Politics in Britain The political system
United Kingdom Basic Characteristics Approx. 63 million people Comprised of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland System of Government: Constitutional monarchy Parliamentary system First Past the Post Electoral System Unitary state
Unwritten constitution Lack of a written constitution
Parliamentary system Parliament selects the prime minister prime minister is not elected by popular vote normally the head of majority party or coalition Cabinet responsibility to parliament major legislation and votes of confidence Parliament Majority party Prime minister & cabinet voters Minority party
British government Constitutional Monarchy: Monarch (Queen Elizabeth II) is the Head of State Whitehall Street executive agencies / Cabinet (e.g.Department of Defence) 10 Downing Street prime minister’s residence Westminster: Bicameral House of Commons House of Lords
Electoral system Single-member district First-past-the-post (winner-take-all) system
Election results
Parliament The House of Commons the House of Lords 650 members (Fixed Number) voting is 100% along party lines in most votes party loyalty versus constituency interests continues to be a major concern the House of Lords 792 members (not fixed number) Lords Temporal And Lords Spiritual Not elected
Margaret Thatcher Served (1979 - 1990) longer without interruption than any other British prime minister in 20th century cut taxes reduced social services stimulated the private sector (privatization of public services) “The Right to buy scheme” Increased military spending
John Major Prime Minister of Great Britain (1990-97) Joined the United States in the Gulf War (1990) against Iraqi invasion of Kuwait Continued the privatization policies of Margaret Thatcher (e.g. privatization of British Rail)
New Labour Party Tony Blair (1997-2007) Rebranded the Labour Party with “new labour” Movement to the political centre (Brokerage politics) the largest majority in parliament (419/659) that the Labour Party has ever held in 1997 Conservative vote fell to its lowest share since 1832 in 1997 Tony Blair: “New Labour is a party of ideas and ideals, but not of outdated ideology. What counts is what works.” Pragmatic Politician: Brokerage Politics
Tony Blair & “Third Way” “Third way” alternative to big government policies of the old Labour Party (socialism) and Thatcherism (free market economics): rejected the historic ties between Labour governments and the trade union movement A vague philosophy to draw support from across the social-economic spectrum. Transcended ideologies (brokerage)
Gordon Brown Labour Prime Minister (2007-2010) Nationalized some banks after the 2007 stock market crashed (e.g. Northern Rock) A continuation of New Labour policies with respect to the role of government in an economy He’s smiling!
David Cameron Prime Minister (2010-Present) Member of the Conservative Party Responsible for Austerity Measures: drastic cuts to the public service: layoffs and reducing wages of public employees Britain’s involvement in the war in Libya (removal of Muammar Gaddifi)