Voting Behaviour & Media Flashcards

1
Q

What are the arguments for social class remaining the main determinant of voting behaviour in UK?

A
  • people vote for parties according to their class

- different turnout between classes

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2
Q

What are the arguments against social class remaining the main determinant of voting behaviour in UK?

A
  • age
  • region
  • media
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3
Q

What are the voting statistics for the middle class (AB/C1) in 1979 and 2017?

A
  • 1979, 59% Conservative

- 2017, 47% Conservative

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4
Q

What are the voting statistics for the semi/unskilled working class (DE) in 1979 and 2017?

A
  • 1979, 59% Labour

- 2017, 38% Labour

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5
Q

Why do middle class vote Conservative?

A
  • they have more money and property

- Conservatives have lower tax policies

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6
Q

Why do working class vote Labour?

A
  • involved in trade unions and want be social care

- tax rich more which creates more for them

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7
Q

What was the turnout for the middle class (AB/C1) in 2017?

A
  • 2017, 69%
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8
Q

What was the turnout for the semi/unskilled working class (DE) in 2017?

A
  • 2017, 53%
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9
Q

Why do middle class turnout more?

A
- many of middle class are older people who are the most likely to vote because they have a strong sense of civic duty
-
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10
Q

Why do working class turnout less?

A
  • there is a growing sense of apathy that people feel there isn’t any point voting as they aren’t going to make a difference
  • people in DE class, tend to use social media, which has encouraged slacktivism
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11
Q

what were the voting statistics for 18-24 year olds in 2017?

A

62% voted Labour

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12
Q

what were the voting statistics for 65+ year olds in 2017?

A

61% voted Conservative

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13
Q

why do young vote labour?

A
  • tend to align more to their policies
  • lower tuition fees + better social care
  • also utilise social media more+better
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14
Q

why do old vote Conservative?

A
  • older people tend to have more money and property
  • this is because they have worked longer and have received inheritance
  • conservatives have lower tax policies
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15
Q

What is the regional divide that divides voting in England called?

A

north - south divide

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16
Q

In 2015, which seats in the south weren’t conservative?

A

London and a few other constituencies

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17
Q

In 2015, which seats in the north weren’t labour?

A

Yorkshire and Berwickshire

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18
Q

What does the region voting show is the key to winning elections?

A

winning swing seats in the opposite area

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19
Q

why do south vote Conservatives ?

A

they are richer - 2/3 of wealth of England in South East

20
Q

why do north vote Labour?

A

there a lot of heavy industries in north so a lot of works and trade unions

21
Q

how does the media persuade the public? (e.g. 1983)

A
  • 1983 Thatcher shown as professional + popular, Michael Foot as unpopular
22
Q

what are newspapers a useful relfection of?

A

a reflection of public opinion - the winning party at each recent election was backed by the majority of the press

23
Q

In 2010 + 2015, which was the only major paper to back Labour?

A

Daily mirror

24
Q

What percentage of respondents said TV was the most influential source in the run-up the 2015 election?

25
how many views did the first live TV debate get in 2010?
9.6M views
26
what has meant that focus on party leaders has increased?
de-alignment and media
27
how can leaders be accessible to the public ?
being telegenic and likeable
28
why do party leaders need to be trustworthy ?
voters need to believe what they say
29
what did gordon brown do in 2010?
called a woman 'bigoted'
30
what is associated with leadership appeal?
how voters see the parties
31
in the 1990s how were the conservatives portrayed
the nasty party of the rich
32
what did David Cameron do the try and change the image of the Conservatives ?
from 2005 he moved to change the image. | more sympathy with minorities & under-privileged
33
Was David Cameron successful in changing the image of the Conservatives ?
to a extent. | 2010 saw a 5% swing to the tories
34
what % of people said leadership had an impact in shaping their views?
38%
35
what is it important to do at TV debates?
address key questions and impress public
36
what shows TV debates are not wholly influential?
whilst Nick Clegg received an initial surge in the polls , as elections drew closer, dipped in polls again
37
how have newspaper sales decreased?
2015 sales 28% lower than in 2010
38
do newspapers always get it right?
No. 2017 papers backed tory landslide - sun "blue murder"
39
why are newspapers less important?
decreasing readership and they are heavily partisan
40
in which election did social media play its biggest role?
2017 election
41
who did Corbyn do an interview with? how many views?
JME and 350K views
42
which artists urged fans to vote Labour?
AJ tracey, novelist and stomzy
43
what % of vote did labour get for 18-24 y/o in 2017?
over 60%
44
how often did Theresa use FB ?
failed to use twitter or FB once to encourage young people to register to vote
45
what does increasing use of social media lead to?
increasing slacktivism
46
in 2014 Scottish referendum what % of tweets were supportive of yes campaign compared to actual result?
- 80% of tweets supportive of yes | - 45% people voted yes