2015 + 2019 Election Flashcards

1
Q

background to 2015 election

A
  • tories had coalition with the lib dems since 2010, and brought in the fixed term parliaments act 2011, and 2015 was the first since then
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2
Q

issues in the 2015 election

A
  • expectancy of a hung parliament
  • finance and the economy
  • budget deficit
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3
Q

campaign of 2015 election

A
  • labour and the tory both insisted they were working towards majority government
  • torys highlighted dangers of minority labour aligned with SNP
  • labour, torys and lib dems all rejected coalition idea with SNP
  • labour blamed eachother for the deficit
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4
Q

impact of the 2015 election

A
  • 7 way debate with the leaders of labour, tory and lib dems, UKIP, greens, SNP and plaid cymru
  • media bashed Ed Miliband (labour) and made him look weak/silly instead of a suitable leader like David Cameron
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5
Q

voter behaviour in the 2015 election

A
  • tory won small majority (depsite opinion polls saying they were neck and neck) (C: 36.9% and 330 seats, L: 30.4% 232 seats)
  • david cameron only other pm except Mthatch to continue in office after a term of at least 4 years with greater number of seats
  • lib dems only had 8 seats (massively underepped)
  • ukop had 12.6% of votes but only 1 seat
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6
Q

winners bonus at the 2019 general election, and why it occurs

A
  • con had 43.6% of the vote, but 56% of the mps, but if it was truly proportional they should have gotten 280 mps
  • labour 32.2% of the vote and 31% of mps
  • LD 11.5% of the vote, but 11 mps and should have received 74
  • SNP = overepped, 3.9% of the vote, should of had 26 mps but received 48 due to the way constituencies in S are
  • seen in 2015, 1997, 1979, and 05 (35% PV and 50% of mps)
  • no party has had a over 50% of the popular vote
  • 4 hung parliaments
  • FPTP avoids this so all the winners can enjoy a winners bonus
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7
Q

voting by age in the 2019 general election

A
  • 18-24 tend to vote for progressive parties
    yougov poll: 77% for Lab, LD, SNP and green, while 21% voted for the conservatives
  • older demographics are more experienced, and need more security as they support their families (children, education etc) –> not really advocating for change
  • 67% on the poll said they voted conservatives (70+)
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8
Q

vote by age and gender in the 2019 general election

A
  • women tend to be more socially liberal than their male counterparts
  • 35% of the poll said they voted for labour, while only 31% of men did
  • women tend to be more concerned with soft social issues, like settling down, childcare etc.
  • 65% said they voted labour compared to 46% of men
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9
Q

social grade definitions

A
  • A: senior managerial professional
  • B: middle manager consultants, barristers
  • C1: junior manager, shop managers, non manual work
  • C2: skilled manual work
  • D: semi skilled unskilled labour
  • E: unemployed, casual workers, part time (job insecurity)
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10
Q

social grade and voting in the 2019 election

A
  • remainers shift from the labour and conservatives to LD, as labour had an ambiguous brexit position
  • increase in conservative votes caused the loss of the red wall –> small marginal loss, but it made a large difference, includes brexiteers who left
  • lower social grades who shifted are socially conservative
  • AB: 42% in poll while DE: 47% in the poll
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11
Q

votes by education level in the 2019 election

A
  • higher education –> more likely to vote for a progressive party
  • 68% of those with a degree or above voted for Lab, LD, SNP or green
  • younger –> more likely to have a higher education
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12
Q

shifts from 2017 voters to 2019 voters

A
  • con and lab both lost votes but labour votes went to con, but con loss was spread out
  • POLL: 4% of tory voters in the 2017 election went to labour, but 11% of labour voters went to con
  • shift in votes depends on area: in a southern area some lost tory votes makes little difference, but in northern constituencies where there tends to be low turnout a small change can have a large difference
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13
Q

what 2 advantages does the conservatives have over labour (2019 election)

A
  • they were closer to voters on issues that mattered in this election
  • conservatives were seen as more competent, more united, and better led
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14
Q

positional vs valence

A

POSITION
- closest on policy/specific issues/broader idealogy
- voters disagree about what they want the gov to do

VALENCE
- most competent to run the country
- based on party performance in office - united, capable leader
- voters agree about what they want gov to do

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15
Q

positional advantage in the 2019 election

A
  • none of the three main parties were close to the average voter in 2019 (electorate tougher on immigrants/brexit than labour but left of con on economics
  • however getting brexit done and immigration was the closest to tories –> SALIENT ISSUES
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16
Q

2019 as the brexit election

A
  • single most important problem was brexit
  • most talked about issue on television and in the press
17
Q

changing classes in the 2019 election

A
  • 1979: the postwar period, social class and income were indeed powerful influences over voting behaviour, but irrelevant in 2019 –> working class is slightly more conservative
  • age and education is a better indication of party to vote for: older and less e = priority to retaining traditional values, and younger are more liberal and cosmopolitan
18
Q

why has labour lost its grip on its working class voters

A
  • many voters have become affluent and moved rightwards on the economic axis
  • labour stopped looking and sounding like a working class party: it avoided referring to social class and its mps became overwhelmingly middle class graduates
  • labour under tony blair moved decisively to the centre on the economic axis –> winning votes but losing enthusiasm among those who preferred ‘old’ labour ideology
  • the red wall was already crumbling for years before brexit
19
Q

valence advantage in the 2019 election

A
  • between 2017 and 2019 there was a 9 percentage point swing from lab to cons due to brexiteers but there no example of this happening vice versa
  • 2019: not even 3/10 saw labour fit to govern or trusted them to handle the economy
  • Jcorb –> 2017 polling day: 48% saw him fit to lead but in 2019: 17%
    voters saw a competence gap between the two main parties in 2019 –> Con valence advantage (was this truth or a malicious media distortion)
20
Q

realignment and dealignment in the 2019 election

A
  • hard to know where the competence advantage will lie in a years time, let alone by the next election
  • age and education look set to remain important influences over voter choice –> more important than social class division: realignment of british electoral pol; social/ideological basis on which people choose
  • labour dealignment: labour shift central under blair, shed wc identity and adopted liberal policies to attract the urban educated middle class
  • conservatives realignment: brexit gave these dealigned a person to vote for the cons, made elections more vertical
  • seen also in S –> vertical dimension was S indp and realignment was from labour to SNP