Political parties II Flashcards

1
Q

UKIP main policies

A
  • fix nhs - 1B invest, 750K hospitaks, social care cap
  • grow economy - 20K jobs in 5 years
  • Working family - 30hrs free childcare, energy support payment
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2
Q

Green party policies

A
  • free school meals
  • carbon tax - 27B road scheme cancelled
  • 3hrs free childcare
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3
Q

SNP policies

A
  • scot independence
  • infrastructure projects in scot
  • funding nhs
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4
Q

Plaid Cymru policies

A
  • climate emergency - wales 2025 mission de carbon and nature act restore biodiversity
  • 6B - 60,000 jobs
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5
Q

DUP policies

A
  • more funding for nhs
  • anti - immigration
  • anti eu
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6
Q

Reform party policies

A
  • Reform economy - quantitative easing debt reorganisation
  • Reform our public sector - NHS waiting list, education
  • Reform energy strategy - increase lithium mining and north sea oil
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7
Q

How different parties have impacted British politics

A
  • Become power brokers - constitution in 2010-15 - con needed lib dems, dup propped up in may c&s agreement 2017-19
  • Devolved gov (SNP power in scotland, propped up by the greens), ni power sharing agreement is functioning - dup and sinn fein power sharing agreement
  • UKIP arguably led the uk to leaving eu in 2016 in Brexit referendum - pushed con to the right and led to con calling brexit ref in 2015 manifesto
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8
Q

How multiple parties have little significant impact

A
  • locked out from fptp - ukip 2015 - 3.8M votes, 1 seat, 12.6%
  • 2 party system inevitabely results in tory or labour pms - havent had a non-lab/con pm since 1920s, over 100 years ago, most of the time only propped
  • support is transitory - ukip vote collapsed since brexit - 0.04% in 2019, lost all council seats in 2023
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9
Q

How parties achieve party funding

A
  • recieving donations from supporters
  • raising loans from wealthy
  • events
  • membership subscriptions

Northern and Shell Media Group - 1m to ukip
Unite union - 1.8M to lab

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10
Q

Political parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000

A
  • meant people on uk electoral roll could no longer make sonations (limit foreign influence)
  • Place limits on how much can be spent on elections - donations over 500 decalred
  • Over 7.5K had to be electoral register
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11
Q

Policy development grants

A

Can be used to hire advisors on policy
Con value of grants - 476K

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12
Q

Short Money

A

Funds given to opposition parties to facilitate their parliamentary work - research facilities
Amount based on how many seats and votes gained on previous elections

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13
Q

Cranborne Money

A

Funds paid to opposition parties in HOL to help with the cost of research and admin to help scrutinise work of gov
2021/22 year - 666K - Labour

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13
Q

Argument for state funding (1)

A

End opportunities for corrupt use of donations - more transparency 2018 electoral commission investing donations to ukip and leave camp worth 2.3m

(harder to scrutinise priv organisations)

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14
Q

Argument against state funding (1)

A

taxpayers may object to their money being used in this way - a member of right wing may be irritated if their tax was going to labour

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15
Q

Argument for state funding (2)

A

will give smaller parties a boost to their electoral chances
con recieved 25m between april and june 2017 companies with 9.5m for lab and only 4.4.m for lib dems in same period

16
Q

Argument against state funding (2)

A
  • parties may lose their indepedence as a result - since supporters no longer donate, they get the budget of the system - less humanising - party in gov maybe power to change rules but highly unlikely
16
Q

Argument for state funding (3)

A
  • improve democracy by creating wider participation in democracy - parties reiceved the funding, angus fraser donated 1.1m to con party - undemocratic form of influence
  • ukip 380,630 debt before 2017 election
17
Q

Argument against state funding (3)

A
  • could increase state regulations of parties, which isnt neccessarily a good thing - comes out of tax - harder standard of living, momentum on low budget videos recieve 8m people on facebook during 2017 ge
18
Q

2017 election results

A

con - 318
lab - 262
third party - 35
89.2% won by 2 main parties

19
Q

2019 election results

A

365 - con
203 - lab
48 - third party
87.4% - two parties

20
Q

Two party system

A

2 realisitic chances from gov -2 win maj of votes in elect - not rep

20
Q

Dominant party system, one party system

A

Democratic systems that do not allow parties to operate freely - highly stable, lack of accountablity

21
Q

Multi party system

A

Several parties competing for votes - 2 have realistic chance of being in gov or coalitio, less volatile but looks fragile

22
Q

Factors impact that electoral success - leadership

A

crucial - voters respond to quality of individual for potential pm
qualities voters prefer - experience, decisiveness, ability to lead, media image

2015 - nicholas sturgeon hugley favourable on tv debates - very positive public approval rating in opinion polls

23
Q

Factors impact that electoral success - party unity

A

a disunited party has no chance of being elected
1980s - con untied with thatcher while lab split - resulted in 2 large victories - 1983 and 1987 ge
2019

24
Q

Factors impact that electoral success - media

A

whatever the policies are, the electorate are influenced by image of the party portrayed in media such as printed press, newspapers, social media - reinforces political affiliation
momentum