Citizenship AQA Paper 1 Key content Flashcards

1
Q

Concept of democracy

A

A system of government by the entire population
or a majority of eligible citizens, usually through elected representatives

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

democracy key features

A

Key Features:
- regular & fair elections
- electoral system w/ secret ballot
- results = views of the people & accountable
- any citizen can stand
- media report freely
- candidates campaign = w/out fear of intimidation/bribery
- judiciary separate & can be used to hold gov. accountable

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Different forms of democracy

A
  • Liberal
  • direct
  • Representative
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Liberal Democracy

A
  • a system of government based on representative democracy
  • linked to freedoms and rights for citizens.
  • USA, UK and EU follow this type of democracy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Direct democracy

A
  • a system of government where all citizens take part in decision making.
  • A modern example of this is the use of referendums.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Representative democracy

A
  • A system of government where citizens, elected to represent others in an assembly.
  • A UK example would be an MP or a councillor
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Values underpinning democracy

A
  • Rights
  • Responsibilities
  • Freedoms
  • The Rule of Law
  • Equality
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Rights

A

These are our legal, social and ethical entitlements and all citizens enjoy them equally.
This structures how government operates, the law and morality of society
e.g. Human Rights, children’s right

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Responsibilities

A

the state or fact of having to do something.
We have duties as citizens of a society.
E.g. pay taxes, obey the law, be called for jury service, conscription during war
These are not optional and underpinned by the law.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Freedoms

A

the ability to act, speak or think as one wants.
E.g. freedom of choice, freedom of the press, freedom of movement

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Rule of Law

A

everyone must obey the law not matter who they are e.g. gender, class, wealth, religion.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Equality

A

This is how society treats its members.
There should be equal treatment for all.
There is legislation protecting different groups e.g. Sex Discrimination Acts 1975 and 1986;

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Power of government

A
  • propose new laws
  • set policy agenda
  • establish priorities for how country overned
  • take action and make decision regarding a wide range of areas
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Balancing power

A
  • checks and balances using institution (Judiciary, Legislature, Executive)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

role of parliament

A
  • represent the people of the country when new laws are being made, by debating the
    proposed bill. Parliament
  • debates current issues
  • scrutinises the work of government through select committees & the questioning of ministers.
  • Every Government department has a select committee that oversees its work.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

role of Prime minister

A
  • appoint people to run the government department
  • along with cabinet forms executive branch
  • the leader of His Majesty’s Government
  • esponsible for the policy and decisions of the government.
  • oversees the operation of the Civil Service and government agencies.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

role of cabinet

A

The Cabinet is the team of 20 or so most senior ministers in the Government who are
chosen by the Prime Minister to lead on specific policy areas such as Health, Transport,
Foreign Affairs or Defence.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

sovereignty of Parliament

A

– Only Parliament can make and change laws.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

the roles of the legislature

A
  • Another name for Parliament which can make laws.
    This can be done through the House of Commons or House of Lords.
    = all MP’s and Peers
  • hold executive to account
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

roles of the opposition

A

the largest political party in the House of Commons that is not in government.
- The leader of this party takes the title Leader of the Opposition.
- The role of the Official Opposition is to question and scrutinise the work of the Government

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

role of political parties

A
  • representation
  • recruit and train leaders
  • educate the public and facilitate debates
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

role of the monarch

A
  • head of state
  • appoint the Prime Minister, and all the other ministers (Kinda)
    to open new sessions of parliament
    give royal assent to bills passed by parliament, signifying that they have become law.
  • (mainly ceremonial)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

role of the judiciary

A
  • protecting human rights
  • interpreting and applying the law enacted by Parliament
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

role of the police

A

One of the main duties of a police officer is to protect people and property. They are usually assigned areas
to patrol (this can include entire jurisdictions), emergency call response, law enforcement and arrests,
reprimanding and, testifying in court cases.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
Q

role of the civil service

A

The Civil Service is based upon three core principles:
1. Impartiality – Civil Service serves the Crown and not a specific government.
2. Anonymity - They should not be identified or associated with specific policies.
3. Permanence – the stay in post when a government leaves office.
They serve whichever government is in power

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
26
Q

why is the Uk consitytion described as unwritten

A

no single written document called the British constitution
Thre are constitutional laws and conventions

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
27
Q

why is the Uk Constitution described as uncodified

A

Range of documents containing aspects of the constitutional arrangements (like the magna carta)
They are not linked or identified as constitutional

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
28
Q

advantages of an unwritten constitution

A

makes changing aspects of constitutional law easy, no different than any other type of law

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
29
Q

disadvantage of an unwritten constitution

A

Give power to the government of the day to make any changes it wishes.
other countries like USA have formal written doc. & have laid out ways to make changes that
involve each state

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
30
Q

advantages of an uncodified constitution

A

enables cchanges to be made easily, for example lowering voting age can be looked at isolation
from, say, changing the parliamentary boundaries

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
31
Q

disadvantage of an uncodified constitution

A

it enables changes to be made piecemeal that could undermine existing constitutional rights
when taken together

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
32
Q

role of elected local gov

A
  • responsible for social care
  • provide some aspects of transport, housing, and education.
  • They are also in charge of a range of neighbourhood services including
    libraries and waste collection.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
33
Q

structure of elected local gov.

A
  1. International bodies UK belongs belongs
  2. Central Gov. in UK (parliament)
  3. Devolved National Bodies - Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland
  4. Regional bodies - Greater London, police etc.
  5. Unitary, County, Boroughs, Distrrct, Town/parish
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
34
Q

role of councillors

A
  • represent local community they are eleccted to serve
  • represent political paty
  • campaign for best interests of whole council aewa
  • make representation to other bodies on behalf of their community & council
  • hold surgeries in their local areas and deal w/ issues & problems raised by their constituents
  • attend civic & community functions
  • help decide on council policy
  • hold counccil acountable through the use of ballot box
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
35
Q

accountability of councillors

A
  • local media report on work of local councillos
  • by localism act 2011 required to follow local councils Code of Conduct, and failure will result in
    sanction
  • political party hold them account for their work & can deselect them
  • financial expenses claimed from the council by councillors are published
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
36
Q

devolution

A

the transfer or delegation of power to a lower level, especially by central government to local or
regional administration.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
37
Q

devolution -> local councils

A

most basic form of devolution. They have control over spending on things like education and bin
collection

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
38
Q

devolution > mayoral regions i.e London/Greater Manchester

A

extra powers i.e policing/housing

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
39
Q

devolution -> Scotland

A

Scotland Act 2012 = gave more powers to Scottish Parliaments
- Sits in Holyrood, Edinburgh
- 129 seats
- power over: health, housing and art
- used devolved powers to: ban smoking in public areas, abolish uni. tuition fees, impose a
minimum alcohol price and made NHS prescriptions free

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
40
Q

devolution -> Wales

A
  • National Assembly of Wales (NAW)
  • sits in Cardiff
  • 60 seats
  • control over agriculture and transport and language
  • 1993 made English = important to welsh = use of devolved pwr = Free NHS prescriptions
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
41
Q

devolution -> Northern Ireland

A
  • Northern Ireland Assembly (NIA)
  • sits in Stormont, Belfast
  • 90 Seats
  • control over education, infrastructure etc
  • use of powers: NHS presecriptions free, reduced maximum alcohol limit for driving, banned
    sale and use of sunbeds for under 18s
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
42
Q

relations between England, Scot, Wales, NI

A

Scotland may want independence

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
43
Q

’ English votes for English laws’ debate

A

the position where English MPs cannot vote on matters which have been devolved to other parts of the UK, but Scottish, Welsh and Northern Ireland MPs can vote on those same matters when the UK Parliament is legislating solely for England.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
44
Q

Who can stand for election

A

Must be at least 18 years old.
* British Citizen, or a citizen of the Commonwealth or the Republic of Ireland.
* You cannot stand for more than one constituency

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
45
Q

who can’t stand for election

A

A Civil Servant; police; in the armed forces; a government nominated director
of a commercial company; a judge; peer in the House of Lords (including bishops
known as the Lords Spiritual.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
46
Q

candidate selection

A

This varies between political parties. The usual method is as follows:
* Local party will advertise in party journal for people to apply.
* They have to be on a list approved by the National party.
* Local party workers will then draw up a short list after interviewing potential
candidates.
* A ‘returning officer’ (a member of another local branch) will oversea the
procedure for the party.
* The potential candidates are invited to attend a meeting of party members.
* The send a leaflet to all party members asking for their vote.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
47
Q

Who can vote in elections

A
  • A British Citizen or a member of the EU (not sure of EU past brexit) or Commonwealth living in the UK.
  • Anyone 18 and over can register to vote.
  • Not suffering any legal incapacity to vote.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
48
Q

who can’t vote in elections

A

Members of the House of Lords.
* People in prison
* Anyone found guilty in the last 5 years of illegal practices in connection with an election.
* Been detained under certain sections of the Mental Health Act.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
49
Q

Scotland voting age for local and Scottish Parliament

A

In Scotland the voting age for local and Scottish Parliament elections is 16.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
50
Q

Should the voting age be lowered?

A
  • FOR *
  • Scotlands positive experience led to voting age being lowered in Scotland
  • young people should have a say in matters that directly affect them, such as tuition fees
  • Research from Edinburgh Uni. found thatt some teens were initially doubtful of their own
    abilities to make right decision but this led to them actively seeking out info to help inform
    judgements.
  • lowering limit encourage civic-mindedness at an earlier age and establish an interest in political system
  • AGAINST *
  • rconomic issues that are often forefront of election campaigns are irrelevant to 16 yr old
  • lack of experience in economics prevents young people from making a considered judgement
  • 18-24 yr olds have lowest turnout of any ae group -> suggest 16yr olds wouldn’t be much better
  • Teenagers who want to cast votes impressionable and easily influenced
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
51
Q

How to participate in a democracy?

A
  1. Taking part in a campaign
  2. raisingg funds
  3. rraise awareness
  4. collect names on petition
  5. lobby or write letters
  6. meeting
  7. take part in direct action/protests
  8. Join a political party
  9. stand for election
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
52
Q

Barriers to Participation

A
  • language
  • access tto education
  • poor housing
  • employment/unemployment
  • state of health/disability
  • lack of interest/apathy
  • believe participation will not make a difference
  • lack of faith in politicians and the political process
  • lack of info/understanding
  • issues personnally unimportant
  • too busy
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
53
Q

Young people and poltical participation

A
  • citizenship education - intro curriculum subject in 2003
  • young ppl get involved inn political protests via groups and organisation
  • large number of young ppl do voluntary work & raise money for people in need
  • young ppl often interested in ‘single issues’ i.e Uni fees
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
54
Q

Response to voter apathy

A
  • make postal vote or consider online voting (fraud concerns)
  • votte over several days - inc. sat when ppl have more time to cote
  • education about importance of voting and also policies of different parties
  • changing voting system
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
55
Q

Voter apathy

A
  • membership of political parties in decline - particulary amongst young people
  • young ppl often don’t vote in elections
  • concerns over future of democracy
  • involvement of citizens
  • number of ppl vote in election decline since WWII
  • political parties difficult to raise funds
  • small groups of people or individuals have too much info on political processes
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
56
Q

How to reduce barriers/increaser voter turnout ?

A
  • compulsory voting
  • loweing voting age to 16
  • allowing online voting or weekend voting
  • changing polling hours
  • open polling stations in different locations
  • encourage postal votes or telephone voting
57
Q

political parties

A
  • SNP
  • Green Party
  • SDLP
  • Labour
  • Ukip
  • Lib dem.
  • conservatives
  • alliance
  • DUP
  • Sinn Fein
  • Plaid Cymru
  • Reform
58
Q

government income

A
  • council tax
  • business rates
  • VAT
  • Corporation Tax
  • income tax
  • National Income
  • excise duty ( tax on alcohol/cigarettes)
59
Q

impact of Gov spending/cuts

A
  • cutting certain benfits can mean some ppl have less income
  • more money spent by gov. means decision is needed to raise taxes or increase the monney it borrows
    (public debt)
  • in 2008 UK economy went into recession = fall in things britain made or sold, which led to a period of austerity
    gov. measures reduce public spending
60
Q

how gov. raises money

A
  1. Increase tax.
  2. Borrow money (from World
    Bank)
61
Q

direct taxes

A

income tax, property tax, business tax

62
Q

indirect taxes

A

betting, gaming and lottery duties, excise duties and import levies

63
Q

how public taxes spent locally

A
  • on local services i.e social care & roads
64
Q

how governments and other service providers make
provision for welfare, health, the elderly and education.

A
  • taxing
  • loans etc
65
Q

complexity of allocating public spending

A
  • limited money
  • increase spending in one area, decreases it in another
66
Q

Uk voting systems

A
  • FPTP
  • STV
  • AMS
  • Party list system
  • SVS
67
Q

First Past the Post (FPTP) what is it? & uses?

A
  • used for electing MPs in a General Election in the UKand for electing councillors in local elections in England & Wales
  • Example, General Election the country is divided into constituincies and each one elects an MP
  • Each person gets one vote & casts their vote by placing a single X on their ballot paper against candidate of
    their choice
  • Candidate with the most votes wins
68
Q

Single Transferable Vote (STV) what is it? & uses?

A
  • used in NI to elect Members of European Parliament, Members of NIA and local councillors & since 2007 Scotland to
    elect local councillors
  • Voters place candidates in rank order, each elects several ppl so political parties have several candidates, a
    candidate isgiven a quota to be eleccted
    If they have more than requiredvotes, extra votes are transfered to second choice, after all extra votes are
    allocated candidates with the smallestt total of votes are eliminated & votes get redistributed
69
Q

Additional Member System (AMS) what is it? & uses?

A
  • used for scotish parliament, Welsh assembly, and Greater London Authority
  • each elector has 2 votes, 1st vvote uses FPTP system, second vote is for a party list, each body using this system
    has a certin amount of members elected by FPTP and certain amount from the list
70
Q

Party List System what is it? & uses?

A

in Party List systems each area is bigger and elects a group of MPs that closely reflect the way the area voted.
3 types:
- closed party list
- open party list
- semi-open list

71
Q

Supplementary Vote System (SV) what is it? & uses?

A
  • majoritarian system
  • rank 2 fav candidates
  • win = 50% of 1st votes OR all candidates but top 2 are eliminated and 2nd votes reallocated -> whoever has most wins
  • used to elect directly mayors including the Mayor of London
72
Q

Proportionate Representation (PR) What is it?

A

an electoral system in which parties gain seats in proportion to the number of votes cast for them.

73
Q

Alternative Vote System (AV) what is it?

A

If more than half the voters have the same favourite candidate, that person becomes the MP. If nobody gets half, the
numbers provide instructions for what happens next.

The counters remove whoever came last and look at the ballot papers with that candidate as their favourite. Rather than
throwing away these votes, they move each vote to the voter’s second favourite candidate. This process is repeated until
one candidate has half of the votes and becomes the MP.

74
Q

Advantages of FPTP

A
  • produce ‘strong’ govs through majorities
  • retains strong link between constitucency and MP
  • Easy to Understand
75
Q

Advantages of AV

A
  • produces a ‘strong’ gov through majorities
  • Retains strong constituency linkensures 50% support of the elected candidate
76
Q

Advantages of AMS

A
  • can produce ‘strong’ majority gov
  • retains constituency link
  • gives more voice to minor parties
77
Q

Advantages of STV

A
  • far fewer votes wasted
  • retains constituency link
  • gives voice to minor parties
78
Q

Advantages of full PR

A

Very few wasted votes
- easy to understand
- gives full voice to minor parties (but potentially extremists)

79
Q

Disadvantages of FPTP

A
  • lots of wasted votes
  • makes it hard for new parties to emerge and not often representative of the public vote
80
Q

Disadvantages of AV

A
  • can prodice results that aren’t representative
  • requires knowledge of all parties
81
Q

Disadvantages of AMS

A
  • can create ultra-safe seats
  • create two-tier representatives
  • can mean very minor party in go
82
Q

DIsadvantages of STV

A
  • difficult to understand
  • leads to large constituencies
  • hard to produce a ‘strong’ majority gov
83
Q

Disadvantages of Full PR

A
  • No constituency link and creates ultra-safe seats
  • likely to produce coalitions w/ lots of post-election deals needed
84
Q

executive

A
  • consists of the PM and the cabiner
  • judiciary can hold executive to account and so can legislature
  • It’ s made up of HM Government.
  • Its primary role is to put forward ideas for laws and run the Government.
  • It represents the will of the majority
85
Q

judiciary

A
  • is separate from government and citizens can use the legal
    process to hold government to account.
  • is a set of independent judges and courts that ensure the law is applied equally to everyone
    regardless of wealth
  • The judges in the UK are not nominated by the PM
  • If a UK court disagrees with a Parliamentary law they cannot strike it down with a ruling but instead issue a ‘declaration of incompatibility,
  • encourage the government to consider looking at or amending the legislation in question.
86
Q

legislature

A
  • a body normally elected that decides upon the laws that apply to a state. In the UK, Parliament is the legislature
    (in the USA, Congress is the legislature).
  • Another name for Parliament which can make laws. This can be done through the House of Commons or House of Lords
  • Members of Parliament in both in the Commons and the Lords. are able to ask ministers or the Prime Minister during their
    question time session in each chamber.
  • These questions can be either oral or written.
  • Oral questions require an oral statement in chamber, whilst a written question mean the member wants a written reply.
87
Q

monarchy

A
  • The UK has a Monarch and a parliament. it is considered a constitutional Monarchy.
  • This means that, while the sovereign is head of state, this power is very much ceremonial and true power to amend
    new laws and pass legislation lies with our elected parliament and elected government of the day
88
Q

nature of bicameral Westinister Parliament

A
  • tw chambers: House of commons (elected MPs) & House of Lords (Unelected Peers) (bicameral)
  • This system helps to improve scrutiny of bills as the Lords can use their expertise to identify problems with potential new laws and they can suggest changes.
89
Q

role of House of Commons

A
  • 650 members
  • elected by general election
  • An MP represents an area within the UK (a constituency)
  • each MP part of a political party
  • The party that wins the most seats forms the government.
  • The leader of that party becomes Prime Minister and they appoint people to run the government departments
  • hosts debates regarding laws, national and international issues.
  • When debates take place, the government sit on the speaker’s right, the opposition on the left. - Ministers and shadow ministers sit on the front benchers.
  • Other MP’s belonging to these parties sit behind (backbench MP’s).
  • MP’s debate ‘motions’.
  • After discussions the Speaker will call for a division (a vote).
  • Each MP walks through an ‘Aye’ or ‘No’ division lobby and the numbers for and against are counted.
  • Result then announced to Speaker.
  • Most work of Parliaments is done in Committees.
  • A committee is made up MP’s belonging to different parties.
90
Q

role of House of Lords

A

There are around 800 Lords (also known as ‘Peers’.)
- They are unelected and not paid for their work, except expenses.
- Some of the Lords belong to political parties, others do not and these are known as cross-benchers.
- Since the House Of Lords Act 1999 abolished any more hereditary peers.
there are now 3 types of Lords:
- Life Peers (675 approx.): appointed by government.
- Hereditary Peers (90 approx.): Lord by birth. (Not allowed any more)
- Bishops and Archbishops (26)
- main function of the House of Lords is to debate and scrutinise bills from the Commons,
- suggest amendments
-scrutinise European legislation and introduce new bills.
- Most of the lords work is done in Committees.
- Many Lords are well known experts in certain areas and contribute knowledge and experience in committees.

91
Q

relationship between House of Commons & Lords

A
  • The House of Lords debates legislation, and has the power to amend or reject bills.
  • However, the power of the Lords to reject a bill passed by the House of Commons is severely restricted by the Parliament Acts.
  • house of lords = upper house
  • house of commons = lower house
92
Q

Education Policy Conservatives

A

increase overall school budget
- improve discipline and standars in the classroom
- increase support for teachers (pay, better discipline etc)
- increase amount of great schools
- invest in arts, music and sport

93
Q

Education Policy Labour

A
  • increase the # of apprenticeships in creative industries
  • abolish uni fees & reintroduce maintenance grants
  • 30hrs free childcare fir 2yr olds in england
  • end public sectot pay cap for teachers
  • restrict primary class sizes (30) & intro. free school meals for primary kids
94
Q

Education Policy Lib Dem.

A
  • spend extra on education, increase school budgets, & pupil premium
  • oppose grammar schools
  • end 1% cap on teacher pay rises
  • reinstate maintenance grants for poorest students
95
Q

Health policy Conservatives

A
  • increase NHS budget
  • include value of family home in means test for ppl receiving social care at home
  • cost of care to be capped ppl guaranteed to keep £100,000 of assets once care bill paid
  • allow deferral of care bills until after death to ensure no one is forced to sell the family home
96
Q

Health policy Labour

A
  • commit to giving extra funding to NHS
  • reverse privitisation and return heakth services into punlic cotrol
  • guarantee access to NHS treatment w/in 18 weeks and A&E within 4 hrs
  • lay the foundayions of a National Care Services
97
Q

Health Policy Lib Dem

A
  • Add 10 onto each rate of income tax and ring-fence the money for NHS and social care
  • ensure mental health care waiting time standards match thise in physical health care
  • ensure there are more nurses on hospital wards in the community
    -intro. welsh NHS whistle-blowing hotline
98
Q

immigration policy Tories.

A
  • reduce net migration to tens of thousands
  • double the immigration skills charge on companies employing migrant workers
  • increase minimum earnings threshold for family visa sponsorship
  • toughen requirements for student Visas and rules allowing them to stay anf work
99
Q

immigration policy labour

A
  • reinstate the migrant impact fund in areas where immigration has placed strain on public services
  • take students out of immigration numbers
  • recruit 500 more border guards
100
Q

Immigration policy Lib Dem.

A
  • allow high skilled immigration to support kry sectors of the economy
  • remove students from official migration stats
  • re-establish the ‘Dubs’ child refugee scheme
101
Q

speaker role

A
  • elected by fellow MPs
  • chair debates in House of Commons
  • Cheif officer & highest authority in the commons
  • speaker interprets the rules of the house
  • pwrs: bar MPs, decide who speaks, call ministers to the house to make statements
  • 3 deputy Speakers
  • once elected withdraw from active political role
  • Lord speaker is elected my Members of the House of Lord
  • impartial (politically), responsible for chairing debated in the Lords chamber and offer advice on procedure
  • current Speaker (Hoc as of 10/03/24) = Rt Hon Sir Lindsay Hoyle
  • current speaker (HoL as of 10/03/24) = John McFall, Baron McFall of Alcluith
102
Q

the cabinet

A
  • The minister
    and civil service in that department are responsible
    for drafting ‘bills’. The senior ministers have a place
    in the cabinet.
103
Q

Whip role

A
  • MPs or Members of the House of Lords appointed by each party in Parliament.
  • organise parliamentary business
  • ensure their party’s MPs turnout and vote according to party’s wishes
  • each week, whips send out a notice (AKA The Whip) to MPs and Lords detailing
    parliamentary business for the week & instructions how to vote
104
Q

Frontbench MP

A
  • sit on front benches nearest speaker in house of governments
  • gov. side where minisers sit
  • opposition side = shadow ministers who represent official opposition
105
Q

Backbench Mps

A
  • ordinary MP who holds no gov. or opposition post so therefore sits behind the front bench
    on the back bench
106
Q

black Rod Mp

A
  • senior officer in House of Lords
  • responsible for security
  • secretary to Lord Great Chamberlain & is responsible for & participares in major
    ceremonial events at the palace of westiminister (i.e State Opening of Parliament)
107
Q

Back bench business Committees

A

Backbench Business Committees can select motions for debate such as
e-petitions that have had over 100,000 signatures.

108
Q

select committees

A
  • small groups of MPs or members of the House of Lords that are set up to investigate a
    specific issue in detail or to perform a specific scrutiny role.
    (hold people accountable)
109
Q

legislative process

A
  1. Bill (Public, Private, Hybrid)
  2. 1st reading (made public, procedural event)
  3. 2nd reading (bill is first debated, details of bill cannot be changed)(HoC)
  4. Comitee stage (longest stage (generally) & most scrutiny)
  5. Report (consideration) stage (debate in Hoc, ammendments/new clauses can be proposed)
  6. 3rd reading (final opportunity to debate bill + vote of approval)
  7. House of Lords (needs approval, but unlikely not to get it)
  8. consideration of ammendments - bill sent back and forth until both houses agree
  9. royal assent (both houses agree/commons has used Parliament Act) monarch officially
    agrees to make bill part of parliament
110
Q

formation of gov - majority house of commons (And coalition)

A

After an election, the leader of the majority party will be invited by the Monarch to form a
government (or even a coalition government if there is no majority in the House of
Commons).
- The leader of that party becomes Prime Minister and they appoint people to run the
government departments (Defence, Home Office).
The minister and civil service in that department are responsible for drafting ‘bills’.
The senior ministers have a place in the cabinet.
Others may be appointed as junior ministers to work in departments.
The Prime Minister and Cabinet also called the Executive

111
Q

role of civil service

A

The Civil Service does the practical and administrative work of government.
It is co-ordinated and managed by the Prime Minister.
Civil Servants work alongside government to direct policies.
There are a strict set of rules in a code of conduct they must follow.
Around half of all civil servants provide services directly to the public, including paying benefits
and pensions, running employment services, staffing prisons and issuing driving licence

112
Q

civil service code (Hint: 4)

A

The Four Core Values outlined in the code are:
 ‘integrity’ is putting the obligations of public service above your own personal
interests
 ‘honesty’ is being truthful and open
 ‘objectivity’ is basing your advice and decisions on rigorous analysis of the
evidence
 ‘impartiality’ is acting solely according to the merits of the case and serving
equally well governments of different political persuasions

113
Q

ministries and agencies

A
  • 24 ministerial departments i.e Attorney General’s Office, education etc.
  • 422 agencies and other public bodies i.e Ofsted, CPS, DVLA
114
Q

different forms of government

A
  • communism
  • socialism
  • capitalism
  • liberalism
  • conservatism
  • Fascism
  • anarchism
  • monarchy
  • One Party State
  • oligarchy
  • Theocracy
  • dictatorship
115
Q

communism

A

-power to the people (in theory)
- classless system (in theory)
- all men = & sharing is caring (in theory)
- Cuba (example)

116
Q

socialism

A
  • profits shared
  • trade unions provide protection for workers
  • pwr to the ppl
117
Q

capitalism

A

Big business and economy all powerful
- low taxes
- work harder = reward (in theory)
- american dream (example)

118
Q

liberalism

A
  • believe in democracy & individual rights
  • gov. should worrk for the ppl
119
Q

conservatism

A
  • Gov keeps businesses in check
  • smart ppl run the country through a strong and stable gov.
120
Q

fascism

A

Nationalistic and autocratic leadership (dictatorship) gets thing done
- country before individual
- forcible suppression of opposition

121
Q

anarchism

A
  • no rules
  • no respect towards authority
  • freedom to do whatever (no rule of Law)
122
Q

monarchy

A
  • government by a family who have inherited the title of monarch (Saudia Arabia)
123
Q

One Party State

A
  • A state where only 1 political party exists and runs the ccountry & is often associated w/ communist forms of gov. i.e Vietnam
124
Q

oligarchy

A
  • government by a privileged few - normally self-appointed (kinda Russia)
125
Q

theocracy

A

where the religious leaders run the counrty
i.e. Iran

126
Q

dictatorship

A

rule by an individual/group w/ no democratic aspect, total control by 1 person/group
- North Korea

127
Q

citizens can contribute to parliamentary democracy & keep accountability

A

Taking part in a campaign.
 Raising funds.
 Raising awareness.
 Collecting names on a petition.
 Lobbying or writing letters.
 Meeting those you wish to
convince/influence to help you make a
change/improvement.
 Taking part in direct action/protests.
 Joining a pressure group
 Standing for election

128
Q

digital democracy

A
  • online voting in elections and referendums
  • online E-petitions
  • use of social media to publicie, organise, lobby and fundraise
  • political party broadcast being preformed on YouTube/Facebook
  • elected officials run twitter accounts (i,e Donald Trump)
  • allowed social movements to gain a wider suport base and more publicity
129
Q

actions citizens can take to hold those in power accountant

A
  • general election - vote for different representatives
  • lobby existing representatives
  • join a pressure group
  • campaign in the media
  • protest directly
  • start an online petition
130
Q

how citizen can contribute to public life by joining interest group or political party

A

Anyone can join a political party or even start their
own political party. A political party is a group of
people with similar ideas and viewpoints who
organise themselves to fight elections. By gaining
power they can make changes to the country so
that it fits with their viewpoints. The three main
political parties are the Conservative party, Labour
Party and the Liberal Democrat Party.

131
Q

campaigning

A

work in an organised and active way towards a particular goal

132
Q

advocacy

A

a person/group puts forward their ideas to support a certain position often on behalf of someone/group

133
Q

lobbying

A

a general term about making your views known to those whose opinions you wish to influence.
specific term = citizens approach their MP to raise an issue

134
Q

petition

A

collections of signatures indicating support for an agreed statement.
- shows the strength and support for the statement

135
Q

join a demonstration

A
  • these can take many forms from small groups to mass marches and rallies
136
Q

volunteering

A

freely offer to do something.

137
Q
A
138
Q
A