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Chapter 4: Great Britain. Thinking About Britain Key Questions Gradualism – the belief that change should occur slowly or incrementally. Relative.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 4: Great Britain. Thinking About Britain Key Questions Gradualism – the belief that change should occur slowly or incrementally. Relative."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 4: Great Britain

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4 Thinking About Britain Key Questions Gradualism – the belief that change should occur slowly or incrementally. Relative economic decline and its political implications The end of collectivist consensus; Margaret Thatcher’s policies and legacy Impact of “New Labour” and Tony Blair

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6 Thinking About Britain The basics –The Kingdoms –The cleavages Geographic Religious Economic Social class

7 The Evolution of the British State Sequential, not simultaneous crises –Building the nation state –Defining the role of religion –Establishing liberal democracy –Industrial revolution The broad sweep of British history –More and more democracy –Persistence of class divisions The collectivist consensus – leaders from both parties agreed on a variety of social policy goals; the golden era of British politics

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10 British Political Culture The civic culture and collectivist years Widespread sense of legitimacy Tolerance of diversity Nationalism

11 British Political Culture The politics of protest: Toward an uncivic culture? –Confrontational political participation and civic unrest; racism; militancy of unions; clash between the left and the right created a far more polarized political system, but the majority of the populace did not take part and grew frustrated with the confrontational politics.

12 British Political Culture The civic culture holds –Thatcher’s stand against the left helped sharply reduce the political tensions that seemed to imperil traditional British institutions and practices. –The analysts who predicted the end of the civic culture overstated the dangers the protest movements posed; revolution was never on the horizon. –Dissatisfaction with the recent governments had not translated into dissatisfaction with the regime.

13 British Political Culture Will there always be a Britain? Polarization and catch-all parties Devolution Cultural and racial diversity European Union

14 Political Participation The Conservatives Pragmatic Noblesse oblige Organization Thatcherism and after Labour Pragmatism Crisis-motivated radicalization Defeat-motivated moderation Blair’s waning popularity

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17 Political Participation The Liberal Democrats – merger of the Liberals and the Social Democrats (SDP); the number three party and in some ways the most radical Minor Parties – the rise in Scottish, Welsh, and Irish nationalism has led to moderate growth in support for regional parties. The British electorate Interest groups –Little of the lobbying one finds in the U.S. –Interests groups focus their attention on decision makers: ministers, party leaders, and senior civil servants; try to influence the drafting of a bill, not how it is dealt with on the House floor. –The TUC with Labour and the Confederation of British Industry with Conservatives wield disproportionate influence –Corporatist arrangements during collectivist years; Thatcher government effectively froze the unions out of the decision making.

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19 The British State: Enduring Myths & Changing Realities Bagehot’s dignified and real parts of the British system The Monarchy and the Lords: Still dignified? –Very little power; proposals for reform Parliamentary Sovereignty, sort of Parliamentary parties Collective responsibility Party discipline

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22 The British State: Enduring Myths & Changing Realities Cabinet government? –Many analysts argue that Britain has prime ministerial government The rest of the state –Weakness of the bureaucracy –Diluted sovereignty of cabinet and parliament because of regulatory agencies and QUANGOs –The courts have never had a policy-making role

23 Public Policy: The Thatcher and Blair Revolutions Break with the past in domestic policy –Thatcher’s “politics of conviction” brought dramatic change, especially to economic life. –Blair’s government has accepted privatization and the core of Thatcherism Continuity in foreign policy

24 Public Policy: The Thatcher and Blair Revolutions Domestic politics –Margaret Thatcher: The retreat from the commanding heights: Nationalizing and privatizing Rolling back the welfare state Thatcher’s supporters say she saved the British economy by bring both inflation and unemployment under control and by creating a more dynamic private sector. Thatcher’s detractors say she created new problems and exacerbated existing ones by widening the gap between rich and poor and by allowing public services to deteriorate.

25 Public Policy: The Thatcher and Blair Revolutions Domestic Politics, cont. –Tony Blair: Not rolling back Thatcher’s and Major’s reforms Government spending as a percentage of GNP shrank Welfare that gives recipients skills to find jobs rather than just benefits The New Deal Tuition increase Tolling London drivers to reduce traffic congestion Blair’s supporters say he has create the Third Way – combining the best aspects of the socialist goals commitment to equality with a market economy. Blair’s detractors say he sold out the left and created “Thatcher lite.”

26 Public Policy: The Thatcher and Blair Revolutions Foreign policy –Europe European Monetary Union? Ratify the draft constitution for the EU? –Iraq Political ramifications of backing George W. Bush on war with Iraq

27 Feedback British media far more centralized than U.S. Broadsheets and tabloids Very little local news on television; national news at different times of the day; networks tend to be impartial, but journalists are not necessarily so; interviewers “grill” politicians


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