17 results
Search Results
2. Lords Reform: Some Inconvenient Truths.
- Author
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Farrington, Conor
- Subjects
COALITION governments ,BRITISH politics & government ,LEGITIMACY of governments ,BICAMERALISM - Abstract
The failure of the Coalition government's attempt to reform the House of Lords has by no means taken further reform off the political agenda. The commitment to installing an elected upper chamber is still widely shared across the political spectrum, on the basis of perceptions that the House of Lords lacks democratic legitimacy. Against this view, this article considers recent literature upon non-electoral representation, deliberative democracy and bicameralism, which together highlight the possibility of an unelected second chamber playing a legitimate role within a wider (democratic) system of government. The article then considers the House of Lords from this perspective, reflecting on changes in the upper chamber since the 1999 reforms and evaluating its role within the wider political system. The paper concludes by suggesting that political debate should focus upon small-scale reforms to ensure that the Lords becomes more effective, representative and legitimate, within the constraints of its present role. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Avoiding Another 'Squatter in Downing Street' Controversy: The Need to Improve the Caretaker Conventions before the 2015 General Election.
- Author
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SCHLEITER, PETRA and BELU, VALERIE
- Subjects
POLITICAL systems ,BRITISH politics & government ,POLITICAL participation ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
In the UK the rules governing caretaker situations have historically been underspecified. The UK's constitutional traditions, such as prime ministerial discretion to time elections and its two-party system, have in the past limited the frequency and duration of caretaker periods. However, the recently lengthened election timetable, new constraints on the executive introduced by the Fixed-term Parliaments Act (2011), and a decline in the dominance of the two largest parties are raising the risk that the UK will experience caretaker periods more often and for longer stretches of time. In this paper, we offer an analysis of the UK's current caretaker provisions and conclude that the existing conventions are insufficiently detailed and can render such periods problematic and controversy-prone. Important lessons, we suggest, can be learned from reforms in other Westminster systems, and from the caretaker rules of other countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Constitutional Storm in a Teacup? Delegated Legislation, the House of Lords and the Inadequacies of the Strathclyde Review.
- Author
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Blackwell, Joel
- Subjects
BRITISH politics & government ,TAX credits ,LEGISLATION - Abstract
The article talks about the 2015 refusal by Great Britain's House of Lords to approve a tax credit statutory instrument that threatened to create a constitutional stand-off. Topics discussed include a review over the power of the Lords over statutory instruments called the Strathclyde review, parliamentary committees' reports in response to the review, and a study on the delegated legislation system in Great Britain.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Grey Power: Towards a Political Economy of Older Voters in the UK.
- Author
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Chrisp, Joe and Pearce, Nick
- Subjects
VOTERS ,VOTING ,VOTER turnout ,BRITISH politics & government ,OLDER people - Abstract
The impact of age on voting behaviour and political outcomes has become an issue of increasing interest, particularly in the UK. Age divides in voter turnout and political preferences have led to claims that age is the 'new class'. In this article, we contrast existing 'cultural backlash' and political economy explanations of the age divide in politics, and challenge the view that older people are predominantly 'left behind', culturally or economically. We show that older people have distinct material interests, related to housing wealth and pensions' income, that are visible in their political preferences. We argue for the development of a new political economy of age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Postliberalism: The New Centre Ground of British Politics.
- Author
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Pabst, Adrian
- Subjects
LIBERALISM ,EQUALITY ,IDENTITY politics ,BRITISH withdrawal from the European Union, 2016-2020 ,DISTRIBUTIVE justice ,BRITISH politics & government - Abstract
Brexit and support for anti-establishment insurgencies suggest that British politics is moving away from the old left-right opposition towards a new divide between the defenders and detractors of progressive liberalism. As this article suggests, progressive liberalism differs significantly from both classical and new liberalism. It fuses free-market economics with social egalitarianism and identity politics. Both the hard left and the radical right reject this combination and want to undo a number of liberal achievements. British politics is also moving in a postliberal direction. In the economy, postliberalism signals a shift from rampant market capitalism to economic justice and reciprocity. In society, it signals a shift from individualism and egalitarianism to social solidarity and fraternal relations. And politically, it signals a shift from the minority politics of vested interests and balkanised group identity to a majority politics based on a balance of interests, shared identity and the embedding of state and market in the intermediary institutions of civil society. This article argues that postliberalism is redefining Britain's political centre ground in an age where neither progressive liberalism nor reactionary anti-liberalism commands majority support. First, it charts the ascendancy of progressive liberalism over the past quarter-century. Second, it contrasts anti-liberal reactions with postliberal alternatives, before exploring why earlier iterations of postliberalism failed to gain traction with the political mainstream. Third, it provides a discussion and critique of Theresa May's postliberal conservatism, notably the tension between free-market globalisation and free trade, on the one hand, and the support for national industry and the indigenous working class, on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A Bonfire of the Regulations, or Business as Usual? The UK Labour Market and the Political Economy of Brexit.
- Author
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Coulter, Steve and Hancké, Bob
- Subjects
ECONOMICS & politics ,EMPLOYMENT ,LABOR market ,INDUSTRIAL relations ,CAPITALISM ,BRITISH politics & government ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,REFERENDUM - Abstract
Employment and labour market regulation initially appeared as one of the solid red lines in the UK's renegotiation of the country's place in the EU. The basic argument is that the UK's more deregulated labour market would sit uneasily in the more organised models, based on statutory instruments or collective bargaining, found on the continent. While there is a legitimate problem here, EU employment regulations appear manageable from the point of view of business, while unions see them as important tools for socially responsible economic restructuring. Most of UK employment case law is now deeply entangled with EU law; labour market regulations have, on the whole, become part of the way of doing business in the Single Market; and a simple cost-benefit analysis appears impossible because some costs are not quantifiable and the costs of others are reduced when taken as a bundle. Labour unions agree that transposition of European law needs to be done taking into account local sensitivities, while internationally oriented companies do not see EU regulations on the whole as detrimental to business. Importantly, though, the costs and benefits of EU employment regulations are not symmetrically distributed across different companies: large companies are better able to reap the rewards and accommodate the costs of operating in the Single Market than smaller companies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Buying into Myths: Free Movement of People and Immigration.
- Author
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Thielemann, Eiko and Schade, Daniel
- Subjects
FREEDOM of movement ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,BRITISH politics & government ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,REFERENDUM - Abstract
The way in which free movement of people has become the central issue of the British government's renegotiation and referendum campaign on the UK's relationship with the European Union ( EU) risks obfuscating at least three central issues: why immigrants are coming to the UK; what impact EU migrants are having on the UK; and what can be done to effectively regulate such inflows. It is, however, not just the eurosceptics and the British government, but also 'in campaigners' and other EU member states, who risk perpetuating a number of widely held misconceptions about free movement and immigration for political reasons. Buying into such myths risks undermining attempts to have a more honest and more evidence-based debate about immigration and migrant integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. A Changing UK in a Changing Europe: The UK State between European Union and Devolution.
- Author
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Minto, Rachel, Hunt, Jo, Keating, Michael, and Mcgowan, Lee
- Subjects
BRITISH politics & government ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,CONSTITUTIONALISM ,DECENTRALIZATION in government ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
Two issues currently dominate the UK's constitutional landscape: the UK's membership of the European Union ( EU) on the one hand; and the unsettled constitutional settlements between the UK and the devolved administrations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland on the other. This article considers these two issues in concert. It stresses the distinct relationships between the EU and the devolved territories within the UK-concerning both devolved and non-devolved policy areas-highlighting the salience of a devolved perspective in any consideration of UK- EU relations. Despite its importance, sensitivity to this has been lacking. The article explores the implications of a 'Leave' or 'Remain' outcome on the future of the internal territorial dynamics within the UK. While there are too many unknowns to be certain of anything, that there will be knock-on effects is, however, beyond doubt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. UK Euroscepticism and the Brexit Referendum.
- Author
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Vasilopoulou, Sofia
- Subjects
EUROSCEPTICISM ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,BRITISH politics & government ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,REFERENDUM ,FREEDOM of movement ,VOTING - Abstract
This article shows that key to understanding the referendum outcome are factors such as a profoundly eurosceptic public, high levels of citizen uncertainty, divided mainstream political parties on the EU and lack of unity within the 'Leave' campaign. The Brexit referendum is more than just about domestic issues and government approval. Utilitarian concerns related to economic evaluations of EU integration coupled with support of or opposition to EU freedom of movement are very likely to influence vote choice. Those campaigns that focus on rational utilitarian arguments about the costs and benefits related to EU membership as a whole but also to EU freedom of movement are expected to swing voters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Is Britain Facing a Crisis of Democracy?
- Author
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Baldini, Gianfranco
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,POWER (Social sciences) ,BRITISH politics & government ,SOCIAL conditions in Great Britain ,POLITICAL trust (in government) - Abstract
This article contributes to the debate in this journal about the state of British democracy. I criticise the tendency to use a 'demand-supply' dichotomy in interpreting the strong distrust experienced by institutions and politicians, and especially the idea that all the blame for current problems is to be attributed to the inadequateness of the British political tradition (BPT). By referring to international data on democracy and to recent British trends in both public attitudes and institutional innovations, a more nuanced picture on the state of democracy emerges. I argue that the BPT is not incompatible with incremental changes that have already introduced innovations in the way politics works in Britain today, and that the task of empowering citizens is one of the most delicate aspects in this process of innovation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. PCC Elections as a 'Failed Experiment': What Lessons can be Learned?
- Author
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Kirkland, Christopher
- Subjects
LAW enforcement ,SELECTION & appointment of police ,ELECTIONS ,BRITISH politics & government ,VOTER turnout ,MASS media & politics - Abstract
The low turnout of the 2012 police and crime commissioner ( PCC) elections have led to questions surrounding their legitimacy and have even led to the former Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg describing the elections-elections his party helped to introduce-as a 'failed experiment'. Despite this, the election of a majority Conservative government in May 2015 appears to offer some longevity to the role of police and crime commissioners and cements next year's PCC elections in the political diary. Concerns in the immediate aftermath of the elections focused upon the costs of the elections. In this article I offer some suggestions as to what lessons could be learned from this experiment and, through exploring the attitudes of voters, political parties and the media, suggest that we can learn four lessons: (1) that spoilt ballots cannot be ignored; that (2) political parties and (3) the media's attitudes toward elections are important in encouraging people to vote; and (4) that high numbers of independent candidates cannot simply be welcomed at times of elections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Goodbye to All That.
- Author
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Mitchell, Austin
- Subjects
RETIREMENT of legislators ,SOCIAL democracy ,NEOLIBERALISM ,BRITISH politics & government ,UNEMPLOYMENT - Abstract
This article is the retirement reflections of an MP of thirty-eight year's standing. The story is mainly one of the decline of the Commons, a decline in the number of 'big beasts' and in the calibre of members and the quality of debates to the level of five-minute harangues and the custard pie-throwing of Prime Minister's Question Time. The House has lost its functions of staging the national debate and checking the executive to the media but has gained a new role as a national audit of government's performance and policies through the select committee system. MPs are working harder. Fewer now have outside jobs. They are more focused on their constituencies and though they have fewer powers there, and nationally more and better staff, they also have less respect and less influence. Personally, the end of what has been a long-fighting national retreat from social democracy has been a rear-guard action against the emergence of a colder, harder, neoliberal world. Retirement means relegation to watching that from the sidelines, not ringside. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. National Identity or National Interest? Scottish, English and Welsh Attitudes to the Constitutional Debate.
- Author
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Henderson, Ailsa, Jeffery, Charlie, and Liñeira, Robert
- Subjects
SCOTTISH independence referendum ,CONSTITUTIONAL law ,SCOTTISH national character ,NATIONAL interest ,WELSH people ,BRITISH politics & government ,CONSTITUTIONAL reform ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) - Abstract
This article analyses political attitudes to the union in England, Scotland and Wales after the Scottish independence referendum. Using public opinion data, we explore constitutional preferences and perceptions of national grievance, before examining the role that national identity plays in structuring preferences. Our evidence shows that considerable demand exists for nationally demarcated forms of government within the UK, although these constitutional preferences do not translate in support for policy diversity across the UK. We also find evidence that these constitutional preferences relate closely to national identity, but relate also to appeals to national interest. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Scotland's Future Political System.
- Author
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Cairney, Paul
- Subjects
SCOTTISH politics & government ,POLITICAL reform ,LEGISLATIVE bodies ,BRITISH politics & government ,GOVERNMENT policy ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
Debates on Scottish constitutional reform go hand in hand with discussions of political reform. Its reformers use the image of 'old Westminster' to describe 'control freakery' within government and an adversarial political system. Many thought that the Scottish political system could diverge from the UK, to strengthen the parliamentary system, introduce consensus politics and further Scotland's alleged social and democratic tradition. Yet the experience of devolution suggests that Holyrood and Westminster politics share key features. Both systems are driven by government, making policy in 'communities' involving interest groups and governing bodies, with parliaments performing a limited role and public participation limited largely to elections. The Scottish government's style of policy-making is distinctive, but new reforms are in their infancy and their effects have not been examined in depth. In this context, the article identifies Scotland's ability to make and implement policy in a new way, based on its current trajectory rather than the hopes of reformers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Coalition and the Politics of the English Question.
- Author
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Hayton, Richard
- Subjects
COALITION governments ,BRITISH politics & government ,CAMPAIGN debates ,CONSTITUTIONAL reform - Abstract
For much of the 2010-15 Parliament the English Question was not a conspicuous feature of political debate in the UK. However, the issue of English votes for English laws (EvfEl) was thrust to centre stage by Prime Minister David Cameron in the aftermath of the Scottish independence referendum, when he announced that fulfilment of the promise of further devolution to Scotland must be accompanied by an answer to the West Lothian Question at Westminster. This article analyses these events and explores their possible consequences. It argues that a reform of parliamentary procedures along the lines outlined in the report of the McKay Commission looks increasingly likely, but that this will not mark a resolution of the broader English Question, and the future of the Union remains in doubt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Corbyn as an Organisational Phenomenon: A Response to Steve Richards.
- Author
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Russell, Meg
- Subjects
POLITICAL parties ,POLITICAL leadership ,BRITISH politics & government ,HISTORY - Abstract
The article discusses Labour Party in Great Britain and its leader Jeremy Corbyn. Topics discussed include political leadership, political parties and elections in Great Britain. Other topics which includes Social Democratic Party (SDP), democracy in political parties and Great Britain's political history are also discussed.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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