voting behaviour and the media Flashcards

1
Q

psephology

A

the study of voting behaviour, elections and trends called psephology

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2
Q

partisan dealignment

A

people leaving the main two parties

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3
Q

what are long term influences on voter behaviour

A

social factors impacting voter behaviour over a number of elections e.g. class gender age religion ethnicity education

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4
Q

explain historical voting behaviour

A

Until 1970, Con & Lab averaged 91% of the vote.
By 2010, Con & Lab received only 57%.
2019 this rebounded to 76% again.

Voter Turnout
Falling since mid 20th century. 59% in 2001 but rebounded to mid/high 60’s since 2010.

Partisan dealignment since 1970’s. Falling Turnout.

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5
Q

long term influences on voter behaviour

A

Social factors that impact voter behaviour over a number of elections.
E.g. Class, Gender, Age, Religion, Ethnicity, Education

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6
Q

short term influences on voter behaviour

A

Short-term influences: Specific to particular elections.
E.g. Party Leader, Wider Context, Campaign

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7
Q

explain link between ethnicity and voter behaviour

A

Mass immigration in the 1950s meant more ethnic minorities migrated to inner cities. Fearing loss of ‘culture’, Conservative party became more antagonistic on immigration.

Smethwick (1964) Conservative Party’s infamous racist campaign. (Right)

Enoch Powell’s ‘Rivers of Blood speech’

e.g. Norman Tebbit MP
Criticised South Asians (Pakistani, Indian, Bangladeshi for not being loyal to the country.
- Measured loyalty by support for England national cricket team

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8
Q

anomalies in the trends of ethnicity and voter behaviour ? (evaluation)

A

Ethnic Minorities are not a monolith.

Some ethnic groups are starting to move away from the labour party.

Aspire party (Tower Hamlets 2022 Local Elections) - Bangladeshi
Conservative Party (Harrow 2022 Local Elections) - (Affluent) Indian community.
Conservative Party (2017 GE) Jewish Community voted 67% tory.

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9
Q

explain link between regions and voter behaviour

A

Different geographical regions tend to have loyalties to different parties.

This can be seen through the urban/rural divide and north/south divide.

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10
Q

explain link between age and voter behaviour

A

older age ranges tend to vote more for conservatives
examples.
2019 general election- 67 percent voting conservatives
higher voter turnout with age as well- for age range of 70+, 84 percent voted

younger age range - 18 to 24 year olds, 56% voting labour
voter turnout for 18-19 year olds is 57 percent

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11
Q

link between religion and voter behaviour

A

In 2015, Labour received 74% of votes from British Muslims – in 2017, this had risen to 87%.

Jewish community turned to conservatives in 2017.
(controversy surrounding alleged anti semitism?)

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12
Q

link between education and voter behaviour

A

those with degrees and above, 43% voting labour and 29% voting tory

those with GCSE or below- 25% voting labour, 58% voting conservatives

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13
Q

short term factors affecting voter behaviour

A

Short term factors increase electoral volatility, making it harder to predict outcomes of elections

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14
Q

explain how rational choice theory is a short term factor on voter behaviour

A

Voters act like individual consumers, choosing the most suitable product on offer. Voters consider how they would be affected by having different parties in government, and make their decision based on who will benefit them and their families. Therefore, successful parties able to adapt their policies to ones that are popular with most of the electorate.
Example, Thatcher changed the conservative party’s policy for the 1979 election, as did Blair from New Labour in 1997.
Rational choice theory combines issue voting and valence (trust), which may be seen as a more accurate way of analysing voting behaviour.

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15
Q

how is the voter positioned in the rational choice model

A

Voters are rational and will vote based on whichever party benefits them the most.
Presumptions about voter. Individuals are comparable to consumers.
Rational
Largely unaligned
Use Manifestos, Party Leaders, Campaign and Past Performance to inform their decision

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16
Q

explain how valence is a short term factor on voter behaviour

A

Valence is the idea that people support the party best able to deliver on issues they care about. So, valence suggests that voters aren’t solely concerned with policies, but also on how much they trust a party to deliver those policies. This might be summed up with three questions: Which party do I trust?, Which party has been or will be most competent in government?
In 2017, many voters questioned whether the Labour Party could deliver economic prosperity, even though they liked their policies of abolishing tuition fees, re nationalising industries and giving the NHS more funding.

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17
Q

what is valence/ trust

A

Valence issues are issues where there is universal agreement on an objective.

E.g. Better health care, less crime, economic growth.

Therefore, what is important in deciding how someone votes is ‘trust’ in delivering.

example- Currently people may not trust the tories to reduce immigration as they haven’t done so in 14 years.

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18
Q

what is issue voting as a short term factor on voter behaviour

A

Voters make decisions on a range of issues by going through several stages

Issue voting is problematic as it relies on a higher level of political engagement from voters. It is also not particularly good in explaining voting patterns. For example, in 1987 and 1992, voters preferred labours policies but conservatives won the elections

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19
Q

explain what positional issues are in issue voting

A

Divisive issues that people can take different, but legitimate, views on.
Should taxes be increased?
Should welfare be cut?
Is this war justified?
Do people need to be charged for missing GP appointments?
Electorate will seek a party that matches their views.

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20
Q

What are Salient issues?

A

Salient issues are the most important issues that arise during an election.

(Economy, Healthcare, Immigration, Education, Position on Europe)

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21
Q

What were the salient issues at these elections?
2005, 2010, 2015, 2017, 2019

A

2005 - Iraq War
2010 - Economy
2015 - Immigration/European Union
2017 - Brexit and Terrorism (Manchester & London)
2019 - Brexit

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22
Q

Identifying Salient issues
how does one identify a salient issue

A

Butler & Stokes identify 4 conditions of salient issues:

Voters must be aware of an issue
Voters must have an active opinion on an issue
Voters must identify a difference between the parties policy on the issue
Voters must be motivated enough to turnout and vote for a party based on the issue.

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23
Q

examples of current salient issues

A

Cost of living, Israel-Palestine, Immigration, NHS waiting times, housing and employment.

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24
Q

influence of party leaders on voter behaviour

A

The charisma and personality of party leaders is now crucial to a party success. They are the brand of their party and are often put in good positions for photo opportunities. For example, in 1997 the young, energetic, family man Blair was seen in stark contrast to Major.

The 2010 televised debates reinforced this view when leaders tried to avoid saying anything controversial, and began to look less human. Voters started to trust them less, being unable to identify with them. Voters seemed willing to vote for an authentic character who would tell the truth in a language they understood, almost irrespective of the policies they stood for.

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25
Q

examples of issue voting

A

2019 election case study: Issue voting.

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26
Q

Brexit & Labour Failures in 2019

A

Why did Labour do poorly in the 2019 election?
Were inconsistent in their view on brexit.

Leaver voters Supported Tories ‘Get Brexit Done’
Remain voters Supported Liberal Democrats ‘Revoke article 50’

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27
Q

problems with issue voting

A

Issue voting is problematic as it relies on a higher level of political engagement from voters. It is also not particularly good in explaining voting patterns. For example, in 1987 and 1992, voters preferred Labours policies but Conservatives won the elections.

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28
Q

what is an electoral asset

A

A leader with a strong strength/charisma can attract potential voters

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29
Q

what is electoral liability

A

A boring, weird, or divisive leader can put voters off

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30
Q

failure of party leaders- case study, Ed Miliband
2010 to 2015

A

Viewed as weird, weak and unable to control ‘Blairite’ faction of his party.
Evidence:
Sun headline ‘Save Our Bacon’
During Interview W/ Jeremy Paxman, he was ridiculed for saying ‘Hell yeah, I’m tough enough’
Failure with Voters:
Loss to David Cameron in 2015 (232 Seats)

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31
Q

case study- Boris Johnson

A

Viewed as charismatic and relatable.
‘Sunny Politics’
Evidence:
London Zip-Wire Incident in 2012
‘Get Brexit Done’ - Seen as trustworthy.
Success with Voters:
Won 80 seat majority (365 seats) in 2019 GE

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32
Q

what is governing competency

A

Governing competency is an assessment of how effective a party’s been in government.
Control of events: Major’s government lost power in 1997 when voters felt they were stumbling from one crisis to another and seemed unable to control events.
Policy: The Thatcher government from 1997 to 1990, stuck firmly to its promises to change the economic model and was rewarded with electoral success.
Party unity, strong leadership: the Labour Party under Blair from 1994 to 2007 is an example of how voters rewarded the party who had a clear vision and a united party.

33
Q

how is governing competency measured

A

assessed of how effective a party’s been in government
- assessed by control of events: major’s government lost power in 1997 when voters felt they were stumbling from one crisis to another ans seemed unable to control events
- policy- the thatcher government from 1997 to 1992 - stuck firmly to its promises to change the economic model and was rewarded with electoral success
- party unity, strong leadership- the labour party under blair from 1984 to 2007 is an example of how voters rewarded the party who had a clear vision and a united party

34
Q

case studies of governance competency

A

control of events 1982 Falklands war and how it led to thatcher landslide victory in 1983

party unity 2019- labour party divided under corbyn

35
Q

what is economic management

A

voters more likely to support a partyif it has managed the economy successfully while in government/ thought it is likely to be able to deliver economic prosperity
voters less likely to support a governing party which has mismanaged the economy
e.g. winter discontent in 1978 played a key role in Thatcher’s Victory in 1979. In 2010, the Conservatives were able to blame Labour under Brown for the 2008 financial crisis. Truss’ financial chaos in 2022.

36
Q

case studies on economic management

A

winter of discontent 1978 - how it lef to thatcher victory in 1979

black wednesday / ERM 1992 - how it led to the major defeat in 1997

37
Q

voting context model

A

Voting behavior changes based on:

Type of election
Electoral System used
Wider Context/Circumstances around the election.

How someone votes in a local election may differ to how they vote in national election or By-elections.

38
Q

what are the different types of elections

A

General Election: Economy, Global Affairs
By-election: Protest vote against government
Local Election: Local issues
Regional Election: TFL

39
Q

Case Study: Rochester & Strood

By election in 2014

A

By-election in 2014
Conservatives won the seat in 2010 with MP Mark Reckless. Defected and joined UKIP in 2014 triggering a by-election.

He won the by-election in what was seen as a protest vote against the coalition government over Immigration/EU.

Six months later in the 2015 General election the Conservatives won it back from UKIP suggesting the context is important.

40
Q

why are general elections more different from by elections

A

In General Elections:
Electorate is concerned with government formation.
Electorate is concerned with multiple issues (e.g. economy)

41
Q

what are different types of electoral systems

A

Proportional systems = Electorate is likely to vote with their conscience.

Plurality/Majoritarian systems = More likely to see tactical voting.

example: Brexit party came first in proportional EU election but won 0 seats in a plurality FPTP general election.

E.g. Brexit Party (2019 EU vs UK elections)

42
Q

what were the 1979 election results

A

Margaret Thatcher won the 1979 Election on a turnout of 76% over Labour leader James Callaghan.

Labour won 269 seats under Callaghan.
Conservatives won 339 seats under Thatcher.
Liberals won 11 under David Steele.

43
Q

Why did the Conservatives win in 1979?

A
  • Leadership of Thatcher
  • Economy: Inflation and Unemployment
  • Winter of Discontent
  • Advertising/Media
  • Callaghan’s Miscalculations
  • Conservative Policies
44
Q

what affects the outcome of parties

A

Sociological Model: long term influences
Social Class

Rational Choice Model:
Image of Party Leaders
Valence/Competency
Influence of Media

Voter Context Model:
Wider Economic Conditions

45
Q

what was the winter of discontent and why did it occur

A

he ‘Winter of Discontent’ was an economic downturn that occurred in the winter of 1978/1979.

High Unemployment
Low Economic Growth
(stagflation)
High Inflation (Opec Oil Embargo)

Resulted in Mass Public Sector strikes

46
Q

examples of the effect of media and party leaders during political crisises
e.g. for thatcher- how did thatcher gather support

A

Portrayed Callaghan as a weak and out of touch leader. With Famous newspaper headline ‘Crisis? What Crisis?’

Conservatives hired Saatchi and Saatchi Advertising Company who ‘Softened’ Thatchers image and highlighted Labour’s poor policies.

Thatcher offered Tax cuts
Limit Gov Spending (Welfare Support)= social class

47
Q

1997 - what factors caused Blair’s success

A

Sociological Model:
Social Class, Age

Rational Choice Model:
Image of Party Leaders
Party Manifesto’s
Influence of Media
Party Unity & Competency
Voter Context Model:
Tory Sleaze

48
Q

1997- how did blair have a weak opposition

A

Economic incompetence: Black Wednesday: In 1992 the UK was forced out of the Exchange Rate Mechanism, damaging the Conservative’s reputation for economic competence. Despite some recovery from this they weren’t able to shake this newly won reputation.

Party division: Major’s government was split over Europe, which made Major appear weak and the party divided.

Credibility: The party was mired in a Cash for Questions scandal and Tory ‘sleaze.’
Time’s up: They had been in power for 18 years, Blair carried the slogan ‘Time for a change’.

49
Q

why was john major disadvantaged in 1997

A

Major signed upto Maastricht Treaty committing to a more federal Europe. This caused division as large parts of the Conservative party were eurosceptic.

Economic Chaos of Black Wednesday heightened tensions.

50
Q

1997 back to basics speech

A

Britain having a ‘Moral’ Panic over changing social norms led to Major giving ‘Back to Basics’ speech on religion/morality.

E.g. John Redwood MP condemned “young women [who] have babies with no apparent intention of even trying marriage or a relationship with the father of the child”
However the string of scandals that followed was seen as highly hypocritical.

51
Q

conservative scandals disadvantaging them in 1997 election

A

1992) David Mellor resigned in September following a series of allegations of sleaze. He engaged in extramarital affairs with actress Antonia de Sancha and accepted free holidays from Palestine Liberation and the ruler of Abu Dhabi.

(1993) Environment Minister Tim Yeo resigned after fathering a “love child” with Conservative councillor Julia Stent. Yeo had previously voiced his support for the traditions of marriage.

(1992) Alan Amos MP was arrested and cautioned for alleged public indecency on Hampstead Heath after being found with another man.

(1994) David Ashby MP was accused by his wife of leaving her for a man. The couple’s marriage had broken down, but his alleged homosexuality/infidelity made the news.

52
Q

how did conservatives react during 1997 election through media

A

Conservatives once again hired the advertising company Saatchi & Saatchi.

Ran a negative advertising campaign replacing tony blair’s eyes with demon eyes.

Party Broadcast presented New Labour as a New Danger.

53
Q

how did the media support tony blair

A

Labour courted the support of Rupert Murdoch (Owner of several newspapers etc. The Sun & The Times).

Used Spin Doctors to manipulate media reporting and ensure that stories that broke made the party look favourable.
‘Alastair Campbell’

54
Q

1997 labour party manifesto points

A

Education will be our number one priority, and we will increase the share of national income spent on education as we decrease it on the bills of economic and social failure
There will be no increase in the basic or top rates of income tax
We will provide stable economic growth with low inflation, and promote dynamic and competitive business and industry at home and abroad
We will get 250,000 young unemployed off benefit and into work
We will rebuild the NHS, reducing spending on administration and increasing spending on patient care
We will be tough on crime and tough on the causes of crime, and halve the time it takes persistent juvenile offenders to come to court
We will help build strong families and strong communities, and lay the foundations of a modern welfare state in pensions and community care
We will safeguard our environment, and develop an integrated transport policy to fight congestion and pollution
We will clean up politics, decentralise political power throughout the United Kingdom and put the funding of political parties on a proper and accountable basis
We will give Britain the leadership in Europe which Britain and Europe need.

55
Q

what sociological shifts were seen during the 1997 election

A

The Labour share of the AB vote increased by 12% and Conservatives went down by 15%, suggesting greater evidence of class and partisan dealignment.
There was a larger swing to Labour amongst women (10%).
Conservatives lost 16% of the 45–54 age bracket.
It was especially surprising was that Labour did very well in the South, particularly in London and the South East.

56
Q

what was the conservative manifesto in 2019

A

Extra funding for the NHS, with 50,000 more nurses and 50 million more GP surgery appointments a year.
20,000 more police and tougher sentencing for criminals.
An Australian-style points-based system to control immigration.
Millions more invested every week in science, schools, apprenticeships and infrastructure while controlling debt.
Reaching Net Zero by 2050 with investment in clean energy solutions and green infrastructure to reduce carbon emissions and pollution.
We will not raise the rate of income tax, VAT or National Insurance.
Getting Brexit done. Investing in our public services and infrastructure. Supporting workers and families. Strengthening the Union. Unleashing Britain’s potential.

57
Q

what were the 2019 election results

A

Boris Johnson won the 2019 Election on a turnout of 67% over Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.

Conservatives won 365 seats under Johnson.
Labour won 202 seats under Corbyn.
SNP won 48 under Sturgeon.

58
Q

Why did Conservatives win in 2019?

A

Sociological Model:
Region, Class

Rational Choice Model:
Image of Party Leaders
Influence of Media
Campaign

Voter Context Model:
Brexit

59
Q

explain campaigning in the 2019 election

A

The Conservative campaign, led by Dominic Cummings, was tightly controlled with the ‘Get Brexit Done’ message at its heart.
The campaign also focused on the idea of ‘the people versus the establishment’, with Johnson railing against Parliament and the Supreme Court ruling as examples of the establishment ignoring the will of the people.

60
Q

weakness of labour

A

it was an indecisive opposition ‘sat on the fence’ , discredited as their manifesto was seen as unrealistic as they kept changing it and they were not keeping to their word, therefore more distrust in labour’s ability to carry out manifesto plans

association to factions of party from before- anti-semitism,

61
Q

influence of leadership and media in the 2019 election

A

A YouGov poll of former Labour supporters showed that 35% turned their back on Labour because of Corbyn while only 19% cited Brexit.

While he was still popular with his devoted supporters, Corbyn’s image had been tarnished due to weak leadership over Brexit and the allegations of anti-Semitism.

While Johnson was not universally liked or trusted, his leadership and political message were strong.

62
Q

social media during the 2019 election

A

2017 showed the power of social media, but 2019 made us think again. Regular consumers of social media platforms were left with the feeling that by 12 December 2019 Corbyn might well steal the election.

The result came as a stark reminder that one’s social media feed is not representative of the country as a whole.

The Conservatives used focus groups and polling to target swing voters and spent heavily on Facebook activity during the last week of the campaign, targeting marginal seats specifically.

63
Q

explain the salient issue of brexit in the 2019 election

A

Like 2017, this election was about ‘Getting Brexit Done’. Johnson was relentless in pushing this slogan throughout the campaign and appeared to read the British voters better than the other parties.
Unsurprisingly therefore, the Conservatives had a clear lead amongst Leave voters with a 73% to 15% lead over Labour.
However, Remain voters were more split with just under half (48%) voting Labour, 21% voting Liberal Democrat and 20% voting for the Conservatives.

64
Q

explain the sociological shifts during the 2019 election

A

Class and party dealignment continued, with the Conservatives even further ahead in social classes C2DE than in 2017, while Labour lost votes amongst all social classes.

The Conservatives’ breaching of Labour’s ‘red wall’ was the headline of the election. The ‘red wall’ stretches from the borders of north Wales to northeast England and Yorkshire, and down into the north Midlands. The Conservatives won 33 of the 63 seats in this area, with Blyth Valley electing a Conservative for the first time in its 69-year history.

65
Q

give examples of the different types of media

A

The Press: Newspaper & Magazine publications
Broadcasters: TV, Radio, Podcasts
Social Media: Twitter, Youtube, Facebook, TikTok
The media is of vital importance as it brings issues to the public’s attention.

66
Q

explain the effect of newspapers

A

Are the most traditional form of media.

Until recently, they were the most important and powerful form of political media.

No regulation of political bias
Newspapers and Magazines are clear to take an ‘editorial stance’
Murdoch (Sun & the Times)
Lebedev (The i, Independent)
Readership of Newspapers is in decline.

67
Q

what are ofcom rules

A

Coverage of parties during the election period must be fair and appropriate.
All discussion and analysis of election and referendum issues must finish when the poll opens.
Broadcasters must wait until polls close on polling day before they publish the results of opinion polls.
A list of all candidates must be included in any constituency discussions.

67
Q

effect of tv

A

Broadcasting

Term covers all television and radio stations. (Sky, BBC, ITV, LBC)
There are strict laws governing political broadcasting on TV and radio to ensure fair representation of all parties.

Dominates political debate with huge coverage during election campaigns, as well as daily and weekly current affairs shows. In 2010, the election leaders debate was watched by just under 10 million viewers.

68
Q

effects of social media

A

Is the newest and arguably most powerful media platform. It has begun to play a huge role in politics both in the UK and in the USA.

Very recent phenomena and so it is too early to truly tell the impact.

No regulation of political bias.

Parties increasingly advertise on twitter, instagram.

Echo chambers can form.
Links to Digital Democracy
Links to Hyper Pluralism

69
Q

what is the social media count

A

In the UK, 28% of young people cited social media as their main news source, compared with 24% for TV.

Facebook has been criticized for not taking its role as a media platform seriously enough, with Amber Rudd, the then Home Secretary, suggesting they should be treated the same as publishing companies.

70
Q

what are opinion polls

A

Opinion polls assess the popularity of political parties by asking a sample of people how they intend to vote. Public opinion polls are now a key part of our electoral experience, but the main political parties also conduct their own private polls.

Opinions polls have come under criticism for getting their predictions spectacularly wrong. For example, in 2017 May was expected to get a majority of around 50+. Still, opinion polls are widely read and valued.

Exit polls seem to be the most accurate opinion polls. John Curtice’s exit polls are legendary in their ability to successfully predict the outcome of elections, usually within a handful of seats.

71
Q

how is media in politics discussed

A

Three ways we think about the media in this course:
How the media affects elections
How it holds government to account
How it impacts democracy

72
Q

explain media in 2010 general election

A

Parliamentary expenses scandal: Investigative Journalists for the Telegraph in 2009/2010 found that MPs were abusing the expenses system.
Many claimed expenses that were ridiculous or ‘immoral’.

e.g. gillian vs gordon brown

73
Q

explain media in 2015 general election

A

Significant amount of TV coverage over what another coalition would look like.

Never before done, ‘the Daily Telegraph used its marketing database to e-mail all of its readers to ask them to vote Conservative on the morning of the election.’

‘Extensive discussion in the media of the constitutional implications of a possible Labour–SNP coalition and front pages such as that of the Daily Mail on 6 May, which warned that such an arrangement would ‘destroy our economy — and our very nation’ certainly helped to bolster Conservative support.’

74
Q

media in 2017 general election

A

On the night before the 2017 general election, the Daily Mail published a front page with the headline ‘Corbin’ and attacked Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Party, imploring voters not to vote Labour.

In 2017, Theresa May refusing to take part in a head on head TV debate with Corbyn made her look weak in the eyes of voters and contributed to her unpopularity.

75
Q

media in 2019 general election

A

The media can also be important in setting the agenda of elections, such as “the Brexit election” in 2019.
In 2019, significant viral events were Jacob Rees Mogg’s comments on the Grenfell fire which were condemned by many alongside coverage of a boy with pneumonia who had to sleep on the floor of a hospital.
In 2019, Johnson refused to be interviewed by Andrew Neil, fearing the impact a mishap could have on the campaign.
Newspaper hostility towards Corbyn’s Labour was particularly hostile in the 2019 GE.

76
Q

what was the canary

A

The Canary is an online blog which publishes pieces that spread more widely than mainstream media and pay their writers partly based on their click numbers.
In the early weeks of the 2017 election campaign, the Canary was one of the most popular news sources on Facebook, at times drawing in number comparable to the BBC and national newspapers to some of its stories.
Kerry-Anne Mendoza, editor of the Canary, is a big supporter of Corbyn

77
Q

is the role of the media exaggerated?

A

Many have strong allegiances to parties and are highly unlikely to be swayed by anything the media does during elections. For example YouGov polling revealed that 30% of Sun readers and 39% of FT readers voted for the Labour Party in the 2017 election, despite both papers backing the Tories.

Most individuals consume the media and political opinions they already agree with, especially true of social media.

Other short term factors that influence elections more e.g. perception of leadership - ‘A YouGov poll of Labour voters who deserted the party in 2019 indicated that Corbyn’s leadership was the main reason for 35% of them, compared to 19% who cited Brexit. A further 16% felt that Labour’s plans for public spending and nationalisation were undeliverable and too costly.’

Other long term factors are more significant e.g. class voting

78
Q
A