what is a referendum
a popular vote on a single issue put to a public ballot by a government
why are referendums good for dictators
referendums in the UK
brexit referendum and labour mps
use of referendums in EU countries
british use of referendums + how does the executive gain power
UK referendums –> compared to general elections
describe referendum trends
political parties views on the EU
uses of referendums
information breakdown at ref
why are referendums popular
problems with referendums
problems with biased questioning with refs
why are referendums good for democracy
why are refs not good for democracy
referendums are the best form of democracy
yes
- direct democracy –> representative assembly that is held regularly to account by the electorate, enrich democracy
- can help solve problems with fptp, the executives power and the unelected HoL
- legitimise and entrench major const changes (eg devolution 1997)
- ensures public consultation: national/local gov can engage with or enthuse the public for a change (2004 NE ref), esp for coalitions that didnt have clear mandates from the people
- gives policies political legitimacy if there is large support for it
- allow the electorate to determine an outcome: govs can allow the electorate to make difficult decisions for them to avoid unpopularity, and promise this in their manifestos too (C promised eu ref in 2015 manifesto
- makes policy makers share proposals and explain issues to the electorate –> political education
- bridge gap between elections
- answer a specific question unlike elections, and give a mandate to an action (2010 all major parties said they would reform hol but didnt)
referendums arent the best form of democracy
political parties, elections and referendums act 2000
referendum use before 1997
referendum use from 1997 onwards
referendums that had unique purposes
when are referendums won
when voters agree with the issue
- outcomes are determined by popularity of issues (electorate may not understand the finer details but can make sense of complex issues and make rationalised decisions)
- 1998, maj of NI voters decided 25 years of troubles was enough and GFA was needed
- 1997: S decided for parl in edinb
- 2014: S indp aligned with views of the voters north of the border as regards independence
when voters are swayed by different issues
- AV as not well known, and Clegg preferred STV
- voters used campaign to make decisions and clegg was criticised for breaking manifesto agreement of removing uni tuition fees + opponents used that to discredit him and AV
- shows voters use a referendum to punish a government to send a party signals that they dislike their policies or distrust the gov
voters wish to punish a gov
- gov lose 1% of the support for every year it has been in office
- this tendency has been observed in british referendums –> T blair won all 4 refs in 1997-98 when he had spent 14 months in office, but he lost the NE ref in 2004, 7 years after L took office
- Cam lost 2016 ref for Brexit when he had been in office for6 years
factors associated with a yes vote