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politics essay plans paper q1
explain and analyse three ways in which judicial independence is upheld in the UK - ANS security of 
tenure, guaranteed salary and the JAC 
explain and analyse the ways how the establishment of the supreme court has increased the judiciaries 
independence - ANS independent appointment, security of tenure and high level training 
"the british judiciary is becoming increasingly more politicised" - ANS judges rule on the merit of law not 
its application, article 50 and johnson's prorogation of ...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 3 pages •
explain and analyse three ways in which judicial independence is upheld in the UK - ANS security of 
tenure, guaranteed salary and the JAC 
explain and analyse the ways how the establishment of the supreme court has increased the judiciaries 
independence - ANS independent appointment, security of tenure and high level training 
"the british judiciary is becoming increasingly more politicised" - ANS judges rule on the merit of law not 
its application, article 50 and johnson's prorogation of ...
politics essay plans QUESTIONS WITH CERTIFIED ANSWERS
is direct democracy superior to representative democracy - 
direct democracy is the only pure form of democracy-first agree point -This is because it ensures 
that people only have to obey laws that they make themselves. Popular participation/sovereignty in 
government is the very key of freedom: it is how the people determine their collective destiny, their 
'general will'. 
majority have a say/are represented 
e.g. Scottish independence referendum-84% turnout 
UK membership of the EU-72% 
on...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 35 pages •
is direct democracy superior to representative democracy - 
direct democracy is the only pure form of democracy-first agree point -This is because it ensures 
that people only have to obey laws that they make themselves. Popular participation/sovereignty in 
government is the very key of freedom: it is how the people determine their collective destiny, their 
'general will'. 
majority have a say/are represented 
e.g. Scottish independence referendum-84% turnout 
UK membership of the EU-72% 
on...
politics essay plans RATED A+
What themes would you use for does FPTP need to be replaced? - participation 
representation 
adversial vs consensus politics 
what themes would you use for the supreme court is too powerful? - advisory 
power of media 
representation 
what themes would you use for evaluate whether representative democracy works well in the UK? - 
representation 
accountability 
participation 
what themes would you use for evaluate whether fptp produces a strong and stable govt - policy 
making 
participation 
...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 5 pages •
What themes would you use for does FPTP need to be replaced? - participation 
representation 
adversial vs consensus politics 
what themes would you use for the supreme court is too powerful? - advisory 
power of media 
representation 
what themes would you use for evaluate whether representative democracy works well in the UK? - 
representation 
accountability 
participation 
what themes would you use for evaluate whether fptp produces a strong and stable govt - policy 
making 
participation 
...
Politics essay plans
'Evaluate the view that the only political parties that matter in our political system is labour and 
conservative' - INACCURATE - ANS 1) The two parties have struggled to deal with many of the issues 
that smaller parties have raise. UKIP - fringe nationalist party started in 1991, whose main objective was 
Britain's membership in the EU. It grew to a sense of dissatisfaction with the way the three main parties 
would have to accommodate to the quickening pace of European Intergration. In 20...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 8 pages •
'Evaluate the view that the only political parties that matter in our political system is labour and 
conservative' - INACCURATE - ANS 1) The two parties have struggled to deal with many of the issues 
that smaller parties have raise. UKIP - fringe nationalist party started in 1991, whose main objective was 
Britain's membership in the EU. It grew to a sense of dissatisfaction with the way the three main parties 
would have to accommodate to the quickening pace of European Intergration. In 20...
politics essay questions to try
evaluate the view that pressure groups, think tanks and lobbyists have little impact on government 
decisions (3) - funds, sympathy of government, counter groups 
evaluate the view that uk democracy is in crisis (2) - participation, trust 
evaluate the extent to which different electoral systems produce different outcomes (3) - fptp, 
ams, stv 
evaluate the claim that the arguments in favour of referendums outweigh those against (3) - 
democracy, division, developmental democracy 
evaluate the ...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 3 pages •
evaluate the view that pressure groups, think tanks and lobbyists have little impact on government 
decisions (3) - funds, sympathy of government, counter groups 
evaluate the view that uk democracy is in crisis (2) - participation, trust 
evaluate the extent to which different electoral systems produce different outcomes (3) - fptp, 
ams, stv 
evaluate the claim that the arguments in favour of referendums outweigh those against (3) - 
democracy, division, developmental democracy 
evaluate the ...
Politics essay
Paragraph 1 - Modernisation 
Modernisation - Independece of the judiciary 
Independence of the Judiciary - Constitutional reform act 2005 
Constitutional reform act 2005 - Supreme Court established, senior judiciary is genuinely 
independent of government - brings UK closer to modern conceptions of democracy 
Paragraph 2 - Lack of democratisation 
Lack of democratisation - Failure to significantly reform the House of Lords 
Failure to significantly reform the House of Lords - House of Lords act ...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 2 pages •
Paragraph 1 - Modernisation 
Modernisation - Independece of the judiciary 
Independence of the Judiciary - Constitutional reform act 2005 
Constitutional reform act 2005 - Supreme Court established, senior judiciary is genuinely 
independent of government - brings UK closer to modern conceptions of democracy 
Paragraph 2 - Lack of democratisation 
Lack of democratisation - Failure to significantly reform the House of Lords 
Failure to significantly reform the House of Lords - House of Lords act ...
Politics Mock Exam - Essay Plans
12 Mark - Analyse the different legislative power of the UK Parliament and US Congress (3 Points) - 
1) US Congress has much more legislative power than UK (Structural) 
2) Legislative Power in the USA is shared equally between two chambers, whilst in the UK the House of 
Lords is very secondary compared to the Commons (Structural) 
3)- In the UK, the head of the executive, the PM, can sit in the Legislature, in the USA, the President 
cant. 
US Congress has much more legislative power than UK ...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 6 pages •
12 Mark - Analyse the different legislative power of the UK Parliament and US Congress (3 Points) - 
1) US Congress has much more legislative power than UK (Structural) 
2) Legislative Power in the USA is shared equally between two chambers, whilst in the UK the House of 
Lords is very secondary compared to the Commons (Structural) 
3)- In the UK, the head of the executive, the PM, can sit in the Legislature, in the USA, the President 
cant. 
US Congress has much more legislative power than UK ...
Politics Paper 1 Bible. (50-60ish Essays). Must learn all!
10 essay plans democ participation. 
next slides: 
Should voting be compulsory ? 
......YES- Increased participation. 
e.g Australia had a declining voting turnout-60% 1924, however has remained a steady 90% since. 
NO 
-Violates individual freedoms- Therefore limiting validity behind vote. 
-Worthless voting. 
YES 
Greater legitimacy- Labour 05 only had 22% of electorate, compulsory voting would sort out current 
turnout crisis and increase legitimacy. 
NO 
Cosmetic democracy, 
compulsory votin...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 26 pages •
10 essay plans democ participation. 
next slides: 
Should voting be compulsory ? 
......YES- Increased participation. 
e.g Australia had a declining voting turnout-60% 1924, however has remained a steady 90% since. 
NO 
-Violates individual freedoms- Therefore limiting validity behind vote. 
-Worthless voting. 
YES 
Greater legitimacy- Labour 05 only had 22% of electorate, compulsory voting would sort out current 
turnout crisis and increase legitimacy. 
NO 
Cosmetic democracy, 
compulsory votin...
Politics Paper 1 Essay Plans RATED A+
Voting age lowered to 16 in favour - ANS Politically active sooner 
Younger generation are better informed 
Being able to vote on issues that affect them Demographic ignored (67% turnout 2017) 
Voting age lowered to 16 not in favour - ANS Uneducated/lack maturity 
No evidence to show it would increase participation 
Fewer countries allow u18s 
Other things unable to do 
"Participation crisis" yes - ANS Turnout in elections are low, decreasing since 1997 
Membership of parties have declined 
Di...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 6 pages •
Voting age lowered to 16 in favour - ANS Politically active sooner 
Younger generation are better informed 
Being able to vote on issues that affect them Demographic ignored (67% turnout 2017) 
Voting age lowered to 16 not in favour - ANS Uneducated/lack maturity 
No evidence to show it would increase participation 
Fewer countries allow u18s 
Other things unable to do 
"Participation crisis" yes - ANS Turnout in elections are low, decreasing since 1997 
Membership of parties have declined 
Di...
Politics Paper 1 Essay Plans RATED A+
Voting age lowered to 16 in favour - ANS Politically active sooner 
Younger generation are better informed 
Being able to vote on issues that affect them Demographic ignored (67% turnout 2017) 
Voting age lowered to 16 not in favour - ANS Uneducated/lack maturity 
No evidence to show it would increase participation 
Fewer countries allow u18s 
Other things unable to do 
"Participation crisis" yes - ANS Turnout in elections are low, decreasing since 1997 
Membership of parties have declined 
Di...
- Exam (elaborations)
- • 3 pages •
Voting age lowered to 16 in favour - ANS Politically active sooner 
Younger generation are better informed 
Being able to vote on issues that affect them Demographic ignored (67% turnout 2017) 
Voting age lowered to 16 not in favour - ANS Uneducated/lack maturity 
No evidence to show it would increase participation 
Fewer countries allow u18s 
Other things unable to do 
"Participation crisis" yes - ANS Turnout in elections are low, decreasing since 1997 
Membership of parties have declined 
Di...