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Summary Election revision notes

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A complete revision summary of all the theories, facts and examples for UK electoral systems.

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Summarized whole book?
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Which chapters are summarized?
Chapter 3
Uploaded on
June 8, 2017
Number of pages
10
Written in
2016/2017
Type
Summary

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Chapter 2: Electoral Systems

Functions:

Forming Government
 Transfer power from one government to the next
- e.g. the 2015 election led to a change in government from the Conservative-Lib
Dem coalition to a Conservative majority government.
 Formed from the majority party
 Leader of the majority party becomes PM
 PM appoints the ministers to the cabinet
 In the UK, the results of elections are usually very clear (apart from February 1974
and May 2010) so a government is formed the day after the election.
- If the result is unclear, negotiations take place meaning that the formation of a
government can take longer.

Ensuring Representation
 Link MP to their constituencies
1. Ensure constituents’ concerns are articulated and addressed in parliament
 e.g. as a Green MP, Caroline Lucas represents the interests of the people of
Brighton in the House of Commons, example constituents concern over
fracking
2. General link between government and public opinion
 Elections make politicians accountable and removable
 People therefore have the final control over who and how the country is governed
 Participation of the public in their representative democracy
- E.g. Liberal Democrats were held accountable for their broken promises over
tuition fees in the 2015 election when they were reduced to 8 MPs.

 5 years’ gap in between elections are too long
 dispute over how politicians can and should represent the people

Upholding Legitimacy – maintain stability
 voting – obligation to obey and respect the government they chose
- consent to being governed
 holding the MPs accountable
 maintaining political stability.

 low turnout – questionable mandate
- apathy, disillusioned withholding ‘consent’
 falling support – declining popular satisfaction

Example: two functions of elections
• They are a means of providing choice for the electorate – elections are contested by
different parties who offer differing programmes if they are placed in power.
Elections serve to identify and secure that choice.
• Elections are devices which allow governments to be fairly removed and to form.
They provide legitimacy.

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This is my last year in school before uni (UCL or Durham), so I wanted to sell my notes to fund my gap year and help other students. The notes I made really helped me to organise the facts and theories in a way that is easier to understand and read than some of the textbooks. If you want the notes at a cheaper price, please just message me, I know money doesn't come easily for us students. Good luck and work hard :)

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