Comparative Politics - Week 6 (Political Parties) Flashcards

1
Q

what did Edmund Burke describe a political party as

A

a political party is a body of men united for promoting by their joint endeavours, the national interest, upon some particular principles in which they are all agreed

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2
Q

what is an example of the elite or caucus party

A

the whig party

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3
Q

what period was the mass party in

A

1930s - 1960s

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4
Q

what is the mass party linked to

A

social cleavages and one social group e.g. Labour, SPD, SAP, Agrarians in Scandanavia

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5
Q

when did catch all parties emerge

A

1950s/1960s

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6
Q

what are catch-all parties

A

where there was more centralised decision-making, a broadened electorate, where office seeking is a main goal

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7
Q

what is an example of an anti-cartel party

A

Gilstrup’s Progress Party

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8
Q

what do parties allow the electorate to do

A

be involved in democracy

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9
Q

what do parties do for the elite

A

they enable ‘competition between elites’

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10
Q

what do parties reduce

A

information costs for candidates and voters

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11
Q

what do parties promote

A

policy coordination across a range of issues (in the wider public interest) and prevent politicians from pursuing private goals

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12
Q

what do parties create by reducing the complexity of issues

A

political stability

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13
Q

what is the responsible party government model of democracy

A
  • parties prevent rival policy agendas (manifestos)
  • citizens make a choice about policy by choosing between parties
  • citizens judge parties on how well they have acted on their promises
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14
Q

what is the problem with the issues parties promote

A

they only promote one part of a general will e.g. the private interests of parties’ supporters rather than the common public interest

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15
Q

what can parties create due to competing policies

A

polarisation and political instability

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16
Q

how do parties influence their politicians

A

they prevent them from representing their constituents’ interest or making up their own minds

17
Q

how do Whips negatively parties

A

carrots and sticks to get MPs to obey

18
Q

what did Dixon, 1996, say about party whips

A

whips engaged in ‘blackmail, verbal intimidation, sexual harassment and physical aggression’

19
Q

what is the cleavage model (Lipset and Rokkan, 1967)

A
  • parties are formed and sustained by social cleavages
  • parties are mass-based organisations
  • parties appeal to and represent particular social groups
  • parties primarily pursue policy and will not compromise policy promises to win/remain in office
20
Q

what is the strategic actor model (Downs, 1957)

A
  • parties are formed by like-minded politicians
  • parties are elite organisations (who would rather not have members)
  • parties appeal to pivotal voters
  • parties primarily pursue officer and will compromise policy promises to win/remain in office
21
Q

what is the moderate pluralist (multiparty) system

A
  • competition among more than two parties hence the greater choice of governing alternatives
  • coalition formation
  • alternating coalitions between left and right
  • centripetal competition - ‘centre clustering’
22
Q

what is the polarised pluralist (multiparty) system

A
  • competition among many more than two parties
  • coalition formation
  • centre spanning parties/coalition
  • centrifugal competition - extremist parties anti-system parties blackmail
23
Q

advantages of two-party systems

A
  • effective (immediate production of governments after elections)
  • accountable (clear accountability if only one party is in government)
  • alternation - two main parties alternate in power. Voters influence directly the formation of government. A small shift can cause government change
24
Q

disadvantages of two-party systems

A
  • non-representative - FPTP under-represents minorities and over-represents large mainstream parties of left right
  • moderate policies - all main parties have a chance to govern and thus avoid extreme claims
  • discontinuity - decisions are made by the majority with a clear strategy
25
Q

advantages of multiparty systems

A
  • representative - PR fairly represents minorities in societies with ethnic-linguistics and religious minorities
  • extreme policies - multiparty systems allow the representation of extreme parties
  • continuity - decisions are made by consensus through consultation. More difficult to find a clear strategy but more continuity in legislation
26
Q

disadvantages of multiparty systems

A
  • ineffective - negotiations between parties can take long. Coalitions might lead to unable governments.
  • non-accountable - responsibility is obfuscated as multi parties are in government
  • less often alternation - coalitions negotiations are ut of the reach of voters’ influence and shifts of votes are not necessarily followed by changes of government