979

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New labour policies (1997-2007)

economic: abandoned clause IV

welfare: minimum wage, welfare to work

law and order: ABSOs, HRA

foreign: iraq/afghan war

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Brown and Miliband policies (2007-2015)

economic: temporary 50% tax - recession

welfare: low tuition fees, oppose bed tax

law and order: high earning prisoners repay

foreign: EU referendum

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Corbyn policies (2015-)

economic: 45% on 80,000, 50% on 123,000

welfare: £10 minimum wage, no tuition fees

law and order: increase police funding

foreign: renew trident but nuclear disarmament

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Traditional conservative policies (1834-1868)

economic: free market capitalism, low taxation

welfare: noblesse oblige

law and order: death penalty

foreign: empire

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One nation policies (1868 - 1975)

economic: nationalised industries

welfare: public health act 1975 (sewers, cleaner streets)

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Thatcherism policies (1975-1990)

economic: free market capitalism, low tax

welfare: reduced state intervention (selling council houses)

law and order: ring fenced police budget/increased powers

foreign: falklands/gulf war

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Compassionate conservatism (2007-)

economic: austerity (reduce public spending to decrease deficit)

welfare: universal credit, bedroom tax, gay marriage

law and order: 20,000 police but, tougher sentences

foreign: syrian bombing, EU referendum

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Orange book liberal democrat policies (2010)

economic: £800 income tax cut, mansion tax

welfare: gay marriage, shared parental leave

law and order: +3000 police, rehabilitation, prisoners work

foreign: not renew trident, more soldiers

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Tim Farron policies (2015-2017)

economic: reverse cuts to corporation tax (from 17% to 20%)

welfare: education spending +£7b in 5 years, rent to own houses

law and order: opposed attempts to leave ECHR, legalise cannabis

foreign: suspend saudi arms sales, international nuclear disaramament

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UKIP vote share 2017

3.9m votes - 12.6%

1 MP

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UKIP policies 2010

economic: business links to europe through free trade agreements

welfare: health credit vouchers (opt out of NHS), replace tuition fees with grants

law and order: double number of prison places and early release

foreign: leave eu, repeal climate change act

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UKIP policies 2015

economy: ensure corporation tax

welfare: no hospital parking charges, lower benefits cap, scrap bedroom tax

law and order: 6000 addition posts (officers, prison service) but reduce crime commissioners

foreign: free trade agreements, encourage peace in middle east

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UKIP policies 2017

economic: raise inheritance tax threshold, eventually eliminate

welfare: no tuition fees for medical students\STEM students

law and order: ban niqab and burqa

foreign: keep trident, repeal law requiring UK to spend 0.7% of national income on foreign aid

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Appropriation

stealing a policy from a minor party

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Why UKIP's membership declined in 2017 - Loss of Nigel Farage

Controversial newspaper headlines

People found him funny

'Down to earth'

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Why UKIP's membership declined in 2017 - Politics 'co-opted by conservatives'

Cameron called for EU referendum as scared of UKIP capabilities

UKIP viewed as copying cameron

No point in voting for a small party when the big 2 covered issues

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Why UKIP's membership declined in 2017 - Single issue achieved

2016 EU referendum

Is now pointless

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Scottish National Party

Formed in 1934

Won first MP in 1945

56/59 seats 2015 (50%)