Labour and Conservative are the only parties that matter Flashcards
(9 cards)
Question
Evaluate the view that Labour and Conservatives are the only two parties that matter in UK politics.
Factors
- General elections
- Media attention
- Outside of Westminster
Judgement
Labour and Conservatives ARE the only two parties that matter.
Weaker argument general elections
→ Between 1974 and 2015 the Liberal Democrats secured around 20% of votes case and held a significant number of seats in the House of Commons.
→ In 2010 the Liberal Democrats formed a central part of government - the “Quad”.
→ In two of the four election between 2010 and 2019 the elections did not deliver a majority government for one of the two “main” parties (COUNTER - the issue of Brexit played a role).
Stronger argument general elections
→ All governments since 1945 have been led by a Labour or Tory PM.
→ Since 1970 the combined Tory and Labour vote has never fallen beneath 67%.
→ FPTP clearly favours the two main parties - 2024 Labour only received 34% of the national vote share but gained 411 seats (Reform had 14% of the vote and only gained 5 seats in Westminster).
→ The funding that the two main parties get means they are much more likely to be able to dominate in UK GEs: In 2024 Labour had £9.5 million donated to the campaign, in 2019 the Tories had £19.4 million donated.
Weaker argument media attention
→ Nigel Farage is a key public figure and whichever party he is campaigning for often receives much media coverage: the Brexit Party and Reform UK - both received a lot of coverage with Farage as the leader.
→ Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davies received much media coverage in the run up to the 2024 General Election because of the publicity stunts he was pulling - bungee jumping, paddleboarding.
→ In 2010 the first TV debate culminated in the Lib Dem leader Nick Clegg getting a lot of media attention - “I agree with Nick” and Cleggmania.
Stronger argument media attention
→ When smaller parties receive attention it is usually to do with the leader rather than the party itself - Farage, Clegg, Davies.
→ The Labour and Conservatives parties are the ones getting attention even if it is scrutiny - Liz Truss and the lettuce, Partygate, the Iraq War and financial crash.
→ The only leader who appear on TV debates tend to be Labour and Conservative - sometimes smaller parties such as the Lib Dems (recently Reform) get on the debate but it mainly to two main parties who can speak.
→ Print media only focuses on the two main parties and have strong political affiliations - The Sun, Mail and Times (Tory), Guardian and Telegraph (Labour).
Weaker argument outsider of Westminster
→ Since the discussion of independence the SNP have dominated - in 2010 Labour had 41/59 seats but in 2015 SNP had 56/59 seats.
→ In Northern Ireland Sinn Fein and the DUP are the only parties that have formed a government since devolution in 1998 (COUNTER - it had to be this way because of power sharing agreement to end the conflict in Northern Ireland).
→ 2025 local elections: Reform has more councillors than Labour and Conservative combined - 677 Vs 417.
Stronger argument outsider of Westminster
→ Whilst Reform did gain seats in the 2025 local election the highest turnout at any location was 41%.
→ In the Welsh Senedd Labour has always been part of the Welsh government whether that been as a majority, minority or coalition government - suggesting outside of Westminster Labour is still more important than other parties.
→ In Scotland prior to independence discussions Labour was part of the Scottish government twice - forming coalitions.
→ There has only ever been Conservative or Labour Mayors of London: Ken Livingstone (elected independent but joined Labour), Boris Johnson (Conservative) and Sadiq Khan (Labour).