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The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - PowerPoint Presentation

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Uploaded On 2019-01-25

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland - PPT Presentation

Where Big Ben is the only thing marking forward progress Summary of Britains Significance First country with a limited monarchy Early 20 th century undoubtedly the worlds greatest superpower ID: 748253

parliament institutions government political institutions parliament political government cabinet people prime minister house party power policy linkage process connection

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Slide1

The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

Where Big Ben is the only thing marking forward progressSlide2
Slide3

Summary of Britain’s Significance

First country with a limited monarchy

Early 20

th

century, undoubtedly the world’s greatest superpowerEmpire is lost, but still retains global significance and influence

Part of EU, yet not fully embracing being “European”Slide4

Sovereignty, Authority, and Power

Sources

Long, very gradual tradition

Original belief in Divine Right of a family to rule gave monarchs power over people

Constitutionalism

No written constitution, but a long series of compacts and acts of Parliament has formed an understood “Constitution of the Crown”Slide5

Components of British “Constitution”

Rational-Legal Authority

Magna Carta (1215) – limited power of the monarch, guaranteed trial by jury, consent of Parliament to raise taxes

The Bill of Rights (1688) – expanded policymaking power of Parliament relative to the crown

Common Law – (opposite of code law) customs and precedent have strong bearing on the law in addition to written rulesSlide6

Historical Evolution of Political Traditions

The monarchy – once powerful, then limited, now powerless and ceremonialSlide7

Oh, woe is me!Slide8

Historical Evolution of Political Traditions

The monarchy – once powerful, then limited, now powerless and ceremonial

The Parliament

English Civil War (1640)

Glorious Revolution (1688)

Prime Minister becomes firm Chief Executive in the 18

th CenturyChallenges of the Industrial Revolution (18th and 19th Century)Diminishing Empire in the 20th and 21st Century

Strong welfare state became a burden, led to backlash of “Thatcherism”Slide9

Political Culture

Geography

Island

Small - Little fertile soil and short growing seasons

Temperate climate, but cold, chilly, and rainy

No major geographical barriers

Nationalism – great deal of pride in being “English”, or “Scottish”, or “Welsh”Insularity – feeling of separation from the rest of EuropeSlide10

Political Culture

Cleavages

Social Class

Not as strong as in the past, but still very significantSlide11

This photo was taken outside of Lord’s cricket grounds in 1937, and came to symbolize the class divide in EnglandSlide12

Political Culture

Cleavages

Social Class

Not as strong as in the past, but still very significant

Noblesse Oblige – a term for the upper classes’ willingness to embrace the welfare state and support the poor

Formerly duty of lords to care for serfs

Multi-NationalismLots of cultural homogeneity, but there are Scots, English, Welsh, Irish, Protestant, and Catholic living together and insisting on some local sovereigntySlide13

Political Culture

Cleavages

Ethnic Minorities (comprise less than 10% of British population)

Largely young, increasingly Muslim

Tight restrictions on immigration imposed by Thatcher kept in place by Labour Party

Many reports of unequal treatment by police, most minorities are disaffected and unemployed

Poorly integrated into British societySlide14

Institutions

Linkage Institutions – provide people with a connection to government and the political process

Political Parties

Originally Liberal (Whigs) vs. Conservative (Tories)

Emergence of voting rights for commoners gave rise to Labour vs. Conservative (still Tories)

Liberal Democrats emerged as a third party to compromise between Thatcher Conservatives on the right and Labour on the Left

Undermined by Blair’s “New Labour” movementSlide15

Ed Miliband

Nick Clegg

David CameronSlide16
Slide17

Institutions

Linkage Institutions – provide people with a connection to government and the political process

Elections

650 constituencies each elect an MP (Member of Parliament)

Party leaders run in “safe” constituencies, MPs often aren’t from their district

Winner-take-all, “First-Past-The-Post” – only winner gets to take office

Plurality – no majority necessaryParty with Parliamentary majority chooses the Prime Minister, who “forms a government”Slide18
Slide19
Slide20

Institutions

Linkage Institutions – provide people with a connection to government and the political process

Regional Elections

Devolution – Blair policy under Good Friday Agreement allowing regional parliaments to exercise some local authority

Proportional representation in Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales respective parliaments

Mayor of London is now directly elected for the first timeSlide21

Institutions

Linkage Institutions – provide people with a connection to government and the political process

Interest Groups

Pluralist system with some patterns of neo-corporatism

Quangos – gov. agencies act as interest advocates and policy advisors in many cases, fusing the relationship between interest group and stateSlide22

Institutions

Linkage Institutions – provide people with a connection to government and the political process

Media

Available media outlets reflect social class divisions in readership/viewership

BBC was created during the collectivist era to educate citizens on politics

Heavily regulated by government (ex. – no ads can be purchased for parties or candidates)Slide23

Institutions

State Institutions

Unitary state, power concentrated in London, devolved to regional parliaments in 1997

No “separation of powers” in central governmentSlide24

Institutions

Cabinet and Prime Minister, The Executive

Cabinet members are MPs chosen by Prime Minister, who is “first among equals”

Collective responsibility – cabinet members all share policy responsibility, and members resign if they do not support decisions of the PMSlide25

Institutions

Parliament, The Legislature

House of Commons, the “Lower House”

Holds all meaningful power in Britain

Majority party chooses PM, makes all policy

Minority becomes “loyal opposition”, sitting directly across the aisle during debate

Shadow Cabinet – group of minority party MPs who would be in cabinet if they were the majorityBackbenchers – MPs who are less influential sit further back in ParliamentSlide26

Backbenchers

Backbenchers

Speaker of the House

Prime Minister and Cabinet

Shadow Cabinet

Other minority partiesSlide27

And now… Question Time for the Prime Minister!Slide28

Institutions

Parliament, The Legislature

House of Commons, the “Lower House”

Vote of Confidence

If a key issue is brought up for a vote and the PM and cabinet lose, they resign and call for new elections immediately by tradition

The House of Lords, the “Upper House”

The original parliament, now nearly meaninglessCan delay legislation, debate technicalities, and add amendmentsAmendments may be deleted in Commons by a majority voteSlide29

Institutions

Parliament, The Legislature

House of Commons, the “Lower House”

Vote of Confidence

If a key issue is brought up for a vote and the PM and cabinet lose, they resign and call for new elections immediately by tradition

The House of Lords, the “Upper House”

567 “life peers,” appointed by PM for achievement and service to Britain92 “hereditary peers,” whose seats were passed down through family connectionsBlair and Labour substantially reduced number of hereditary peeragesSlide30

The Sovereign

Supporters of the government

Supporters of the Opposition Party

Neutral MembersSlide31

Institutions

The Bureaucracy

Powerful force in policy formation, implementation

Bureaucrats are experts, ministers are likely not, so ministers take direction from top bureaucrats informally

Bureaucrats stay in place from government to governmentSlide32

Institutions

The Judiciary

Limited in authority compared to U.S.

Parliamentary sovereignty – principle that Parliament has the final say

Courts can strike acts of government that violate common law or previous acts of Parliament, but rule very narrowly

May not impose “judicial review” on Parliament, PM, or cabinet

Judges are usually independent, apoliticalExpected to resign at age 75Highest court formerly the Law Lords, but a new Supreme Court has been created (2009)Slide33

3 Major Steps in the British Judiciary

District Courts

High Courts

Supreme Court

Appeals

Appeals