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Politics of the United Kingdom

The politics of the United Kingdom functions within a constitutional monarchy where executive power is delegated by legislation and social conventions to a unitary parliamentary democracy. From this a hereditary monarch, currently Charles III, serves as head of state while the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, currently Rishi Sunak since 2022, serves as the elected head of government.

Organisational chart of the UK political system

The United Kingdom's parliamentary system sees executive power exercised by the British government, appointed on behalf of the monarch. This executive branch overlaps and is formed by members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom where legislative power is vested in the two parliamentary chambers of the House of Commons and the House of Lords. Asymmetrical powers are also granted to the devolved governments of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland within the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Parliament, and the Northern Ireland Assembly.

The British political system is a multiple-party system.[1] Since the 1920s, the two dominant parties have been the Conservative Party and the Labour Party. Before the Labour Party rose in British politics, the Liberal Party was the other major political party, along with the Conservatives. While coalition and minority governments have been an occasional feature of parliamentary politics, the first-past-the-post electoral system used for general elections tends to maintain the dominance of these two parties, though each has in the past century relied upon a third party, such as the Liberal Democrats, to deliver a working majority in Parliament. A Conservative–Liberal Democrat coalition government held office from 2010 until 2015, the first coalition since 1945.[2] The coalition ended following parliamentary elections on 7 May 2015, in which the Conservative Party won an outright majority of seats, 330 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons, while their coalition partners lost all but eight seats.[3]

With the partition of Ireland, Northern Ireland received home rule in 1920, though civil unrest meant direct rule was restored in 1972. Support for nationalist parties in Scotland and Wales led to proposals for devolution in the 1970s, though only in the 1990s did devolution happen. Today, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland each possess a legislature and executive, with devolution in Northern Ireland being conditional on participation in certain all-Ireland institutions. The British government remains responsible for non-devolved matters and, in the case of Northern Ireland, co-operates with the government of the Republic of Ireland. Devolution of executive and legislative powers may have contributed to increased support for independence in the constituent parts of the United Kingdom.[4] The principal Scottish pro-independence party, the Scottish National Party, became a minority government in 2007 and then went on to win an overall majority of MSPs at the 2011 Scottish parliament elections and forms the current Scottish Government administration. In a 2014 referendum on independence 44.7% of voters voted for independence versus 55.3% against.[5] In Northern Ireland, Irish nationalist parties such as Sinn Féin advocate Irish reunification. In Wales, Welsh nationalist parties such as Plaid Cymru support Welsh independence.

The constitution of the United Kingdom is uncodified, being made up of constitutional conventions, statutes and other elements. This system of government, known as the Westminster system, has been adopted by other countries, especially those that were formerly parts of the British Empire. The United Kingdom is also responsible for several dependencies, which fall into two categories: the Crown Dependencies, in the immediate vicinity of the UK, are strictly-speaking subject to the Crown (i.e., the Monarch) but not part of the sovereign territory of the United Kingdom (though de facto British territory), and British Overseas Territories, as British colonies were re-designated in 1983, which are part of the sovereign territory of the United Kingdom, in most of which aspects of internal governance have been delegated to local governments, with each territory having its own first minister, though the title used may differ, such as in the case of the Chief Minister of Gibraltar, though they remain subject to the Parliament of the United Kingdom (when United Kingdom is used to refer only to that part of the British Realm, or sovereign British territory, which is governed directly by the British Government, and not via local subsidiary governments, United Kingdom logically refers to a local government area, though the national government performs the role of local government within that area).

History edit

The Crown edit

The British monarch, currently Charles III, is the head of state of the United Kingdom. Though he takes little direct part in government, the Crown remains the fount in which ultimate executive power over government lies. These powers are known as royal prerogative and can be used for a vast amount of things, such as the issue or withdrawal of passports, to the dismissal of the prime minister or even the declaration of war. The powers are delegated from the monarch personally, in the name of the Crown, and can be handed to various ministers, or other officers of the Crown, and can purposely bypass the consent of Parliament.

The head of His Majesty's Government, the prime minister, also has weekly meetings with the sovereign, where he may express his feelings, warn, or advise the prime minister in the government's work.[6]

According to the uncodified constitution of the United Kingdom, the monarch has the following powers:[7]

Domestic powers

  • The power to dismiss and appoint a prime minister
  • The power to dismiss and appoint other ministers
  • The power to summon, prorogue and dissolve Parliament
  • The power to grant or refuse Royal Assent to bills (making them valid and law)
  • The power to commission officers in the Armed Forces
  • The power to command the Armed Forces of the United Kingdom
  • The power to appoint members to the King's Counsel
  • The power to issue and withdraw passports
  • The power to grant prerogative of mercy (though capital punishment is abolished, this power is still used to change sentences)
  • The power to grant honours
  • The power to create corporations via Royal charter

Foreign powers

  • The power to ratify and make treaties
  • The power to declare war and peace
  • The power to deploy the Armed Forces overseas
  • The power to recognise states
  • The power to credit and receive diplomats

Executive edit

Executive power in the United Kingdom is exercised by the Sovereign, King Charles III, via His Majesty's Government and the devolved national authorities – the Scottish Government, the Welsh Government and the Northern Ireland Executive.

His Majesty's Government edit

The monarch appoints a Prime Minister as the head of His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom, guided by the strict convention that the Prime Minister should be the member of the House of Commons most likely to be able to form a Government with the support of that House. In practice, this means that the leader of the political party with an absolute majority of seats in the House of Commons is chosen to be the Prime Minister. If no party has an absolute majority, the leader of the largest party is given the first opportunity to form a coalition. The Prime Minister then selects the other Ministers which make up the Government and act as political heads of the various Government Departments. About twenty of the most senior government ministers make up the Cabinet and approximately 100 ministers in total comprise the government. In accordance with constitutional convention, all ministers within the government are either Members of parliament or peers in the House of Lords.[citation needed]

As in some other parliamentary systems of government (especially those based upon the Westminster system), the executive (called "the government") is drawn from and is answerable to Parliament – a successful vote of no confidence will force the government either to resign or to seek a parliamentary dissolution and a general election. In practice, members of parliament of all major parties are strictly controlled by whips who try to ensure they vote according to party policy. If the government has a large majority, then they are very unlikely to lose enough votes to be unable to pass legislation.

The Prime Minister and the Cabinet edit

The Prime Minister, currently Rishi Sunak, is the most senior minister in the Cabinet. Their tenure begins when they are appointed by the monarch. The Prime Minister is responsible for chairing Cabinet meetings, selecting Cabinet ministers (and all other positions in His Majesty's government), and formulating government policy. The Prime Minister being the de facto leader of the UK, exercises executive functions that are nominally vested in the sovereign (by way of the Royal Prerogatives). Historically, the British monarch was the sole source of executive powers in the government. However, following the lead of the Hanoverian monarchs, an arrangement of a "Prime Minister" chairing and leading the Cabinet began to emerge. Over time, this arrangement became the effective executive branch of government, as it assumed the day-to-day functioning of the British government away from the sovereign.

Theoretically, the Prime Minister is primus inter pares (i.e., Latin for "first among equals") among their Cabinet colleagues. While the Prime Minister is the senior Cabinet Minister, they are theoretically bound to make executive decisions in a collective fashion with the other Cabinet ministers. The Cabinet, along with the PM, consists of Secretaries of State from the various government departments, the Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, the Lord Privy Seal, the Lord President of the Council, the President of the Board of Trade, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Ministers without portfolio. Cabinet meetings are typically held weekly, while Parliament is in session.

Government departments and the Civil Service edit

The Government of the United Kingdom contains a number of ministries known mainly, though not exclusively as departments, e.g., Department for Education. These are politically led by a Government Minister who is often a Secretary of State and member of the Cabinet. The minister may also be supported by a number of junior ministers. In practice, several government departments and ministers have responsibilities that cover England alone, with devolved bodies having responsibility for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, (for example – the Department of Health), or responsibilities that mainly focus on England (such as the Department for Education).

Implementation of the Minister's decisions is carried out by a permanent politically neutral organisation known as the Civil Service. Its constitutional role is to support the Government of the day regardless of which political party is in power. Unlike some other democracies, senior civil servants remain in post upon a change of Government. Administrative management of the department is led by a head civil servant known in most Departments as a Permanent secretary. The majority of the civil service staff in fact work in executive agencies, which are separate operational organisations reporting to Departments of State.

"Whitehall" is often used as a metonym for the central core of the Civil Service. This is because most Government Departments have headquarters in and around the former Royal Palace Whitehall.

Devolved national administrations edit

Ieuan Wyn JonesMike German, Baron GermanMark DrakefordCarwyn JonesRhodri MorganMartin McGuinnessPeter Robinson (Northern Ireland politician)David TrimbleJohn SwinneyNicola SturgeonJim WallaceNicola SturgeonAlex SalmondJack McConnellDominic RaabWilliam HagueJohn PrescottDominic RaabNick CleggJohn PrescottBoris JohnsonTheresa MayDavid CameronGordon BrownTony Blair

Scottish Government edit

The Scottish Government is responsible for all issues that are not explicitly reserved to the United Kingdom Parliament at Westminster, by the Scotland Act; including NHS Scotland, education, justice, rural affairs, and transport. In the 2024–25 financial year, its annual budget was almost £60 billion.[8] The government is led by the First Minister, assisted by various Ministers with individual portfolios and remits. The Scottish Parliament nominates a Member to be appointed as First Minister by the King. The First Minister then appoints their Ministers (now known as Cabinet Secretaries) and junior Ministers, subject to approval by the Parliament. The First Minister, the Ministers (but not junior ministers), the Lord Advocate and Solicitor General are the Members of the 'Scottish Executive', as set out in the Scotland Act 1998. They are collectively known as "the Scottish Ministers".

Welsh Government edit

The Welsh Government and Senedd have more limited powers than those devolved to Scotland,[9] although following the passing of the Government of Wales Act 2006 and the 2011 Welsh devolution referendum, the Senedd can now legislate in some areas through an Act of Senedd Cymru. The current First Minister of Wales, or Prif Weinidog Cymru in Welsh, is Mark Drakeford of Welsh Labour.

Northern Ireland Executive edit

Assembly have powers closer to those already devolved to Scotland. The Northern Ireland Executive is led by a diarchy, most recently First Minister Paul Givan (Democratic Unionist Party) and deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill (Sinn Féin).

Legislatures edit

The British Parliament is the supreme legislative body in the United Kingdom (i.e., there is parliamentary sovereignty), and government is drawn from and answerable to it. Parliament is bicameral, consisting of the House of Commons and the House of Lords. There are also devolved Scottish and Welsh parliaments and a devolved assembly in Northern Ireland, with varying degrees of legislative authority.

British Parliament edit

House of Commons edit

 
Parliament meets at the Palace of Westminster

The Countries of the United Kingdom are divided into parliamentary constituencies of broadly equal population by the four Boundary Commissions. Each constituency elects a Member of Parliament (MP) to the House of Commons at general elections and, if required, at by-elections. As of the 2010 general election there are 650 constituencies (there were 646 before that year's general election). At the 2017 general election, of the 650 MPs, all but one – Sylvia Hermon – were elected as representatives of a political party. However, as of the 2019 general election, there are currently 11 independent MPs, who have either chosen to leave their political party or have had the whip withdrawn.

In modern times, all prime ministers and leaders of the opposition have been drawn from the Commons, not the Lords. Alec Douglas-Home resigned from his peerages days after becoming prime minister in 1963, and the last prime minister before him from the Lords left in 1902 (the Marquess of Salisbury).

One party usually has a majority in parliament, because of the use of the First Past the Post electoral system, which has been conducive in creating the current Two-party system. The monarch normally asks a person commissioned to form a government simply whether it can survive in the House of Commons, something which majority governments are expected to be able to do. In exceptional circumstances the monarch asks someone to 'form a government' with a parliamentary minority[10] which in the event of no party having a majority requires the formation of a coalition government or 'confidence and supply' arrangement. This option is only ever taken at a time of national emergency, such as war-time. It was given in 1916 to Bonar Law, and when he declined, to David Lloyd George and in 1940 to Winston Churchill. A government is not formed by a vote of the House of Commons, it is a commission from the monarch. The House of Commons gets its first chance to indicate confidence in the new government when it votes on the Speech from the throne (the legislative programme proposed by the new government).

House of Lords edit

The House of Lords was previously a largely hereditary aristocratic chamber, although including life peers, and Lords Spiritual. It is currently midway through extensive reforms, the most recent of these being enacted in the House of Lords Act 1999. The house consists of two very different types of member, the Lords Temporal and Lords Spiritual. Lords Temporal include appointed members (life peers with no hereditary right for their descendants to sit in the house) and ninety-two remaining hereditary peers, elected from among, and by, the holders of titles which previously gave a seat in the House of Lords. The Lords Spiritual represent the established Church of England and number twenty-six: the Five Ancient Sees (Canterbury, York, London, Winchester and Durham), and the 21 next-most senior bishops. Secular organisations such as Humanists UK oppose bishops sitting in the House of Lords.[11] The movement to end the Church of England's status as the official state religion of the United Kingdom is known as disestablishmentarianism. Alternatives include a secular state in which the state purports to be officially neutral in matters of religion.

The House of Lords currently acts to review legislation initiated by the House of Commons, with the power to propose amendments, and can exercise a suspensive veto. This allows it to delay legislation if it does not approve it for twelve months. However, the use of vetoes is limited by convention and by the operation of the Parliament Acts 1911 and 1949: the Lords may not veto the "money bills" or major manifesto promises (see Salisbury convention). Persistent use of the veto can also be overturned by the Commons, under a provision of the Parliament Act 1911. Often governments will accept changes in legislation in order to avoid both the time delay, and the negative publicity of being seen to clash with the Lords. However the Lords still retain a full veto in acts which would extend the life of parliament beyond the 5-year term limit introduced by the Parliament Act 1911.

The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 outlined plans for a Supreme Court of the United Kingdom to replace the role of the Law Lords.

The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom replaced the House of Lords as the final court of appeal on civil cases within the United Kingdom on 1 October 2009.

Devolved national legislatures edit

Though the British parliament remains the sovereign parliament, Scotland and Wales have devolved parliaments and Northern Ireland has an assembly. Each can have its powers broadened, narrowed or changed by an act of the UK Parliament. Both the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Senedd gained legislative power over some forms of taxation between 2012 and 2016. Their power over economic issues is significantly constrained by an act of parliament passed in 2020.[18]

The UK is a unitary state with a devolved system of government. This contrasts with a federal system, in which sub-parliaments or state parliaments and assemblies have a clearly defined constitutional right to exist and a right to exercise certain constitutionally guaranteed and defined functions and cannot be unilaterally abolished by acts of the central parliament.

All three devolved institutions are elected by proportional representation: the Additional Member System is used in Scotland and Wales, and Single Transferable Vote is used in Northern Ireland.

England, therefore, is the only country in the UK not to have its own devolved parliament. However, senior politicians of all main parties have voiced concerns in regard to the West Lothian Question,[19][20] which is raised where certain policies for England are set by MPs from all four constituent nations whereas similar policies for Scotland or Wales might be decided in the devolved assemblies by legislators from those countries alone. Alternative proposals for English regional government have stalled, following a poorly received referendum on devolved government for the North East of England, which had hitherto been considered the region most in favour of the idea, with the exception of Cornwall, where there is widespread support for a Cornish Assembly, including all five Cornish MPs.[21][22] England is therefore governed according to the balance of parties across the whole of the United Kingdom.

The government has no plans to establish an English parliament or assembly although several pressure groups[23] are calling for one. One of their main arguments is that MPs (and thus voters) from different parts of the UK have inconsistent powers. Currently an MP from Scotland can vote on legislation which affects only England but MPs from England (or indeed Scotland) cannot vote on matters devolved to the Scottish parliament. Indeed, the former Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who was an MP for a Scottish constituency until the 2015 general election, introduced some laws that only affect England and not his own constituency. This anomaly is known as the West Lothian question.

The policy of the British Government in England was to establish elected regional assemblies with no legislative powers. The London Assembly was the first of these, established in 2000, following a referendum in 1998, but further plans were abandoned following rejection of a proposal for an elected assembly in North East England in a referendum in 2004. Unelected regional assemblies remain in place in eight regions of England.

Scottish Parliament edit

 
The Scottish Parliament Building in Holyrood, Edinburgh, seat of the Scottish Parliament.
 
The debating chamber of the Scottish Parliament.

The Scottish Parliament is the national, unicameral legislature of Scotland, located in the Holyrood area of the capital Edinburgh. The Parliament, informally referred to as "Holyrood"[24] (cf. "Westminster"), is a democratically elected body comprising 129 members who are known as Members of the Scottish Parliament, or MSPs. Members are elected for four-year terms under the mixed member proportional representation system. As a result, 73 MSPs represent individual geographical constituencies elected by the plurality ("first past the post") system, with a further 56 returned from eight additional member regions, each electing seven MSPs.[25]

The current Scottish Parliament was established by the Scotland Act 1998 and its first meeting as a devolved legislature was on 12 May 1999. The parliament has the power to pass laws and has limited tax-varying capability. Another of its roles is to hold the Scottish Government to account. The "devolved matters" over which it has responsibility include education, health, agriculture, and justice. A degree of domestic authority, and all foreign policy, remains with the British Parliament in Westminster.

The public take part in Parliament in a way that is not the case at Westminster through Cross-Party Groups on policy topics which the interested public join and attend meetings of alongside Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs).

The resurgence in Celtic language and identity, as well as 'regional' politics and development, has contributed to forces pulling against the unity of the state.[26] This was clearly demonstrated when – although some argue it was influenced by general public disillusionment with Labour – the Scottish National Party (SNP) became the largest party in the Scottish Parliament by one seat.

Alex Salmond (leader of SNP between 2004 and 2014) made history becoming the first First Minister of Scotland from a party other than Labour following the 2007 Scottish Parliament election. The SNP governed as a minority administration following this election. Nationalism (support for breaking up the UK) has experienced a dramatic rise in popularity in recent years, with a pivotal moment coming at the 2011 Scottish Parliament election where the SNP capitalised on the collapse of the Liberal Democrat support to improve on their 2007 performance to win the first ever outright majority at Holyrood (despite the voting system being specifically designed to prevent majorities), with Labour remaining the largest opposition party.

This election result prompted the leader of the three main opposition parties to resign. Iain Gray was succeeded as Scottish Labour leader by Johann Lamont, Scottish Conservative and Unionist leader, Annabel Goldie was replaced by Ruth Davidson, and Tavish Scott, leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats was replaced by Willie Rennie.

A major SNP manifesto pledge was to hold a referendum on Scottish Independence, which was duly granted by the British Government and held on 18 September 2014. When the nationalists came to power in 2011, opinion polls placed support for independence at around 31%, but in 2014, 45% voted to leave the union. In the wake of the referendum defeat, membership of the SNP surged to over 100,000, overtaking the Liberal Democrats as the third largest political party in the UK by membership, and in the general election of May 2015 the SNP swept the board and took 56 of the 59 Westminster constituencies in Scotland (far surpassing their previous best of 11 seats in the late 1970s) and winning more than 50% of the Scottish vote.

Salmond resigned as First Minister of Scotland and leader of the SNP following the country's rejection of independence in September 2014, and was succeeded in both roles by the deputy First Minister and deputy leader of the SNP, Nicola Sturgeon. Also in the wake of the referendum, Lamont stood down as Scottish Labour leader and Jim Murphy was elected to replace her. Murphy was the leader until the general election in 2015 in which he lost his seat in Westminster. After the defeat, he resigned his position and her deputy MSP Kezia Dugdale became leader of the party and leader of SLP in Holyrood. In 2017 she unexpectedly resigned and was replaced as Scottish Labour leader by the English-born Richard Leonard. He held the post until quitting in January 2021, with Anas Sarwar replacing him the following month.

Senedd edit

 
The Senedd building in Cardiff Bay

The Senedd (formerly the National Assembly for Wales) is the devolved legislature of Wales with power to make legislation and vary taxes. The Parliament comprises 60 members, who are known as Members of the Senedd, or MSs (Welsh: Aelodau o'r Senedd, ASau). Members are elected for four-year terms under an additional members system, where 40 MSs represent geographical constituencies elected by the plurality system, and 20 MSs from five electoral regions using the d'Hondt method of proportional representation.

 
The Siambr – the debating chamber of the Senedd

The Welsh Parliament was created by the Government of Wales Act 1998, which followed a referendum in 1997. On its creation, most of the powers of the Welsh Office and Secretary of State for Wales were transferred to it. The Senedd had no powers to initiate primary legislation until limited law-making powers were gained through the Government of Wales Act 2006. Its primary law-making powers were enhanced following a Yes vote in the referendum on 3 March 2011, making it possible for it to legislate without having to consult the British parliament, nor the Secretary of State for Wales in the 20 areas that are devolved.[27]

Northern Ireland Assembly edit

 
Parliament Buildings in Stormont, Belfast, seat of the Northern Ireland Assembly.

The government of Northern Ireland was established as a result of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement. This created the Northern Ireland Assembly. The Assembly is a unicameral body consisting of 90 members elected under the Single Transferable Vote form of proportional representation. The Assembly is based on the principle of power-sharing, in order to ensure that both communities in Northern Ireland, unionist and nationalist, participate in governing the region. It has power to legislate in a wide range of areas and to elect the Northern Ireland Executive (cabinet). It sits at Parliament Buildings at Stormont in Belfast.

The Assembly has authority to legislate in a field of competences known as "transferred matters". These matters are not explicitly enumerated in the Northern Ireland Act 1998 but instead include any competence not explicitly retained by the Parliament at Westminster. Powers reserved by Westminster are divided into "excepted matters", which it retains indefinitely, and "reserved matters", which may be transferred to the competence of the Northern Ireland Assembly at a future date. Health, criminal law and education are "transferred" while royal relations are all "excepted".

While the Assembly was in suspension, due to issues involving the main parties and the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA), its legislative powers were exercised by the UK government, which effectively had power to legislate by decree. Laws that would normally be within the competence of the Assembly were passed by the UK government in the form of Orders-in-Council rather than legislative acts. There has been a significant decrease in violence over the last twenty years, though the situation remains tense, with the more hard-line parties such as Sinn Féin and the Democratic Unionist Party now holding the most parliamentary seats (see Demographics and politics of Northern Ireland).

Judiciary edit

The United Kingdom does not have a single legal system due to it being created by the political union of previously independent countries with the terms of the Treaty of Union guaranteeing the continued existence of Scotland's separate legal system. Today the UK has three distinct systems of law: English law, Northern Ireland law and Scots law. Recent constitutional changes saw a new Supreme Court of the United Kingdom come into being in October 2009 that took on the appeal functions of the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords.[28] The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, comprising the same members as the Supreme Court, is the highest court of appeal for several independent Commonwealth countries, the UK overseas territories, and the British crown dependencies.

England, Wales and Northern Ireland edit

Both English law, which applies in England and Wales, and Northern Ireland law are based on common-law principles. The essence of common-law is that law is made by judges sitting in courts, applying their common sense and knowledge of legal precedent (stare decisis) to the facts before them. The Courts of England and Wales are headed by the Senior Courts of England and Wales, consisting of the Court of Appeal, the High Court of Justice (for civil cases) and the Crown Court (for criminal cases). The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom is the highest court in the land for both criminal and civil cases in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland and any decision it makes is binding on every other court in the hierarchy.

Scotland edit

Scots law, a hybrid system based on both common-law and civil-law principles, applies in Scotland. The chief courts are the Court of Session, for civil cases, and the High Court of Justiciary, for criminal cases. The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom serves as the highest court of appeal for civil cases under Scots law. Sheriff courts deal with most civil and criminal cases including conducting criminal trials with a jury, known that as Sheriff solemn Court, or with a Sheriff and no jury, known as (Sheriff summary Court). The Sheriff courts provide a local court service with 49 Sheriff courts organised across six Sheriffdoms.

Electoral systems edit

Various electoral systems are used in the UK:

  • The first-past-the-post system is used for general elections to the House of Commons and also for some local government elections in England and Wales. The first-past-the-post system elects members to parliament through individual elections in each of the 650 constituencies in the UK. To be elected to the House of Commons, candidates require the biggest share of votes. Each constituency can only elect one member to parliament; voters are given a ballot paper with a list of candidates from which they can select one. [1]
  • The plurality-at-large voting (the bloc vote) is also used for some local government elections in England and Wales. The plurality system is a simple way of election; the winner requires only to gain more votes than any other candidate.[2]
  • The additional member system is used for elections to the Scottish Parliament, Senedd, and London Assembly. The system is implemented differently in each of the three locations. The additional member's system used when electing members of parliament is a combination of the first-past-the-post system and the party-list system. Voters are given two ballots: one is for the candidates running to be elected as MP, and the other has a list of parties that are running for a seat in parliament. Voters choose their preferred party. [3]
  • The single transferable vote system is used in Northern Ireland to elect the Northern Ireland Assembly, local councils, and Members of the European Parliament, and in Scotland to elect local councils. The single transferrable vote is a form of proportional representation; the strength of a party in parliament is equal to the number of votes they received during a general election. Areas elect a team of representatives rather than the traditional one; they also represent a larger area. Voters rank their choices; they can rank as many as they choose since parties will run more than one candidate in each area. To be elected, candidates have to receive a specific number of votes, the quota, which is decided based on the number of vacancies and the number of people that can vote.[4]
  • The alternative vote system is used for by-elections in Scottish local councils. The alternative vote system is designed to deal with vote splitting. Under the first-past-the-post system, a candidate can win even when the majority votes against them if this majority is split over several other candidates. Voters rank the candidates from their preferred to their least preferred; if a candidate is the first choice for more than half of the votes cast, they win. But when there is no majority, the loser is removed, and the second choice becomes the first. This process is repeated until one candidate receives the majority. [5]
  • The D'Hondt method of party-list proportional representation was used for European Parliament elections in England, Scotland, and Wales between 1999 and 2019 (the last such election before 'Brexit').
  • The supplementary vote is used to elect directly elected mayors in England, including the mayor of London.

The use of the first-past-the-post to elect members of Parliament is unusual among European nations. The use of the system means that when three or more candidates receive a significant share of the vote, MPs are often elected from individual constituencies with a plurality (receiving more votes than any other candidate), but not an absolute majority (50 percent plus one vote).

Elections and political parties in the United Kingdom are affected by Duverger's law, the political science principle that states that plurality voting systems, such as first-past-the-post, tend to lead to the development of two-party systems. The UK, like several other states, has sometimes been called a "two-and-a-half" party system because parliamentary politics is dominated by the Labour Party and Conservative Party, while the Liberal Democrats used to hold a significant number of seats (but still substantially less than Labour and the Conservatives), and several small parties (some of them regional or nationalist) trailed far behind in the number of seats, although this changed in the 2015 general election.

In the last few general elections, voter mandates for Westminster in the 30–40% ranges have been swung into 60% parliamentary majorities. No single party has won a majority of the popular vote since the Third National Government of Stanley Baldwin in 1935. On two occasions since World War II1951 and February 1974 – a party that came in second in the popular vote came out with the largest number of seats.

Electoral reform for parliamentary elections has been proposed many times. The Jenkins Commission report in October 1998 suggested implementing the Alternative Vote Top-up (also called alternative vote plus or AV+) in parliamentary elections. Under this proposal, most MPs would be directly elected from constituencies by the alternative vote, with a number of additional members elected from "top-up lists." However, no action was taken by the Labour government at the time. There are several groups in the UK campaigning for electoral reform, including the Electoral Reform Society, Make Votes Count Coalition, and Fairshare. The boundary commission for England has also suggested in its 2023 boundary review that constituency lines should be redrawn to allow constituencies to have a similar number of residents.

The 2010 general election resulted in a hung parliament (no single party was able to command a majority in the House of Commons). This was only the second general election since World War II to return a hung parliament, the first being the February 1974 election. The Conservatives gained the most seats (ending 13 years of Labour government) and the largest percentage of the popular vote but fell 20 seats short of a majority.

The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats entered into a new coalition government, headed by David Cameron. Under the terms of the coalition agreement, the government committed itself to holding a referendum in May 2011 on whether to change parliamentary elections from first-past-the-post to AV. Electoral reform was a major priority for the Liberal Democrats, who favour proportional representation but were able to negotiate only a referendum on AV (the alternative vote system is not a form of proportional representation) with the Conservatives. The coalition partners campaigned on opposite sides, with the Liberal Democrats supporting AV and the Conservatives opposing it. The referendum resulted in the Conservatives' favour, and the first-past-the-post system was maintained.

Political parties edit

 
2005 general election results by age group: voters for Conservative (blue), Labour (red), Lib Dem (yellow), other parties (green); and those not voting (grey).

Since the 1920s the two main political parties in the UK, in terms of the number of seats in the House of Commons, are the Conservative and Unionist Party and the Labour Party. The Scottish National Party has the second largest party membership,[29] but a smaller number of MPs as it only fields candidates for constituencies in Scotland.[30]

The modern day Conservative Party was founded in 1834 and is an outgrowth of the Tory movement or party, which began in 1678. Today it is still colloquially referred to as the Tory Party and members/supporters are referred to as Tories. The Liberal Democrats (or "Lib Dems") were founded in 1988 by an amalgamation of the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party (SDP), a right-wing Labour breakaway movement formed in 1981. The Liberals and SDP had contested elections together as the SDP–Liberal Alliance for seven years previously. The modern Liberal Party had been founded in 1859 as an outgrowth of the Whig movement or party (which began at the same time as the Tory Party and was its historical rival) as well as the Radical and Peelite tendencies.

The Liberal Party was one of the two dominant parties (along with the Conservatives) from its founding until the 1920s, when it rapidly declined in popularity, and was supplanted on the left by the Labour Party, which was founded in 1900 and formed its first minority government in 1924. Since that time, the Labour and Conservative parties have been dominant, with the Liberals (later Liberal Democrats) being the third-largest party until 2015, when they lost 49 of their 57 seats, they now hold 11 seats. They lost 10 seats in the 2019 general election. Currently the Scottish National Party is the third largest party and have been since the 2015 General Election when they gained 56 seats. Founded in 1934, the SNP advocates Scottish independence and has had continuous representation in Parliament since 1967. The SNP currently leads a minority government in the Scottish Parliament, and has 48 MPs in the House of Commons after the 2019 general election.

Minor parties also hold seats in parliament:

At the most recent general election in 2019, the Conservatives, gained a majority after two years of being a minority government.

Conservatives (Tories) edit

The Conservative Party won the largest number of seats at the 2015 general election, returning 330 MPs, enough for an overall majority, and went on to form the first Conservative majority government since the 1992 general election. The Conservatives won only 318 seats at the 2017 general election, but went on to form a confidence and supply deal with the Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) who got 10 seats in the House of Commons, allowing the Conservative Party to remain in government. The Conservatives won 365 seats at the 2019 general election and had a majority, forming the first majority government since 2015–17.

The Conservative Party can trace its origin back to 1662, with the Court Party and the Country Party being formed in the aftermath of the English Civil War. The Court Party soon became known as the Tories, a name that has stuck despite the official name being 'Conservative'. The term "Tory" originates from the Exclusion Crisis of 1678–1681 – the Whigs were those who supported the exclusion of the Roman Catholic Duke of York from the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland, and the Tories were those who opposed it. Generally, the Tories were associated with lesser gentry and the Church of England, while Whigs were more associated with trade, money, larger land holders (or "land magnates"), expansion and tolerance of Catholicism. The Rochdale Radicals were a group of more extreme reformists who were also heavily involved in the cooperative movement. They sought to bring about a more equal society, and are considered by modern standards to be left-wing.

After becoming associated with repression of popular discontent in the years after 1815, the Tories underwent a fundamental transformation under the influence of Robert Peel, himself an industrialist rather than a landowner, who in his 1834 "Tamworth Manifesto" outlined a new "Conservative" philosophy of reforming ills while conserving the good. Though Peel's supporters subsequently split from their colleagues over the issue of free trade in 1846, ultimately joining the Whigs and the Radicals to form what would become the Liberal Party, Peel's version of the party's underlying outlook was retained by the remaining Tories, who adopted his label of Conservative as the official name of their party.

The Conservatives were in government for eighteen years between 1979 and 1997, under the leadership of the first-ever female Prime Minister, Margaret Thatcher, and former Chancellor of the Exchequer John Major (1990–97). Their landslide defeat at the 1997 general election saw the Conservative Party lose over half their seats gained in 1992, and saw the party re-align with public perceptions of them. The Conservatives lost all their seats in both Scotland and Wales, and was their worst defeat since 1906. In 2008, the Conservative Party formed a pact with the Ulster Unionist Party (UUP) to select joint candidates for European and House of Commons elections; this angered the DUP as by splitting the Unionist vote, republican parties will be elected in some areas.[32]

After thirteen years in opposition, the Conservatives returned to power as part of a coalition agreement with the Liberal Democrats in 2010, going on to form a majority government in 2015. David Cameron resigned as Prime Minister in July 2016, which resulted in the appointment of the country's second female Prime Minister, Theresa May. The Conservative Party is the only party in the history of the United Kingdom to have been governed by a female Prime Minister. In 2019, Boris Johnson was appointed Prime Minister after May stepped down during Brexit negotiations. At one point during 2019 his party had a parliamentary minority for a short period after he ejected a large number of party members, of which some were subsequently allowed to return for the 2019 General election. After the election the Tories returned with a majority government under Johnson.

Historically, the party has been the mainland party most pre-occupied by British unionism, as attested to by the party's full name, the Conservative and Unionist Party. This resulted in the merger between the Conservatives and Joseph Chamberlain's Liberal Unionist Party, composed of former Liberals who opposed Irish home rule. The unionist tendency is still in evidence today, manifesting sometimes as a scepticism or opposition to devolution, firm support for the continued existence of the United Kingdom in the face of movements advocating independence from the UK, and a historic link with the cultural unionism of Northern Ireland.

Labour edit

The Labour Party won the second-largest number of seats in the House of Commons at the 2019 general election, with 202 seats overall, 60 seats less than 2017.

The history of the Labour Party goes back to 1900, when a Labour Representation Committee was established and changed its name to "The Labour Party" in 1906. After 1918, this led to the demise of the Liberal Party as the main reformist force in British politics. The existence of the Labour Party on the left-wing of British politics led to a slow waning of energy from the Liberal Party, which has consequently assumed third place in national politics. After performing poorly at the general elections of 1922, 1923 and 1924, the Liberal Party was superseded by the Labour Party as being the party of the left.

Following two brief spells in minority governments in 1924 and 1929–1931, the party was part of the Churchill war ministry during World War II. When the war ended the Labour Party won a landslide victory at the 1945 "khaki election"; winning a majority for the first time ever. Throughout the rest of the twentieth century, Labour governments alternated with Conservative governments. The Labour Party suffered the "wilderness years" of 1951–1964 (three consecutive general election defeats) and 1979–1997 (four consecutive general election defeats). During this second period, Margaret Thatcher, who became Leader of the Conservative Party in 1975, made a fundamental change to Conservative policies, turning the Conservative Party into an economically liberal party. At the 1979 general election, she defeated James Callaghan's Labour government following the Winter of Discontent. For all of the 1980s and most of the 1990s, Conservative governments under Thatcher and her successor John Major pursued policies of privatisation, anti-trade-unionism, and, for a time, monetarism, now known collectively as Thatcherism.

The Labour Party elected left-winger Michael Foot as their leader in 1980, and he responded to dissatisfaction within the Labour Party by pursuing a number of radical policies developed by its grassroots members. In 1981, several centrist and right-leaning Labour MPs formed a breakaway group called the Social Democratic Party (SDP), a move which split Labour and is widely believed to have made the Labour Party unelectable for a decade. The SDP formed an alliance with the Liberal Party which contested the 1983 and 1987 general elections as a pro-European, centrist alternative to Labour and the Conservatives. Following some initial success, the SDP did not prosper (partly due to its unfavourable distribution of votes by the First-Past-the-Post electoral system), and was accused by some of splitting the Labour vote. The SDP eventually merged with the Liberal Party to form the Liberal Democrats in 1988.

The Labour Party was defeated in a landslide at the 1983 general election, and Michael Foot was replaced shortly thereafter by Neil Kinnock as party leader. Kinnock progressively expelled members of Militant, a left-wing group which practised entryism, and moderated many of the party's policies. Despite these changes, as well as electoral gains and also due to Kinnock's negative media image, Labour was defeated at the 1987 and 1992 general elections, and he was succeeded by Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, John Smith. Shadow Home Secretary Tony Blair became Leader of the Labour Party following Smith's sudden death from a heart attack in 1994. He continued to move the Labour Party towards the "centre" by loosening links with the unions and continuing many of Thatcher's neoliberal policies. This, coupled with the professionalising of the party machine's approach to the media, helped Labour win a historic landslide at the 1997 general election, after eighteen consecutive years of Conservative rule. Some observers say the Labour Party had by then morphed from a democratic socialist party to a social democratic party, a process which delivered three general election victories but alienated some of its core base; leading to the formation of the Socialist Labour Party.[citation needed] A subset of Labour MPs stand as joint Labour and Co-operative candidates due to a long-standing electoral alliance between the Labour Party and the Co-operative Party – the political arm of the British co-operative movement. At the 2019 general election, 26 were elected.[33]

Following Tony Blair's election as leader of Labour, the part was reformed under the "New Labour" branding and won the 1997 election with an overall landslide victory. Under "New Labour", the Human Rights Act and National Minimum Wage Act were passed in 1998.[34][35]

Scottish National Party edit

The Scottish National Party won the third-largest number of seats in the House of Commons at the 2015 general election, winning 56 MPs from the 59 constituencies in Scotland having won 50% of the popular vote. This was an increase of 50 MPs on the result achieved in 2010.

At the 2017 general election, the SNP won 35 seats, a net loss of 21 seats.

At the 2019 general election, the SNP won 48 seats, a net gain of 13 seats.

The SNP has enjoyed parliamentary representation continuously since 1967. Following the 2007 Scottish parliamentary elections, the SNP emerged as the largest party with 47 MSPs and formed a minority government with Alex Salmond as First Minister. After the 2011 Scottish parliamentary election, the SNP won enough seats to form a majority government, the first time this had ever happened since devolution was established in 1999.

Members of the Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru work together as a single parliamentary group[36] following a formal pact signed in 1986. This group currently has 49 MPs.

Liberal Democrats edit

The Liberal Democrats won the fourth largest number of seats at the 2019 general election, returning 11 MPs.

The Liberal Democrats were founded in 1988 by an amalgamation of the Liberal Party with the Social Democratic Party, but can trace their origin back to the Whigs and the Rochdale Radicals who evolved into the Liberal Party. The term 'Liberal Party' was first used officially in 1868, though it had been in use colloquially for decades beforehand. The Liberal Party formed a government in 1868 and then alternated with the Conservative Party as the party of government throughout the late-nineteenth century and early-twentieth century.

The Liberal Democrats are a party with policies on constitutional and political reforms, including changing the voting system for general elections (2011 United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum), abolishing the House of Lords and replacing it with a 300-member elected Senate, introducing fixed five-year Parliaments, and introducing a National Register of Lobbyists. They also support what they see as greater fairness and social mobility. In the coalition government, the party promoted legislation introducing a pupil premium – funding for schools directed at the poorest students to give them an equal chance in life. They also supported same-sex marriage and increasing the income tax threshold to £10,000, a pre-election manifesto commitment.

In the 2010 election, David Cameron formed a coalition government with Nick Clegg. After the 2015 elections, the conservative government continued with a single party rather than a coalition.

Some coalition government reforms that were proposed were for fixed term parliaments. This piece of legislation consisted of setting a five-year interval between general elections. Another piece of coalition reform that was enacted was the Scottish independence referendum. The result overall was remain.[37]

Northern Ireland parties edit

The Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) had 8 MPs elected at the 2019 general election. Founded in 1971 by Ian Paisley, it has grown to become the larger of the two main unionist political parties in Northern Ireland. Sinn Féin MPs had 7 MPs elected at the 2019 election, but Sinn Féin MPs traditionally abstain from the House of Commons and refuse to take their seats in what they view as a "foreign" parliament.

Plaid Cymru edit

Plaid Cymru has enjoyed parliamentary representation continuously since 1974 and had 4 MPs elected at the 2019 general election, though one was suspended. Following the 2007 Welsh Assembly elections, they joined Labour as the junior partner in a coalition government, but have fallen down to the third-largest party in the Assembly after the 2011 Assembly elections, and have become an opposition party.

Other parliamentary parties edit

The Green Party of England and Wales has had a single MP, Caroline Lucas, since 2010 and re-elected at the 2019 general election (the party previously had an MP in 1992; Cynog Dafis, Ceredigion, who was elected on a joint Plaid Cymru/Green Party ticket). It also has three seats on the London Assembly and over 500 local councillors as of May 2022.[38]

The UK Independence Party (UKIP) had one MP and 24 seats in the European Parliament as well as a number of local councillors. UKIP also had a MLA in the Northern Ireland Assembly. UKIP had become an emerging alternative party among some voters, gaining the third-largest share of the vote in the 2015 general election and the largest share of the vote of any party (27%) in the 2014 European elections. In 2014 UKIP gained its first ever MP following the defection and re-election of Douglas Carswell in the 2014 Clacton by-election. They campaign mainly on issues such as reducing immigration and EU withdrawal. They no longer have any MPs.

The Respect party, a left-wing group that came out of the anti-war movement had a single MP, George Galloway from 2005 to 2010, and again between 2012 and 2015.[39]

Change UK was a political party formed and disbanded in 2019. It had five MPs, four of whom were elected as Labour MPs, and one as Conservative MPs.

There are usually a small number of Independent politicians in parliament with no party allegiance. In modern times, this has usually occurred when a sitting member leaves their party, and some such MPs have been re-elected as independents. Since 1950, only two new members have been elected as independents without having ever stood for a major party:

  • Martin Bell represented the Tatton constituency in Cheshire between 1997 and 2001. He was elected following a "sleaze" scandal involving the-then incumbent Conservative MP, Neil Hamilton. Bell, a BBC journalist, stood as an anti-corruption independent candidate, and the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties withdrew their candidates from the election.
  • Dr. Richard Taylor MP was elected for the Wyre Forest constituency in 2001 on a platform opposing the closure of Kidderminster hospital. He later established Health Concern, the party under which he ran in 2005.

Non-Parliamentary political parties edit

Other political parties exist, but struggle to return MPs to Parliament.

The Brexit Party was founded in January 2019, with leader Nigel Farage (former retired UKIP leader). It initially had 14 MEPs, all of whom had been elected as members of UKIP. In the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom, it returned 29 MEPs. The MEPs were elected representatives of the party until 11pm on 31 January 2020 when the UK left the European Union and the position of British MEPs was subsequently abolished.[40]

Following the 2021 Scottish Parliament Election the Scottish Greens have 8 MSPs in the Scottish Parliament and are the junior partner in the SNP/Green coalition. They also 35 local councillors.

The Green Party in Northern Ireland has previously had MLAs in the Northern Ireland Assembly. They currently have 8 local councillors.

The Scottish Socialist Party (SSP) won its first seat in the Scottish Parliament in the 1999 Scottish Parliament election. In the 2003 Scottish Parliament election the party increased their number of seats to 6. The party built up its support through opposing the war in Iraq and fighting for policies such as free school meals and an end to prescription charges. In the 2007 Scottish Parliament election it lost all of its MSPs but remains politically active and continues to contest elections.[41]

The British National Party (BNP) became the official opposition in the 2006 Barking and Dagenham Council election, won a seat in the 2008 London Assembly election, two seats in the 2009 European elections, and received the fifth-highest share of votes in the 2010 general election. At their peak they had 58 local councillors. However, the early 2010s saw the BNP's support collapse and became fractured, resulting in them losing all elected representation by 2018.[42]

The British Democratic Party (BDP) was founded in 2013 by Andrew Brons, one of the British National Party's two MEPs. In 2022, following the collapse of the BNP, a plethora of prominent ex-BNP members rapidly began coalescing around the British Democrats. It is currently the only far-right UK political party with any elected representation.

The Aspire Party has 24 out of the 45 seats in the Tower Hamlets council.

The Women's Equality Party (WEP) was founded in 2015. The party gained its first elected representation in the 2019 United Kingdom local elections, winning one local councillor seat on Congleton Town Council.[43] The party has no other elected representation at any other level of governance.

The Libertarian Party was founded in 2008 and has contested several local elections and parliamentary constituencies. It has no elected representatives at any level of governance.

The English Democrats was founded in 2002 and advocates England having its own parliament. The party's candidate was elected mayor of Doncaster in 2009, before resigning from the party in February 2013.[44]

Other parties include: the Socialist Labour Party (UK), the Socialist Party of Great Britain, the Communist Party of Britain, the Socialist Party (England and Wales), the Socialist Workers Party, the Liberal Party, Mebyon Kernow (a Cornish nationalist party) in Cornwall, the Yorkshire Party in Yorkshire, and the National Health Action Party. The Pirate Party UK existed from 2009 to 2020.

Several local parties contest only within a specific area, a single county, borough or district. Examples include the Better Bedford Independent Party, which was one of the dominant parties in Bedford Borough Council and led by Bedford's former Mayor, Frank Branston. The most notable local party is Health Concern, which controlled a single seat in the British Parliament from 2001 to 2010.

The Jury Team, launched in March 2009 and described as a "non-party party", is an umbrella organisation seeking to increase the number of independent MPs.[45]

The Official Monster Raving Loony Party was founded in 1983. The OMRLP are distinguished by having a deliberately bizarre manifesto, which contains things that seem to be impossible or too absurd to implement – usually to highlight what they see as real-life absurdities. It is effectively regarded as a satirical political party.

2015 to 2019 edit

After winning the largest number of seats and votes in the 2015 general election, the Conservatives under David Cameron, remained ahead of the Labour Party, led by Jeremy Corbyn since September 2015. The SNP maintained its position in Scotland, the party was just short of an overall majority at the Scottish parliamentary elections in May 2016.

However, a turbulent referendum on the United Kingdom's membership of the European Union, called for by David Cameron, led to his resignation, the appointment of a new prime minister Theresa May, and divided opinion on Europe amongst the party.

In addition, the EU referendum campaign plunged the Labour Party into crisis and resulted in a motion of no confidence in the party leader Jeremy Corbyn being passed by the party's MPs in a 172–40 vote,[46] which followed a significant number of resignations from the Shadow Cabinet. This led to a leadership election which began with Angela Eagle, the former Shadow First Secretary of State and Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills who eight days later withdrew from the leadership race, to support Owen Smith, the former Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions. This was won by Jeremy Corbyn with an increased majority.

Following the vote to leave the European Union, Nigel Farage offered his own resignation as leader, something he had campaigned for since 1992. A leadership contest also took place in the Green Party, which led to the joint election on 2 September 2016 of Jonathan Bartley and Caroline Lucas as co-leaders, who took over the role in a job-share arrangement.[47] Lucas, was previously leader until 2010 and is the party's only MP. Strategic cross-party alliances have been initiated, including a "progressive alliance" and a "Patriotic Alliance",[48][49] as proposed by UKIP donor Arron Banks.

In 2017, the prime minister, Theresa May, called a general election. She hoped to increase the conservative majority to diffuse party opposition to her deal to leave the EU. In the election, the conservatives lost seats and the Labour party, under Jeremy Corbyn, gained 30 seats. This led to a minority conservative government supported by the DUP.

In July 2019, Boris Johnson won the leadership of the conservative party following the resignation of May. He became the prime minister by default.

In August 2019, Prime Minister Boris Johnson requested the monarch, Queen Elizabeth II, to prorogue the British parliament.[50] Although this measure is common for incoming governments to allow time to prepare the Queen's speech, the move caused great controversy as it was announced to last 23 days instead of the usual 4 or 5 days.[51] It would end the current session of the Parliament that had been running for 2 years and prevent further parliamentary debate. The government stated that it was nothing to do with Brexit and that there would still be "ample time" for debate before Brexit happens.[52] Opponents believed that parliament had been suspended to force through a no-deal Brexit and prevent parliament from being able to thwart the government's plan. Others argued that it facilitated the Brexit negotiations by forcing the EU to modify the current proposed deal. The move is unprecedented in British politics and caused debate in the media, an attempt to stop it in the Scottish Court of Session, an attempt by ex-prime minister John Major and others to stop it in the English High Court and in the High Court in Northern Ireland.[53] It was reported by many media sources that the move takes the UK one more step towards a full dictatorship from its current status of 'elective dictatorship'.[54] The legality of the suspension of parliament was tested in courts in England and Scotland. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom. On 24 September, it ruled unanimously that the prorogation was both justiciable and unlawful. The prorogation was quashed and deemed "null and of no [legal] effect". Parliament resumed the next day.

On the return of parliament the government lost its majority when Conservative MP Phillip Lee crossed the floor of the house to join the Liberal Democrats.[55] This meant that the combined votes of the Conservative and DUP MPs amounted to one less than the combined votes of opposition parties. The government of Boris Johnson then lost a vote, 301 to 328, giving control of the agenda of the house to the MPs, removing the control the government had over the introduction of new laws.[56] The 21 Conservative MPs who voted against their own government had the whip removed by Number 10, removing them from the party. This included long-standing members of the party.[57] Johnson called for a general election and following a few attempts succeeded in getting a vote approving an election through parliament.

Current political landscape edit

In the December 2019 general election, the Conservative Party, led by Boris Johnson, won a large overall majority. Jeremy Corbyn resigned as leader of the Labour Party. Jo Swinson resigned as Lib Dem leader after losing her own seat.[58]

On 20 December 2019, the Brexit withdrawal agreement was passed. The UK left the EU on 31 January 2020 at 11 p.m. GMT and entered a transition period, set to finish on 31 December 2020.

In January 2020, the Labour Party began the process of electing a new leader. On 4 April 2020, Keir Starmer was elected leader of the Labour Party with 56.2% of the vote in the first round.[59]

In October 2020, Corbyn was suspended from the Labour Party over his comments about antisemitism. According to The Washington Post:

Corbyn's ouster from a party he led in the last two national elections, in 2019 and 2017, was a stunning rebuke and mark him now as a near-outcast, at least temporarily. The suspension also shines light on a long-running feud within Europe's largest democratic socialist party over its very soul, as hard-left "Corbynistas" pushing for radical change duke it out with a more moderate wing more ideologically aligned with Tony Blair, the centrist former Labour prime minister.[60]

The present dispute within the Labour party is likely causing the leftist political coalition to further fragment since the catastrophic result in 2019. Polling generally indicates that at present (August 2021) Labour has lost significant portions of its vote share to the Green party and the Liberal Democrats.[61] At Labour Conference 2021, several showdowns between the left and right of the party are expected to take place. This includes but is not limited to: a motion to give members power to approve or reject decisions over the Labour whip within the PLP, a potential rejection of the pro-Starmer interim General Secretary David Evans by unions and members alike, a debate over PR and a significant debate over the loss of members and their subscription fees since Corbyn's expulsion which has left the party in a dire state regarding its activist and financial bases.[62][63]

The SNP and the Scottish Greens won the right to form a Scottish coalition government in May 2021. The precise arrangement is loose and allows the Greens freedom to criticise official SNP policy on key areas of disagreement. However, it provides FM Nicola Sturgeon with a mandate to call for a new independence referendum after the failed one in 2014.[62] Proponents of a new referendum particularly cite Brexit as changing the political situation, thus leading Scots to be more pro-independence than in 2014. As an issue, Scottish independence is known to cross-cut across party lines, with many Scottish Labour voters in particular being favourable to the prospect of independence.[64]

The Democracy Index (The Economist) rated the United Kingdom as a "full democracy" in 2022, ranking 18th worldwide with an overall score of 8.28 out of a maximum of 10.[65] The V-Dem Democracy indices ranked United Kingdom 22nd worldwide on electoral democracy.

Membership edit

All political parties have membership schemes that allow members of the public to actively influence the policy and direction of the party to varying degrees, though particularly at a local level. Membership of British political parties is around 1% of the British electorate,[66] which is lower than in all European countries except for Poland and Latvia.[67] Overall membership to a political party has been in decline since the 1950s.[68] In 1951, the Conservative Party had 2.2 million members, and a year later in 1952 the Labour Party reached their peak of 1 million members (of an electorate of around 34 million).[69]

The table below details the membership numbers of political parties that have more than 5,000 members.

Party Members Date Regions served
Conservative 200,000[70] March 2021 UK
Green Party of England and Wales 53,000[71] July 2021 England and Wales
Labour 430,000[72] July 2021 UK
Liberal Democrats 98,247[73] December 2020 UK
Plaid Cymru 11,500[74] October 2018 Wales
Scottish Greens 7,500[75] August 2021 Scotland
Scottish National Party (SNP) 72,186[76] March 2023 Scotland
Women's Equality Party 30,000[77] September 2020 UK

No data could be collected for the four parties of Northern Ireland: the DUP, UUP, SDLP, and Sinn Féin. However, in January 1997, it was estimated that the UUP had 10,000 – 12,000 members, and the DUP had 5,000 members.[78]

In December 2020, the UK Independence Party had 3,888 members.[79]

In June 2019, Reform UK claimed to have 115,000 registered supporters.[80][81]

Local government edit

The UK is divided into a complex system of local governance.

Former European Union membership edit

The United Kingdom first joined the then European Communities in January 1973 by the then Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath, and remained a member of the European Union (EU) that it evolved into; British citizens, and other EU citizens resident in the UK, between 1979 and 2019 elected members to represent them in the European Parliament in Brussels and Strasbourg.

The UK's membership in the Union has been a major topic of debate over the years and has been objected to over questions of sovereignty,[82] and in recent years there have been divisions in both major parties over whether the UK should form greater ties within the EU, or reduce the EU's supranational powers. Opponents of greater European integration are known as "Eurosceptics", while supporters are known as "Europhiles". Division over Europe is prevalent in both major parties, although the Conservative Party is seen as most divided over the issue, both whilst in Government up to 1997 and after 2010, and between those dates as the opposition. However, the Labour Party is also divided, with conflicting views over British adoption of the euro whilst in Government (1997–2010).[citation needed]

British nationalists have long campaigned against European integration. The strong showing of the eurosceptic UK Independence Party (UKIP) since the 2004 European Parliament elections has shifted the debate over UK relations with the EU.

In March 2008, Parliament decided to not hold a referendum on the ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon, signed in December 2007.[83][84] This was despite the Labour government promising in 2004 to hold a referendum on the previously proposed Constitution for Europe.[85]

On 23 June 2016, the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union in a referendum. After the referendum, it was debated as to how and when the UK should leave the EU. On 11 July 2016, the Cabinet Office Minister, John Penrose failed to deliver a final answer on whether it would be at the disposal of the Prime Minister and one of the Secretaries of State, through the royal prerogative, or of Parliament, through primary legislation.

In October 2016 the Conservative Prime Minister, Theresa May, announced that Article 50 would be invoked by "the first quarter of 2017".[86] On 24 January 2017 the Supreme Court ruled in the Miller case by a majority that the process could not be initiated without an authorising act of parliament, but unanimously ruled against the Scottish government's claim in respect of devolution that they had a direct say in the decision to trigger Article 50. Consequently, the European Union (Notification of Withdrawal) Act 2017 empowering the prime minister to invoke Article 50 was passed and enacted by royal assent in March 2017.

Invocation of Article 50 by the United Kingdom government occurred on 29 March 2017, when Sir Tim Barrow, the Permanent Representative of the United Kingdom to the European Union, formally delivered by hand a letter signed by Prime Minister Theresa May to Donald Tusk, the President of the European Council in Brussels. The letter also contained the United Kingdom's intention to withdraw from the European Atomic Energy Community (EAEC or Euratom). This means that the UK will cease to be a member of the EU on 30 March 2019, unless an extension to negotiations is agreed upon by the UK and EU.[87] The leaving date was subsequently revised by agreement with the EU to be 31 October 2019. This led to a change of prime minister who promised to leave the EU on this date either with a revised deal or with no-deal.[citation needed]

The UK withdrew from the EU at 23.00 GMT on 31 January 2020, beginning a transition period that was set to end on 31 December 2020.[88] During the 11-month transition period, the UK and EU negotiated their future relationship which resulted in the EU–UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement which was agreed on 24 December 2020 just days before the end of the transition period.[88] The UK ended the transition period which ended the incorporation of European Union law into UK law, and ended its membership of the EU Customs Union, and the European Single Market at 23:00 GMT on 31 December 2020.[89][90]

International organisation participation edit

See also edit

Overviews by period edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "General Election results through time, 1945–2001". BBC News. Retrieved 19 May 2006.
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  9. ^ "Structure and powers of the Assembly". BBC News. 9 April 1992. Retrieved 21 October 2008.
  10. ^ The formal request from the monarch is either to (a) form a government capable of surviving in the House of Commons (which by implication does not require a majority behind it, given that skilled minority governments can and do survive for long periods); or (b) form a government capable of commanding a majority in the Commons, which by implication requires a majority behind it
  11. ^ "Bishops in the House of Lords". humanists.uk. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  12. ^ Keating, Michael (2 February 2021). "Taking back control? Brexit and the territorial constitution of the United Kingdom". Journal of European Public Policy. Abingdon: Taylor & Francis. 28 (4): 6–7. doi:10.1080/13501763.2021.1876156. hdl:1814/70296. S2CID 234066376. The UK Internal Market Act gives ministers sweeping powers to enforce mutual recognition and non-discrimination across the four jurisdictions. Existing differences and some social and health matters are exempted but these are much less extensive than the exemptions permitted under the EU Internal Market provisions. Only after an amendment in the House of Lords, the Bill was amended to provide a weak and non-binding consent mechanism for amendments (equivalent to the Sewel Convention) to the list of exemptions. The result is that, while the devolved governments retain regulatory competences, these are undermined by the fact that goods and services originating in, or imported into, England can be marketed anywhere.
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Further reading edit

  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004) online; short scholarly biographies of all the major people who died by 2009
  • Addison, Paul and Harriet Jones, eds. A Companion to Contemporary Britain: 1939–2000 (2005) excerpt and text search
  • Brown, David, Robert Crowcroft, and Gordon Pentland, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Modern British Political History, 1800–2000 (2018) excerpt
  • Budge, Ian, et al. eds. The New British Politics (4th ed. 2007) 712pp
  • Butler, David. British General Elections Since 1945 (1995) 195pp; excerpt and text search
  • Cannon, John, ed. The Oxford Companion to British History (2003), historical encyclopedia; 4000 entries in 1046pp excerpt and text search
  • Childs, David. Britain since 1945: A Political History (2012) excerpt and text search
  • Cook, Chris and John Stevenson, eds. Longman Companion to Britain Since 1945 (1995) 336pp
  • Fairlie, Henry. "Oratory in Political Life," History Today (Jan 1960) 10#1 pp 3–13. A survey of political oratory in Britain from 1730 to 1960.
  • Hennessy, Peter. The Prime Minister: The Office and Its Holders Since 1945 (2001) except and text search; Attlee to Blair; 688pp
  • Jones, Harriet, and Mark Clapson, eds. The Routledge Companion to Britain in the Twentieth Century (2009) excerpt and text search
  • King, Anthony. The British Constitution (2011) 464pp
  • Leventhal, F.M. Twentieth-Century Britain: An Encyclopedia (2nd ed. 2002) 640pp; short articles by scholars
  • Marr, Andrew. A History of Modern Britain (2009); also published as The Making of Modern Britain (2010), popular history 1945–2005
  • Pugh, Martin. Speak for Britain!: A New History of the Labour Party (2011) excerpt and text search
  • Ramsden, John, ed. The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century British Politics (2005) excerpt and text search

External links edit

  • Prospect Magazine – UK based political magazine focussing on British and international politics, cultural essays and arguments 4 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine
  • British Politics – the only academic journal devoted purely to the study of political issues in Britain
  • Directgov, main entry point for citizens to the UK government 23 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine
    • Directgov – Guide to Government
  • Official UK parliament website
  • Official UK parliamentary membership by party
  • British Government and Politics on the Internet from the Keele University School of Politics
  • British Politics and Policy at LSE The London School of Economics' UK politics and policy blog
  • ePolitix – UK Politics news website 22 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • British Government and Politics Compiled by a retired English Librarian
  • Women's Parliamentary Radio Interviews and resources about women politicians in the UK

politics, united, kingdom, british, politics, redirects, here, journal, british, politics, journal, politics, united, kingdom, functions, within, constitutional, monarchy, where, executive, power, delegated, legislation, social, conventions, unitary, parliamen. British politics redirects here For the journal see British Politics journal The politics of the United Kingdom functions within a constitutional monarchy where executive power is delegated by legislation and social conventions to a unitary parliamentary democracy From this a hereditary monarch currently Charles III serves as head of state while the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom currently Rishi Sunak since 2022 serves as the elected head of government Organisational chart of the UK political systemThe United Kingdom s parliamentary system sees executive power exercised by the British government appointed on behalf of the monarch This executive branch overlaps and is formed by members of the Parliament of the United Kingdom where legislative power is vested in the two parliamentary chambers of the House of Commons and the House of Lords Asymmetrical powers are also granted to the devolved governments of Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland within the Scottish Parliament the Welsh Parliament and the Northern Ireland Assembly The British political system is a multiple party system 1 Since the 1920s the two dominant parties have been the Conservative Party and the Labour Party Before the Labour Party rose in British politics the Liberal Party was the other major political party along with the Conservatives While coalition and minority governments have been an occasional feature of parliamentary politics the first past the post electoral system used for general elections tends to maintain the dominance of these two parties though each has in the past century relied upon a third party such as the Liberal Democrats to deliver a working majority in Parliament A Conservative Liberal Democrat coalition government held office from 2010 until 2015 the first coalition since 1945 2 The coalition ended following parliamentary elections on 7 May 2015 in which the Conservative Party won an outright majority of seats 330 of the 650 seats in the House of Commons while their coalition partners lost all but eight seats 3 With the partition of Ireland Northern Ireland received home rule in 1920 though civil unrest meant direct rule was restored in 1972 Support for nationalist parties in Scotland and Wales led to proposals for devolution in the 1970s though only in the 1990s did devolution happen Today Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland each possess a legislature and executive with devolution in Northern Ireland being conditional on participation in certain all Ireland institutions The British government remains responsible for non devolved matters and in the case of Northern Ireland co operates with the government of the Republic of Ireland Devolution of executive and legislative powers may have contributed to increased support for independence in the constituent parts of the United Kingdom 4 The principal Scottish pro independence party the Scottish National Party became a minority government in 2007 and then went on to win an overall majority of MSPs at the 2011 Scottish parliament elections and forms the current Scottish Government administration In a 2014 referendum on independence 44 7 of voters voted for independence versus 55 3 against 5 In Northern Ireland Irish nationalist parties such as Sinn Fein advocate Irish reunification In Wales Welsh nationalist parties such as Plaid Cymru support Welsh independence The constitution of the United Kingdom is uncodified being made up of constitutional conventions statutes and other elements This system of government known as the Westminster system has been adopted by other countries especially those that were formerly parts of the British Empire The United Kingdom is also responsible for several dependencies which fall into two categories the Crown Dependencies in the immediate vicinity of the UK are strictly speaking subject to the Crown i e the Monarch but not part of the sovereign territory of the United Kingdom though de facto British territory and British Overseas Territories as British colonies were re designated in 1983 which are part of the sovereign territory of the United Kingdom in most of which aspects of internal governance have been delegated to local governments with each territory having its own first minister though the title used may differ such as in the case of the Chief Minister of Gibraltar though they remain subject to the Parliament of the United Kingdom when United Kingdom is used to refer only to that part of the British Realm or sovereign British territory which is governed directly by the British Government and not via local subsidiary governments United Kingdom logically refers to a local government area though the national government performs the role of local government within that area Contents 1 History 2 The Crown 3 Executive 3 1 His Majesty s Government 3 1 1 The Prime Minister and the Cabinet 3 1 2 Government departments and the Civil Service 3 2 Devolved national administrations 3 2 1 Scottish Government 3 2 2 Welsh Government 3 2 3 Northern Ireland Executive 4 Legislatures 4 1 British Parliament 4 1 1 House of Commons 4 1 2 House of Lords 4 2 Devolved national legislatures 4 2 1 Scottish Parliament 4 2 2 Senedd 4 2 3 Northern Ireland Assembly 5 Judiciary 5 1 England Wales and Northern Ireland 5 2 Scotland 6 Electoral systems 7 Political parties 7 1 Conservatives Tories 7 2 Labour 7 3 Scottish National Party 7 4 Liberal Democrats 7 5 Northern Ireland parties 7 6 Plaid Cymru 7 7 Other parliamentary parties 7 8 Non Parliamentary political parties 7 9 2015 to 2019 7 10 Current political landscape 7 11 Membership 8 Local government 9 Former European Union membership 10 International organisation participation 11 See also 11 1 Overviews by period 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory editMain articles Post war Britain 1945 1979 History of the United Kingdom Victorian era Republic of Ireland and Political history of the United Kingdom 1979 present Treaty of Union agreed by commissioners for each parliament on 22 July 1706 Acts of Union 1707 passed by both the Parliament of England and the Parliament of Scotland to form the Kingdom of Great Britain Acts of Union 1800 passed by both the Parliament of Great Britain and the Parliament of Ireland to form the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Government of Ireland Act 1920 passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom and created the partition of Ireland The republican southern part of Ireland became Republic of Ireland also known as Eire leaving Northern Ireland part of the union The Accession of the United Kingdom to the European Communities EC took effect on 1 January 1973 The United Kingdom withdrew from the European Union EU on 31 January 2020 The Crown editMain article Monarchy of the United Kingdom See also Republicanism in the United Kingdom The British monarch currently Charles III is the head of state of the United Kingdom Though he takes little direct part in government the Crown remains the fount in which ultimate executive power over government lies These powers are known as royal prerogative and can be used for a vast amount of things such as the issue or withdrawal of passports to the dismissal of the prime minister or even the declaration of war The powers are delegated from the monarch personally in the name of the Crown and can be handed to various ministers or other officers of the Crown and can purposely bypass the consent of Parliament The head of His Majesty s Government the prime minister also has weekly meetings with the sovereign where he may express his feelings warn or advise the prime minister in the government s work 6 According to the uncodified constitution of the United Kingdom the monarch has the following powers 7 Domestic powers The power to dismiss and appoint a prime minister The power to dismiss and appoint other ministers The power to summon prorogue and dissolve Parliament The power to grant or refuse Royal Assent to bills making them valid and law The power to commission officers in the Armed Forces The power to command the Armed Forces of the United Kingdom The power to appoint members to the King s Counsel The power to issue and withdraw passports The power to grant prerogative of mercy though capital punishment is abolished this power is still used to change sentences The power to grant honours The power to create corporations via Royal charterForeign powers The power to ratify and make treaties The power to declare war and peace The power to deploy the Armed Forces overseas The power to recognise states The power to credit and receive diplomatsExecutive editExecutive power in the United Kingdom is exercised by the Sovereign King Charles III via His Majesty s Government and the devolved national authorities the Scottish Government the Welsh Government and the Northern Ireland Executive His Majesty s Government edit Main article Government of the United Kingdom The monarch appoints a Prime Minister as the head of His Majesty s Government in the United Kingdom guided by the strict convention that the Prime Minister should be the member of the House of Commons most likely to be able to form a Government with the support of that House In practice this means that the leader of the political party with an absolute majority of seats in the House of Commons is chosen to be the Prime Minister If no party has an absolute majority the leader of the largest party is given the first opportunity to form a coalition The Prime Minister then selects the other Ministers which make up the Government and act as political heads of the various Government Departments About twenty of the most senior government ministers make up the Cabinet and approximately 100 ministers in total comprise the government In accordance with constitutional convention all ministers within the government are either Members of parliament or peers in the House of Lords citation needed As in some other parliamentary systems of government especially those based upon the Westminster system the executive called the government is drawn from and is answerable to Parliament a successful vote of no confidence will force the government either to resign or to seek a parliamentary dissolution and a general election In practice members of parliament of all major parties are strictly controlled by whips who try to ensure they vote according to party policy If the government has a large majority then they are very unlikely to lose enough votes to be unable to pass legislation The Prime Minister and the Cabinet edit Main articles Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and Cabinet of the United Kingdom The Prime Minister currently Rishi Sunak is the most senior minister in the Cabinet Their tenure begins when they are appointed by the monarch The Prime Minister is responsible for chairing Cabinet meetings selecting Cabinet ministers and all other positions in His Majesty s government and formulating government policy The Prime Minister being the de facto leader of the UK exercises executive functions that are nominally vested in the sovereign by way of the Royal Prerogatives Historically the British monarch was the sole source of executive powers in the government However following the lead of the Hanoverian monarchs an arrangement of a Prime Minister chairing and leading the Cabinet began to emerge Over time this arrangement became the effective executive branch of government as it assumed the day to day functioning of the British government away from the sovereign Theoretically the Prime Minister is primus inter pares i e Latin for first among equals among their Cabinet colleagues While the Prime Minister is the senior Cabinet Minister they are theoretically bound to make executive decisions in a collective fashion with the other Cabinet ministers The Cabinet along with the PM consists of Secretaries of State from the various government departments the Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain the Lord Privy Seal the Lord President of the Council the President of the Board of Trade the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster and Ministers without portfolio Cabinet meetings are typically held weekly while Parliament is in session Government departments and the Civil Service edit Main articles Departments of the Government of the United Kingdom and List of government ministers of the United Kingdom The Government of the United Kingdom contains a number of ministries known mainly though not exclusively as departments e g Department for Education These are politically led by a Government Minister who is often a Secretary of State and member of the Cabinet The minister may also be supported by a number of junior ministers In practice several government departments and ministers have responsibilities that cover England alone with devolved bodies having responsibility for Scotland Wales and Northern Ireland for example the Department of Health or responsibilities that mainly focus on England such as the Department for Education Implementation of the Minister s decisions is carried out by a permanent politically neutral organisation known as the Civil Service Its constitutional role is to support the Government of the day regardless of which political party is in power Unlike some other democracies senior civil servants remain in post upon a change of Government Administrative management of the department is led by a head civil servant known in most Departments as a Permanent secretary The majority of the civil service staff in fact work in executive agencies which are separate operational organisations reporting to Departments of State Whitehall is often used as a metonym for the central core of the Civil Service This is because most Government Departments have headquarters in and around the former Royal Palace Whitehall Devolved national administrations edit Main article Devolution in the United Kingdom Scottish Government edit Main article Scottish Government The Scottish Government is responsible for all issues that are not explicitly reserved to the United Kingdom Parliament at Westminster by the Scotland Act including NHS Scotland education justice rural affairs and transport In the 2024 25 financial year its annual budget was almost 60 billion 8 The government is led by the First Minister assisted by various Ministers with individual portfolios and remits The Scottish Parliament nominates a Member to be appointed as First Minister by the King The First Minister then appoints their Ministers now known as Cabinet Secretaries and junior Ministers subject to approval by the Parliament The First Minister the Ministers but not junior ministers the Lord Advocate and Solicitor General are the Members of the Scottish Executive as set out in the Scotland Act 1998 They are collectively known as the Scottish Ministers Welsh Government edit Main article Welsh Government The Welsh Government and Senedd have more limited powers than those devolved to Scotland 9 although following the passing of the Government of Wales Act 2006 and the 2011 Welsh devolution referendum the Senedd can now legislate in some areas through an Act of Senedd Cymru The current First Minister of Wales or Prif Weinidog Cymru in Welsh is Mark Drakeford of Welsh Labour Northern Ireland Executive edit Main article Northern Ireland Executive Assembly have powers closer to those already devolved to Scotland The Northern Ireland Executive is led by a diarchy most recently First Minister Paul Givan Democratic Unionist Party and deputy First Minister Michelle O Neill Sinn Fein Legislatures editThe British Parliament is the supreme legislative body in the United Kingdom i e there is parliamentary sovereignty and government is drawn from and answerable to it Parliament is bicameral consisting of the House of Commons and the House of Lords There are also devolved Scottish and Welsh parliaments and a devolved assembly in Northern Ireland with varying degrees of legislative authority British Parliament edit Main article Parliament of the United Kingdom House of Commons edit nbsp Parliament meets at the Palace of WestminsterMain article House of Commons of the United Kingdom The Countries of the United Kingdom are divided into parliamentary constituencies of broadly equal population by the four Boundary Commissions Each constituency elects a Member of Parliament MP to the House of Commons at general elections and if required at by elections As of the 2010 general election there are 650 constituencies there were 646 before that year s general election At the 2017 general election of the 650 MPs all but one Sylvia Hermon were elected as representatives of a political party However as of the 2019 general election there are currently 11 independent MPs who have either chosen to leave their political party or have had the whip withdrawn In modern times all prime ministers and leaders of the opposition have been drawn from the Commons not the Lords Alec Douglas Home resigned from his peerages days after becoming prime minister in 1963 and the last prime minister before him from the Lords left in 1902 the Marquess of Salisbury One party usually has a majority in parliament because of the use of the First Past the Post electoral system which has been conducive in creating the current Two party system The monarch normally asks a person commissioned to form a government simply whether it can survive in the House of Commons something which majority governments are expected to be able to do In exceptional circumstances the monarch asks someone to form a government with a parliamentary minority 10 which in the event of no party having a majority requires the formation of a coalition government or confidence and supply arrangement This option is only ever taken at a time of national emergency such as war time It was given in 1916 to Bonar Law and when he declined to David Lloyd George and in 1940 to Winston Churchill A government is not formed by a vote of the House of Commons it is a commission from the monarch The House of Commons gets its first chance to indicate confidence in the new government when it votes on the Speech from the throne the legislative programme proposed by the new government House of Lords edit Main article House of Lords See also Reform of the House of Lords The House of Lords was previously a largely hereditary aristocratic chamber although including life peers and Lords Spiritual It is currently midway through extensive reforms the most recent of these being enacted in the House of Lords Act 1999 The house consists of two very different types of member the Lords Temporal and Lords Spiritual Lords Temporal include appointed members life peers with no hereditary right for their descendants to sit in the house and ninety two remaining hereditary peers elected from among and by the holders of titles which previously gave a seat in the House of Lords The Lords Spiritual represent the established Church of England and number twenty six the Five Ancient Sees Canterbury York London Winchester and Durham and the 21 next most senior bishops Secular organisations such as Humanists UK oppose bishops sitting in the House of Lords 11 The movement to end the Church of England s status as the official state religion of the United Kingdom is known as disestablishmentarianism Alternatives include a secular state in which the state purports to be officially neutral in matters of religion The House of Lords currently acts to review legislation initiated by the House of Commons with the power to propose amendments and can exercise a suspensive veto This allows it to delay legislation if it does not approve it for twelve months However the use of vetoes is limited by convention and by the operation of the Parliament Acts 1911 and 1949 the Lords may not veto the money bills or major manifesto promises see Salisbury convention Persistent use of the veto can also be overturned by the Commons under a provision of the Parliament Act 1911 Often governments will accept changes in legislation in order to avoid both the time delay and the negative publicity of being seen to clash with the Lords However the Lords still retain a full veto in acts which would extend the life of parliament beyond the 5 year term limit introduced by the Parliament Act 1911 The Constitutional Reform Act 2005 outlined plans for a Supreme Court of the United Kingdom to replace the role of the Law Lords The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom replaced the House of Lords as the final court of appeal on civil cases within the United Kingdom on 1 October 2009 Devolved national legislatures edit Main article Devolution in the United Kingdom Though the British parliament remains the sovereign parliament Scotland and Wales have devolved parliaments and Northern Ireland has an assembly Each can have its powers broadened narrowed or changed by an act of the UK Parliament Both the Scottish Parliament and the Welsh Senedd gained legislative power over some forms of taxation between 2012 and 2016 Their power over economic issues is significantly constrained by an act of parliament passed in 2020 18 The UK is a unitary state with a devolved system of government This contrasts with a federal system in which sub parliaments or state parliaments and assemblies have a clearly defined constitutional right to exist and a right to exercise certain constitutionally guaranteed and defined functions and cannot be unilaterally abolished by acts of the central parliament All three devolved institutions are elected by proportional representation the Additional Member System is used in Scotland and Wales and Single Transferable Vote is used in Northern Ireland England therefore is the only country in the UK not to have its own devolved parliament However senior politicians of all main parties have voiced concerns in regard to the West Lothian Question 19 20 which is raised where certain policies for England are set by MPs from all four constituent nations whereas similar policies for Scotland or Wales might be decided in the devolved assemblies by legislators from those countries alone Alternative proposals for English regional government have stalled following a poorly received referendum on devolved government for the North East of England which had hitherto been considered the region most in favour of the idea with the exception of Cornwall where there is widespread support for a Cornish Assembly including all five Cornish MPs 21 22 England is therefore governed according to the balance of parties across the whole of the United Kingdom The government has no plans to establish an English parliament or assembly although several pressure groups 23 are calling for one One of their main arguments is that MPs and thus voters from different parts of the UK have inconsistent powers Currently an MP from Scotland can vote on legislation which affects only England but MPs from England or indeed Scotland cannot vote on matters devolved to the Scottish parliament Indeed the former Prime Minister Gordon Brown who was an MP for a Scottish constituency until the 2015 general election introduced some laws that only affect England and not his own constituency This anomaly is known as the West Lothian question The policy of the British Government in England was to establish elected regional assemblies with no legislative powers The London Assembly was the first of these established in 2000 following a referendum in 1998 but further plans were abandoned following rejection of a proposal for an elected assembly in North East England in a referendum in 2004 Unelected regional assemblies remain in place in eight regions of England Scottish Parliament edit Main article Scottish Parliament nbsp The Scottish Parliament Building in Holyrood Edinburgh seat of the Scottish Parliament nbsp The debating chamber of the Scottish Parliament The Scottish Parliament is the national unicameral legislature of Scotland located in the Holyrood area of the capital Edinburgh The Parliament informally referred to as Holyrood 24 cf Westminster is a democratically elected body comprising 129 members who are known as Members of the Scottish Parliament or MSPs Members are elected for four year terms under the mixed member proportional representation system As a result 73 MSPs represent individual geographical constituencies elected by the plurality first past the post system with a further 56 returned from eight additional member regions each electing seven MSPs 25 The current Scottish Parliament was established by the Scotland Act 1998 and its first meeting as a devolved legislature was on 12 May 1999 The parliament has the power to pass laws and has limited tax varying capability Another of its roles is to hold the Scottish Government to account The devolved matters over which it has responsibility include education health agriculture and justice A degree of domestic authority and all foreign policy remains with the British Parliament in Westminster The public take part in Parliament in a way that is not the case at Westminster through Cross Party Groups on policy topics which the interested public join and attend meetings of alongside Members of the Scottish Parliament MSPs The resurgence in Celtic language and identity as well as regional politics and development has contributed to forces pulling against the unity of the state 26 This was clearly demonstrated when although some argue it was influenced by general public disillusionment with Labour the Scottish National Party SNP became the largest party in the Scottish Parliament by one seat Alex Salmond leader of SNP between 2004 and 2014 made history becoming the first First Minister of Scotland from a party other than Labour following the 2007 Scottish Parliament election The SNP governed as a minority administration following this election Nationalism support for breaking up the UK has experienced a dramatic rise in popularity in recent years with a pivotal moment coming at the 2011 Scottish Parliament election where the SNP capitalised on the collapse of the Liberal Democrat support to improve on their 2007 performance to win the first ever outright majority at Holyrood despite the voting system being specifically designed to prevent majorities with Labour remaining the largest opposition party This election result prompted the leader of the three main opposition parties to resign Iain Gray was succeeded as Scottish Labour leader by Johann Lamont Scottish Conservative and Unionist leader Annabel Goldie was replaced by Ruth Davidson and Tavish Scott leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats was replaced by Willie Rennie A major SNP manifesto pledge was to hold a referendum on Scottish Independence which was duly granted by the British Government and held on 18 September 2014 When the nationalists came to power in 2011 opinion polls placed support for independence at around 31 but in 2014 45 voted to leave the union In the wake of the referendum defeat membership of the SNP surged to over 100 000 overtaking the Liberal Democrats as the third largest political party in the UK by membership and in the general election of May 2015 the SNP swept the board and took 56 of the 59 Westminster constituencies in Scotland far surpassing their previous best of 11 seats in the late 1970s and winning more than 50 of the Scottish vote Salmond resigned as First Minister of Scotland and leader of the SNP following the country s rejection of independence in September 2014 and was succeeded in both roles by the deputy First Minister and deputy leader of the SNP Nicola Sturgeon Also in the wake of the referendum Lamont stood down as Scottish Labour leader and Jim Murphy was elected to replace her Murphy was the leader until the general election in 2015 in which he lost his seat in Westminster After the defeat he resigned his position and her deputy MSP Kezia Dugdale became leader of the party and leader of SLP in Holyrood In 2017 she unexpectedly resigned and was replaced as Scottish Labour leader by the English born Richard Leonard He held the post until quitting in January 2021 with Anas Sarwar replacing him the following month Senedd edit Main article Senedd nbsp The Senedd building in Cardiff BayThe Senedd formerly the National Assembly for Wales is the devolved legislature of Wales with power to make legislation and vary taxes The Parliament comprises 60 members who are known as Members of the Senedd or MSs Welsh Aelodau o r Senedd ASau Members are elected for four year terms under an additional members system where 40 MSs represent geographical constituencies elected by the plurality system and 20 MSs from five electoral regions using the d Hondt method of proportional representation nbsp The Siambr the debating chamber of the SeneddThe Welsh Parliament was created by the Government of Wales Act 1998 which followed a referendum in 1997 On its creation most of the powers of the Welsh Office and Secretary of State for Wales were transferred to it The Senedd had no powers to initiate primary legislation until limited law making powers were gained through the Government of Wales Act 2006 Its primary law making powers were enhanced following a Yes vote in the referendum on 3 March 2011 making it possible for it to legislate without having to consult the British parliament nor the Secretary of State for Wales in the 20 areas that are devolved 27 Northern Ireland Assembly edit Main article Northern Ireland Assembly nbsp Parliament Buildings in Stormont Belfast seat of the Northern Ireland Assembly The government of Northern Ireland was established as a result of the 1998 Good Friday Agreement This created the Northern Ireland Assembly The Assembly is a unicameral body consisting of 90 members elected under the Single Transferable Vote form of proportional representation The Assembly is based on the principle of power sharing in order to ensure that both communities in Northern Ireland unionist and nationalist participate in governing the region It has power to legislate in a wide range of areas and to elect the Northern Ireland Executive cabinet It sits at Parliament Buildings at Stormont in Belfast The Assembly has authority to legislate in a field of competences known as transferred matters These matters are not explicitly enumerated in the Northern Ireland Act 1998 but instead include any competence not explicitly retained by the Parliament at Westminster Powers reserved by Westminster are divided into excepted matters which it retains indefinitely and reserved matters which may be transferred to the competence of the Northern Ireland Assembly at a future date Health criminal law and education are transferred while royal relations are all excepted While the Assembly was in suspension due to issues involving the main parties and the Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA its legislative powers were exercised by the UK government which effectively had power to legislate by decree Laws that would normally be within the competence of the Assembly were passed by the UK government in the form of Orders in Council rather than legislative acts There has been a significant decrease in violence over the last twenty years though the situation remains tense with the more hard line parties such as Sinn Fein and the Democratic Unionist Party now holding the most parliamentary seats see Demographics and politics of Northern Ireland Judiciary editSee also Courts of the United Kingdom and Law of the United Kingdom The United Kingdom does not have a single legal system due to it being created by the political union of previously independent countries with the terms of the Treaty of Union guaranteeing the continued existence of Scotland s separate legal system Today the UK has three distinct systems of law English law Northern Ireland law and Scots law Recent constitutional changes saw a new Supreme Court of the United Kingdom come into being in October 2009 that took on the appeal functions of the Appellate Committee of the House of Lords 28 The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council comprising the same members as the Supreme Court is the highest court of appeal for several independent Commonwealth countries the UK overseas territories and the British crown dependencies England Wales and Northern Ireland edit Main articles English law and Northern Ireland law Both English law which applies in England and Wales and Northern Ireland law are based on common law principles The essence of common law is that law is made by judges sitting in courts applying their common sense and knowledge of legal precedent stare decisis to the facts before them The Courts of England and Wales are headed by the Senior Courts of England and Wales consisting of the Court of Appeal the High Court of Justice for civil cases and the Crown Court for criminal cases The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom is the highest court in the land for both criminal and civil cases in England Wales and Northern Ireland and any decision it makes is binding on every other court in the hierarchy Scotland edit Main article Scots law Scots law a hybrid system based on both common law and civil law principles applies in Scotland The chief courts are the Court of Session for civil cases and the High Court of Justiciary for criminal cases The Supreme Court of the United Kingdom serves as the highest court of appeal for civil cases under Scots law Sheriff courts deal with most civil and criminal cases including conducting criminal trials with a jury known that as Sheriff solemn Court or with a Sheriff and no jury known as Sheriff summary Court The Sheriff courts provide a local court service with 49 Sheriff courts organised across six Sheriffdoms Electoral systems editMain article Elections in the United Kingdom This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Various electoral systems are used in the UK The first past the post system is used for general elections to the House of Commons and also for some local government elections in England and Wales The first past the post system elects members to parliament through individual elections in each of the 650 constituencies in the UK To be elected to the House of Commons candidates require the biggest share of votes Each constituency can only elect one member to parliament voters are given a ballot paper with a list of candidates from which they can select one 1 The plurality at large voting the bloc vote is also used for some local government elections in England and Wales The plurality system is a simple way of election the winner requires only to gain more votes than any other candidate 2 The additional member system is used for elections to the Scottish Parliament Senedd and London Assembly The system is implemented differently in each of the three locations The additional member s system used when electing members of parliament is a combination of the first past the post system and the party list system Voters are given two ballots one is for the candidates running to be elected as MP and the other has a list of parties that are running for a seat in parliament Voters choose their preferred party 3 The single transferable vote system is used in Northern Ireland to elect the Northern Ireland Assembly local councils and Members of the European Parliament and in Scotland to elect local councils The single transferrable vote is a form of proportional representation the strength of a party in parliament is equal to the number of votes they received during a general election Areas elect a team of representatives rather than the traditional one they also represent a larger area Voters rank their choices they can rank as many as they choose since parties will run more than one candidate in each area To be elected candidates have to receive a specific number of votes the quota which is decided based on the number of vacancies and the number of people that can vote 4 The alternative vote system is used for by elections in Scottish local councils The alternative vote system is designed to deal with vote splitting Under the first past the post system a candidate can win even when the majority votes against them if this majority is split over several other candidates Voters rank the candidates from their preferred to their least preferred if a candidate is the first choice for more than half of the votes cast they win But when there is no majority the loser is removed and the second choice becomes the first This process is repeated until one candidate receives the majority 5 The D Hondt method of party list proportional representation was used for European Parliament elections in England Scotland and Wales between 1999 and 2019 the last such election before Brexit The supplementary vote is used to elect directly elected mayors in England including the mayor of London The use of the first past the post to elect members of Parliament is unusual among European nations The use of the system means that when three or more candidates receive a significant share of the vote MPs are often elected from individual constituencies with a plurality receiving more votes than any other candidate but not an absolute majority 50 percent plus one vote Elections and political parties in the United Kingdom are affected by Duverger s law the political science principle that states that plurality voting systems such as first past the post tend to lead to the development of two party systems The UK like several other states has sometimes been called a two and a half party system because parliamentary politics is dominated by the Labour Party and Conservative Party while the Liberal Democrats used to hold a significant number of seats but still substantially less than Labour and the Conservatives and several small parties some of them regional or nationalist trailed far behind in the number of seats although this changed in the 2015 general election In the last few general elections voter mandates for Westminster in the 30 40 ranges have been swung into 60 parliamentary majorities No single party has won a majority of the popular vote since the Third National Government of Stanley Baldwin in 1935 On two occasions since World War II 1951 and February 1974 a party that came in second in the popular vote came out with the largest number of seats Electoral reform for parliamentary elections has been proposed many times The Jenkins Commission report in October 1998 suggested implementing the Alternative Vote Top up also called alternative vote plus or AV in parliamentary elections Under this proposal most MPs would be directly elected from constituencies by the alternative vote with a number of additional members elected from top up lists However no action was taken by the Labour government at the time There are several groups in the UK campaigning for electoral reform including the Electoral Reform Society Make Votes Count Coalition and Fairshare The boundary commission for England has also suggested in its 2023 boundary review that constituency lines should be redrawn to allow constituencies to have a similar number of residents The 2010 general election resulted in a hung parliament no single party was able to command a majority in the House of Commons This was only the second general election since World War II to return a hung parliament the first being the February 1974 election The Conservatives gained the most seats ending 13 years of Labour government and the largest percentage of the popular vote but fell 20 seats short of a majority The Conservatives and Liberal Democrats entered into a new coalition government headed by David Cameron Under the terms of the coalition agreement the government committed itself to holding a referendum in May 2011 on whether to change parliamentary elections from first past the post to AV Electoral reform was a major priority for the Liberal Democrats who favour proportional representation but were able to negotiate only a referendum on AV the alternative vote system is not a form of proportional representation with the Conservatives The coalition partners campaigned on opposite sides with the Liberal Democrats supporting AV and the Conservatives opposing it The referendum resulted in the Conservatives favour and the first past the post system was maintained Political parties editMain article List of political parties in the United Kingdom nbsp 2005 general election results by age group voters for Conservative blue Labour red Lib Dem yellow other parties green and those not voting grey Since the 1920s the two main political parties in the UK in terms of the number of seats in the House of Commons are the Conservative and Unionist Party and the Labour Party The Scottish National Party has the second largest party membership 29 but a smaller number of MPs as it only fields candidates for constituencies in Scotland 30 The modern day Conservative Party was founded in 1834 and is an outgrowth of the Tory movement or party which began in 1678 Today it is still colloquially referred to as the Tory Party and members supporters are referred to as Tories The Liberal Democrats or Lib Dems were founded in 1988 by an amalgamation of the Liberal Party and the Social Democratic Party SDP a right wing Labour breakaway movement formed in 1981 The Liberals and SDP had contested elections together as the SDP Liberal Alliance for seven years previously The modern Liberal Party had been founded in 1859 as an outgrowth of the Whig movement or party which began at the same time as the Tory Party and was its historical rival as well as the Radical and Peelite tendencies The Liberal Party was one of the two dominant parties along with the Conservatives from its founding until the 1920s when it rapidly declined in popularity and was supplanted on the left by the Labour Party which was founded in 1900 and formed its first minority government in 1924 Since that time the Labour and Conservative parties have been dominant with the Liberals later Liberal Democrats being the third largest party until 2015 when they lost 49 of their 57 seats they now hold 11 seats They lost 10 seats in the 2019 general election Currently the Scottish National Party is the third largest party and have been since the 2015 General Election when they gained 56 seats Founded in 1934 the SNP advocates Scottish independence and has had continuous representation in Parliament since 1967 The SNP currently leads a minority government in the Scottish Parliament and has 48 MPs in the House of Commons after the 2019 general election Minor parties also hold seats in parliament Plaid Cymru the Welsh nationalist party has had continuous representation in Parliament since 1974 and currently hold three of the 40 Welsh seats with a fourth member which the whip revoked Plaid has had the second highest number of seats in the Senedd after Welsh Labour for most of the period since devolution in 1999 but currently has the same number 10 as the Welsh Conservatives They currently have three MPs In Northern Ireland all 18 MPs are from parties that only contest elections in Northern Ireland except for Sinn Fein which contests elections in both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland The unionist Democratic Unionist Party DUP who currently hold eight seats the republican Sinn Fein who currently hold seven seats the nationalist Social Democratic and Labour Party SDLP who currently hold two and the non sectarian Alliance Party of Northern Ireland who currently hold one seat all gained seats in Parliament at the 2010 general election the Alliance Party for the first time Sinn Fein has a policy of abstentionism and their MPs refuse to take their seats in Parliament and have done so since 1918 The DUP Sinn Fein the Ulster Unionist Party UUP and the SDLP are considered the four major political parties in Northern Ireland holding the most seats in the Northern Ireland Assembly The Alba Party led by former SNP leader Alex Salmond has two seats Both of their MPs Kenny MacAskill and Neale Hanvey were elected for the SNP at the 2019 election but defected to Alba in March 2021 31 The Green Party of England and Wales holds one seat which it has held since 2010 There are also Independent MPs One is the Speaker Lindsay Hoyle who revoked his Labour affiliation after the 2019 Speaker election Others have had their whip revoked or have resigned from their political party At the most recent general election in 2019 the Conservatives gained a majority after two years of being a minority government Conservatives Tories edit Main article Conservative Party UK The Conservative Party won the largest number of seats at the 2015 general election returning 330 MPs enough for an overall majority and went on to form the first Conservative majority government since the 1992 general election The Conservatives won only 318 seats at the 2017 general election but went on to form a confidence and supply deal with the Democratic Unionist Party DUP who got 10 seats in the House of Commons allowing the Conservative Party to remain in government The Conservatives won 365 seats at the 2019 general election and had a majority forming the first majority government since 2015 17 The Conservative Party can trace its origin back to 1662 with the Court Party and the Country Party being formed in the aftermath of the English Civil War The Court Party soon became known as the Tories a name that has stuck despite the official name being Conservative The term Tory originates from the Exclusion Crisis of 1678 1681 the Whigs were those who supported the exclusion of the Roman Catholic Duke of York from the thrones of England Ireland and Scotland and the Tories were those who opposed it Generally the Tories were associated with lesser gentry and the Church of England while Whigs were more associated with trade money larger land holders or land magnates expansion and tolerance of Catholicism The Rochdale Radicals were a group of more extreme reformists who were also heavily involved in the cooperative movement They sought to bring about a more equal society and are considered by modern standards to be left wing After becoming associated with repression of popular discontent in the years after 1815 the Tories underwent a fundamental transformation under the influence of Robert Peel himself an industrialist rather than a landowner who in his 1834 Tamworth Manifesto outlined a new Conservative philosophy of reforming ills while conserving the good Though Peel s supporters subsequently split from their colleagues over the issue of free trade in 1846 ultimately joining the Whigs and the Radicals to form what would become the Liberal Party Peel s version of the party s underlying outlook was retained by the remaining Tories who adopted his label of Conservative as the official name of their party The Conservatives were in government for eighteen years between 1979 and 1997 under the leadership of the first ever female Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and former Chancellor of the Exchequer John Major 1990 97 Their landslide defeat at the 1997 general election saw the Conservative Party lose over half their seats gained in 1992 and saw the party re align with public perceptions of them The Conservatives lost all their seats in both Scotland and Wales and was their worst defeat since 1906 In 2008 the Conservative Party formed a pact with the Ulster Unionist Party UUP to select joint candidates for European and House of Commons elections this angered the DUP as by splitting the Unionist vote republican parties will be elected in some areas 32 After thirteen years in opposition the Conservatives returned to power as part of a coalition agreement with the Liberal Democrats in 2010 going on to form a majority government in 2015 David Cameron resigned as Prime Minister in July 2016 which resulted in the appointment of the country s second female Prime Minister Theresa May The Conservative Party is the only party in the history of the United Kingdom to have been governed by a female Prime Minister In 2019 Boris Johnson was appointed Prime Minister after May stepped down during Brexit negotiations At one point during 2019 his party had a parliamentary minority for a short period after he ejected a large number of party members of which some were subsequently allowed to return for the 2019 General election After the election the Tories returned with a majority government under Johnson Historically the party has been the mainland party most pre occupied by British unionism as attested to by the party s full name the Conservative and Unionist Party This resulted in the merger between the Conservatives and Joseph Chamberlain s Liberal Unionist Party composed of former Liberals who opposed Irish home rule The unionist tendency is still in evidence today manifesting sometimes as a scepticism or opposition to devolution firm support for the continued existence of the United Kingdom in the face of movements advocating independence from the UK and a historic link with the cultural unionism of Northern Ireland Labour edit Main article Labour Party UK The Labour Party won the second largest number of seats in the House of Commons at the 2019 general election with 202 seats overall 60 seats less than 2017 The history of the Labour Party goes back to 1900 when a Labour Representation Committee was established and changed its name to The Labour Party in 1906 After 1918 this led to the demise of the Liberal Party as the main reformist force in British politics The existence of the Labour Party on the left wing of British politics led to a slow waning of energy from the Liberal Party which has consequently assumed third place in national politics After performing poorly at the general elections of 1922 1923 and 1924 the Liberal Party was superseded by the Labour Party as being the party of the left Following two brief spells in minority governments in 1924 and 1929 1931 the party was part of the Churchill war ministry during World War II When the war ended the Labour Party won a landslide victory at the 1945 khaki election winning a majority for the first time ever Throughout the rest of the twentieth century Labour governments alternated with Conservative governments The Labour Party suffered the wilderness years of 1951 1964 three consecutive general election defeats and 1979 1997 four consecutive general election defeats During this second period Margaret Thatcher who became Leader of the Conservative Party in 1975 made a fundamental change to Conservative policies turning the Conservative Party into an economically liberal party At the 1979 general election she defeated James Callaghan s Labour government following the Winter of Discontent For all of the 1980s and most of the 1990s Conservative governments under Thatcher and her successor John Major pursued policies of privatisation anti trade unionism and for a time monetarism now known collectively as Thatcherism The Labour Party elected left winger Michael Foot as their leader in 1980 and he responded to dissatisfaction within the Labour Party by pursuing a number of radical policies developed by its grassroots members In 1981 several centrist and right leaning Labour MPs formed a breakaway group called the Social Democratic Party SDP a move which split Labour and is widely believed to have made the Labour Party unelectable for a decade The SDP formed an alliance with the Liberal Party which contested the 1983 and 1987 general elections as a pro European centrist alternative to Labour and the Conservatives Following some initial success the SDP did not prosper partly due to its unfavourable distribution of votes by the First Past the Post electoral system and was accused by some of splitting the Labour vote The SDP eventually merged with the Liberal Party to form the Liberal Democrats in 1988 The Labour Party was defeated in a landslide at the 1983 general election and Michael Foot was replaced shortly thereafter by Neil Kinnock as party leader Kinnock progressively expelled members of Militant a left wing group which practised entryism and moderated many of the party s policies Despite these changes as well as electoral gains and also due to Kinnock s negative media image Labour was defeated at the 1987 and 1992 general elections and he was succeeded by Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer John Smith Shadow Home Secretary Tony Blair became Leader of the Labour Party following Smith s sudden death from a heart attack in 1994 He continued to move the Labour Party towards the centre by loosening links with the unions and continuing many of Thatcher s neoliberal policies This coupled with the professionalising of the party machine s approach to the media helped Labour win a historic landslide at the 1997 general election after eighteen consecutive years of Conservative rule Some observers say the Labour Party had by then morphed from a democratic socialist party to a social democratic party a process which delivered three general election victories but alienated some of its core base leading to the formation of the Socialist Labour Party citation needed A subset of Labour MPs stand as joint Labour and Co operative candidates due to a long standing electoral alliance between the Labour Party and the Co operative Party the political arm of the British co operative movement At the 2019 general election 26 were elected 33 Following Tony Blair s election as leader of Labour the part was reformed under the New Labour branding and won the 1997 election with an overall landslide victory Under New Labour the Human Rights Act and National Minimum Wage Act were passed in 1998 34 35 Scottish National Party edit Main article Scottish National Party The Scottish National Party won the third largest number of seats in the House of Commons at the 2015 general election winning 56 MPs from the 59 constituencies in Scotland having won 50 of the popular vote This was an increase of 50 MPs on the result achieved in 2010 At the 2017 general election the SNP won 35 seats a net loss of 21 seats At the 2019 general election the SNP won 48 seats a net gain of 13 seats The SNP has enjoyed parliamentary representation continuously since 1967 Following the 2007 Scottish parliamentary elections the SNP emerged as the largest party with 47 MSPs and formed a minority government with Alex Salmond as First Minister After the 2011 Scottish parliamentary election the SNP won enough seats to form a majority government the first time this had ever happened since devolution was established in 1999 Members of the Scottish National Party and Plaid Cymru work together as a single parliamentary group 36 following a formal pact signed in 1986 This group currently has 49 MPs Liberal Democrats edit Main article Liberal Democrats UK The Liberal Democrats won the fourth largest number of seats at the 2019 general election returning 11 MPs The Liberal Democrats were founded in 1988 by an amalgamation of the Liberal Party with the Social Democratic Party but can trace their origin back to the Whigs and the Rochdale Radicals who evolved into the Liberal Party The term Liberal Party was first used officially in 1868 though it had been in use colloquially for decades beforehand The Liberal Party formed a government in 1868 and then alternated with the Conservative Party as the party of government throughout the late nineteenth century and early twentieth century The Liberal Democrats are a party with policies on constitutional and political reforms including changing the voting system for general elections 2011 United Kingdom Alternative Vote referendum abolishing the House of Lords and replacing it with a 300 member elected Senate introducing fixed five year Parliaments and introducing a National Register of Lobbyists They also support what they see as greater fairness and social mobility In the coalition government the party promoted legislation introducing a pupil premium funding for schools directed at the poorest students to give them an equal chance in life They also supported same sex marriage and increasing the income tax threshold to 10 000 a pre election manifesto commitment In the 2010 election David Cameron formed a coalition government with Nick Clegg After the 2015 elections the conservative government continued with a single party rather than a coalition Some coalition government reforms that were proposed were for fixed term parliaments This piece of legislation consisted of setting a five year interval between general elections Another piece of coalition reform that was enacted was the Scottish independence referendum The result overall was remain 37 Northern Ireland parties edit Main article List of political parties in Northern Ireland The Democratic Unionist Party DUP had 8 MPs elected at the 2019 general election Founded in 1971 by Ian Paisley it has grown to become the larger of the two main unionist political parties in Northern Ireland Sinn Fein MPs had 7 MPs elected at the 2019 election but Sinn Fein MPs traditionally abstain from the House of Commons and refuse to take their seats in what they view as a foreign parliament Plaid Cymru edit Main article Plaid Cymru Plaid Cymru has enjoyed parliamentary representation continuously since 1974 and had 4 MPs elected at the 2019 general election though one was suspended Following the 2007 Welsh Assembly elections they joined Labour as the junior partner in a coalition government but have fallen down to the third largest party in the Assembly after the 2011 Assembly elections and have become an opposition party Other parliamentary parties edit The Green Party of England and Wales has had a single MP Caroline Lucas since 2010 and re elected at the 2019 general election the party previously had an MP in 1992 Cynog Dafis Ceredigion who was elected on a joint Plaid Cymru Green Party ticket It also has three seats on the London Assembly and over 500 local councillors as of May 2022 38 The UK Independence Party UKIP had one MP and 24 seats in the European Parliament as well as a number of local councillors UKIP also had a MLA in the Northern Ireland Assembly UKIP had become an emerging alternative party among some voters gaining the third largest share of the vote in the 2015 general election and the largest share of the vote of any party 27 in the 2014 European elections In 2014 UKIP gained its first ever MP following the defection and re election of Douglas Carswell in the 2014 Clacton by election They campaign mainly on issues such as reducing immigration and EU withdrawal They no longer have any MPs The Respect party a left wing group that came out of the anti war movement had a single MP George Galloway from 2005 to 2010 and again between 2012 and 2015 39 Change UK was a political party formed and disbanded in 2019 It had five MPs four of whom were elected as Labour MPs and one as Conservative MPs There are usually a small number of Independent politicians in parliament with no party allegiance In modern times this has usually occurred when a sitting member leaves their party and some such MPs have been re elected as independents Since 1950 only two new members have been elected as independents without having ever stood for a major party Martin Bell represented the Tatton constituency in Cheshire between 1997 and 2001 He was elected following a sleaze scandal involving the then incumbent Conservative MP Neil Hamilton Bell a BBC journalist stood as an anti corruption independent candidate and the Labour and Liberal Democrat parties withdrew their candidates from the election Dr Richard Taylor MP was elected for the Wyre Forest constituency in 2001 on a platform opposing the closure of Kidderminster hospital He later established Health Concern the party under which he ran in 2005 Non Parliamentary political parties edit Other political parties exist but struggle to return MPs to Parliament The Brexit Party was founded in January 2019 with leader Nigel Farage former retired UKIP leader It initially had 14 MEPs all of whom had been elected as members of UKIP In the 2019 European Parliament election in the United Kingdom it returned 29 MEPs The MEPs were elected representatives of the party until 11pm on 31 January 2020 when the UK left the European Union and the position of British MEPs was subsequently abolished 40 Following the 2021 Scottish Parliament Election the Scottish Greens have 8 MSPs in the Scottish Parliament and are the junior partner in the SNP Green coalition They also 35 local councillors The Green Party in Northern Ireland has previously had MLAs in the Northern Ireland Assembly They currently have 8 local councillors The Scottish Socialist Party SSP won its first seat in the Scottish Parliament in the 1999 Scottish Parliament election In the 2003 Scottish Parliament election the party increased their number of seats to 6 The party built up its support through opposing the war in Iraq and fighting for policies such as free school meals and an end to prescription charges In the 2007 Scottish Parliament election it lost all of its MSPs but remains politically active and continues to contest elections 41 The British National Party BNP became the official opposition in the 2006 Barking and Dagenham Council election won a seat in the 2008 London Assembly election two seats in the 2009 European elections and received the fifth highest share of votes in the 2010 general election At their peak they had 58 local councillors However the early 2010s saw the BNP s support collapse and became fractured resulting in them losing all elected representation by 2018 42 The British Democratic Party BDP was founded in 2013 by Andrew Brons one of the British National Party s two MEPs In 2022 following the collapse of the BNP a plethora of prominent ex BNP members rapidly began coalescing around the British Democrats It is currently the only far right UK political party with any elected representation The Aspire Party has 24 out of the 45 seats in the Tower Hamlets council The Women s Equality Party WEP was founded in 2015 The party gained its first elected representation in the 2019 United Kingdom local elections winning one local councillor seat on Congleton Town Council 43 The party has no other elected representation at any other level of governance The Libertarian Party was founded in 2008 and has contested several local elections and parliamentary constituencies It has no elected representatives at any level of governance The English Democrats was founded in 2002 and advocates England having its own parliament The party s candidate was elected mayor of Doncaster in 2009 before resigning from the party in February 2013 44 Other parties include the Socialist Labour Party UK the Socialist Party of Great Britain the Communist Party of Britain the Socialist Party England and Wales the Socialist Workers Party the Liberal Party Mebyon Kernow a Cornish nationalist party in Cornwall the Yorkshire Party in Yorkshire and the National Health Action Party The Pirate Party UK existed from 2009 to 2020 Several local parties contest only within a specific area a single county borough or district Examples include the Better Bedford Independent Party which was one of the dominant parties in Bedford Borough Council and led by Bedford s former Mayor Frank Branston The most notable local party is Health Concern which controlled a single seat in the British Parliament from 2001 to 2010 The Jury Team launched in March 2009 and described as a non party party is an umbrella organisation seeking to increase the number of independent MPs 45 The Official Monster Raving Loony Party was founded in 1983 The OMRLP are distinguished by having a deliberately bizarre manifesto which contains things that seem to be impossible or too absurd to implement usually to highlight what they see as real life absurdities It is effectively regarded as a satirical political party 2015 to 2019 edit After winning the largest number of seats and votes in the 2015 general election the Conservatives under David Cameron remained ahead of the Labour Party led by Jeremy Corbyn since September 2015 The SNP maintained its position in Scotland the party was just short of an overall majority at the Scottish parliamentary elections in May 2016 However a turbulent referendum on the United Kingdom s membership of the European Union called for by David Cameron led to his resignation the appointment of a new prime minister Theresa May and divided opinion on Europe amongst the party In addition the EU referendum campaign plunged the Labour Party into crisis and resulted in a motion of no confidence in the party leader Jeremy Corbyn being passed by the party s MPs in a 172 40 vote 46 which followed a significant number of resignations from the Shadow Cabinet This led to a leadership election which began with Angela Eagle the former Shadow First Secretary of State and Shadow Secretary of State for Business Innovation and Skills who eight days later withdrew from the leadership race to support Owen Smith the former Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions This was won by Jeremy Corbyn with an increased majority Following the vote to leave the European Union Nigel Farage offered his own resignation as leader something he had campaigned for since 1992 A leadership contest also took place in the Green Party which led to the joint election on 2 September 2016 of Jonathan Bartley and Caroline Lucas as co leaders who took over the role in a job share arrangement 47 Lucas was previously leader until 2010 and is the party s only MP Strategic cross party alliances have been initiated including a progressive alliance and a Patriotic Alliance 48 49 as proposed by UKIP donor Arron Banks In 2017 the prime minister Theresa May called a general election She hoped to increase the conservative majority to diffuse party opposition to her deal to leave the EU In the election the conservatives lost seats and the Labour party under Jeremy Corbyn gained 30 seats This led to a minority conservative government supported by the DUP In July 2019 Boris Johnson won the leadership of the conservative party following the resignation of May He became the prime minister by default In August 2019 Prime Minister Boris Johnson requested the monarch Queen Elizabeth II to prorogue the British parliament 50 Although this measure is common for incoming governments to allow time to prepare the Queen s speech the move caused great controversy as it was announced to last 23 days instead of the usual 4 or 5 days 51 It would end the current session of the Parliament that had been running for 2 years and prevent further parliamentary debate The government stated that it was nothing to do with Brexit and that there would still be ample time for debate before Brexit happens 52 Opponents believed that parliament had been suspended to force through a no deal Brexit and prevent parliament from being able to thwart the government s plan Others argued that it facilitated the Brexit negotiations by forcing the EU to modify the current proposed deal The move is unprecedented in British politics and caused debate in the media an attempt to stop it in the Scottish Court of Session an attempt by ex prime minister John Major and others to stop it in the English High Court and in the High Court in Northern Ireland 53 It was reported by many media sources that the move takes the UK one more step towards a full dictatorship from its current status of elective dictatorship 54 The legality of the suspension of parliament was tested in courts in England and Scotland The case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom On 24 September it ruled unanimously that the prorogation was both justiciable and unlawful The prorogation was quashed and deemed null and of no legal effect Parliament resumed the next day On the return of parliament the government lost its majority when Conservative MP Phillip Lee crossed the floor of the house to join the Liberal Democrats 55 This meant that the combined votes of the Conservative and DUP MPs amounted to one less than the combined votes of opposition parties The government of Boris Johnson then lost a vote 301 to 328 giving control of the agenda of the house to the MPs removing the control the government had over the introduction of new laws 56 The 21 Conservative MPs who voted against their own government had the whip removed by Number 10 removing them from the party This included long standing members of the party 57 Johnson called for a general election and following a few attempts succeeded in getting a vote approving an election through parliament Current political landscape edit Main article 2020s in United Kingdom political history In the December 2019 general election the Conservative Party led by Boris Johnson won a large overall majority Jeremy Corbyn resigned as leader of the Labour Party Jo Swinson resigned as Lib Dem leader after losing her own seat 58 On 20 December 2019 the Brexit withdrawal agreement was passed The UK left the EU on 31 January 2020 at 11 p m GMT and entered a transition period set to finish on 31 December 2020 In January 2020 the Labour Party began the process of electing a new leader On 4 April 2020 Keir Starmer was elected leader of the Labour Party with 56 2 of the vote in the first round 59 In October 2020 Corbyn was suspended from the Labour Party over his comments about antisemitism According to The Washington Post Corbyn s ouster from a party he led in the last two national elections in 2019 and 2017 was a stunning rebuke and mark him now as a near outcast at least temporarily The suspension also shines light on a long running feud within Europe s largest democratic socialist party over its very soul as hard left Corbynistas pushing for radical change duke it out with a more moderate wing more ideologically aligned with Tony Blair the centrist former Labour prime minister 60 The present dispute within the Labour party is likely causing the leftist political coalition to further fragment since the catastrophic result in 2019 Polling generally indicates that at present August 2021 Labour has lost significant portions of its vote share to the Green party and the Liberal Democrats 61 At Labour Conference 2021 several showdowns between the left and right of the party are expected to take place This includes but is not limited to a motion to give members power to approve or reject decisions over the Labour whip within the PLP a potential rejection of the pro Starmer interim General Secretary David Evans by unions and members alike a debate over PR and a significant debate over the loss of members and their subscription fees since Corbyn s expulsion which has left the party in a dire state regarding its activist and financial bases 62 63 The SNP and the Scottish Greens won the right to form a Scottish coalition government in May 2021 The precise arrangement is loose and allows the Greens freedom to criticise official SNP policy on key areas of disagreement However it provides FM Nicola Sturgeon with a mandate to call for a new independence referendum after the failed one in 2014 62 Proponents of a new referendum particularly cite Brexit as changing the political situation thus leading Scots to be more pro independence than in 2014 As an issue Scottish independence is known to cross cut across party lines with many Scottish Labour voters in particular being favourable to the prospect of independence 64 The Democracy Index The Economist rated the United Kingdom as a full democracy in 2022 ranking 18th worldwide with an overall score of 8 28 out of a maximum of 10 65 The V Dem Democracy indices ranked United Kingdom 22nd worldwide on electoral democracy Membership edit All political parties have membership schemes that allow members of the public to actively influence the policy and direction of the party to varying degrees though particularly at a local level Membership of British political parties is around 1 of the British electorate 66 which is lower than in all European countries except for Poland and Latvia 67 Overall membership to a political party has been in decline since the 1950s 68 In 1951 the Conservative Party had 2 2 million members and a year later in 1952 the Labour Party reached their peak of 1 million members of an electorate of around 34 million 69 The table below details the membership numbers of political parties that have more than 5 000 members Party Members Date Regions servedConservative 200 000 70 March 2021 UKGreen Party of England and Wales 53 000 71 July 2021 England and WalesLabour 430 000 72 July 2021 UKLiberal Democrats 98 247 73 December 2020 UKPlaid Cymru 11 500 74 October 2018 WalesScottish Greens 7 500 75 August 2021 ScotlandScottish National Party SNP 72 186 76 March 2023 ScotlandWomen s Equality Party 30 000 77 September 2020 UKNo data could be collected for the four parties of Northern Ireland the DUP UUP SDLP and Sinn Fein However in January 1997 it was estimated that the UUP had 10 000 12 000 members and the DUP had 5 000 members 78 In December 2020 the UK Independence Party had 3 888 members 79 In June 2019 Reform UK claimed to have 115 000 registered supporters 80 81 Local government editMain articles Local government in the United Kingdom Local government in England Local government in Scotland Local government in Wales and Local government in Northern IrelandSee also Intergovernmental relations in the United Kingdom and Political make up of local councils in the United Kingdom The UK is divided into a complex system of local governance Former European Union membership editFurther information United Kingdom European Union relations European Movement UK Euroscepticism in the United Kingdom Lists of Members of the European Parliament for the United Kingdom and Brexit The United Kingdom first joined the then European Communities in January 1973 by the then Conservative Prime Minister Edward Heath and remained a member of the European Union EU that it evolved into British citizens and other EU citizens resident in the UK between 1979 and 2019 elected members to represent them in the European Parliament in Brussels and Strasbourg The UK s membership in the Union has been a major topic of debate over the years and has been objected to over questions of sovereignty 82 and in recent years there have been divisions in both major parties over whether the UK should form greater ties within the EU or reduce the EU s supranational powers Opponents of greater European integration are known as Eurosceptics while supporters are known as Europhiles Division over Europe is prevalent in both major parties although the Conservative Party is seen as most divided over the issue both whilst in Government up to 1997 and after 2010 and between those dates as the opposition However the Labour Party is also divided with conflicting views over British adoption of the euro whilst in Government 1997 2010 citation needed British nationalists have long campaigned against European integration The strong showing of the eurosceptic UK Independence Party UKIP since the 2004 European Parliament elections has shifted the debate over UK relations with the EU In March 2008 Parliament decided to not hold a referendum on the ratification of the Treaty of Lisbon signed in December 2007 83 84 This was despite the Labour government promising in 2004 to hold a referendum on the previously proposed Constitution for Europe 85 On 23 June 2016 the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union in a referendum After the referendum it was debated as to how and when the UK should leave the EU On 11 July 2016 the Cabinet Office Minister John Penrose failed to deliver a final answer on whether it would be at the disposal of the Prime Minister and one of the Secretaries of State through the royal prerogative or of Parliament through primary legislation In October 2016 the Conservative Prime Minister Theresa May announced that Article 50 would be invoked by the first quarter of 2017 86 On 24 January 2017 the Supreme Court ruled in the Miller case by a majority that the process could not be initiated without an authorising act of parliament but unanimously ruled against the Scottish government s claim in respect of devolution that they had a direct say in the decision to trigger Article 50 Consequently the European Union Notification of Withdrawal Act 2017 empowering the prime minister to invoke Article 50 was passed and enacted by royal assent in March 2017 Invocation of Article 50 by the United Kingdom government occurred on 29 March 2017 when Sir Tim Barrow the Permanent Representative of the United Kingdom to the European Union formally delivered by hand a letter signed by Prime Minister Theresa May to Donald Tusk the President of the European Council in Brussels The letter also contained the United Kingdom s intention to withdraw from the European Atomic Energy Community EAEC or Euratom This means that the UK will cease to be a member of the EU on 30 March 2019 unless an extension to negotiations is agreed upon by the UK and EU 87 The leaving date was subsequently revised by agreement with the EU to be 31 October 2019 This led to a change of prime minister who promised to leave the EU on this date either with a revised deal or with no deal citation needed The UK withdrew from the EU at 23 00 GMT on 31 January 2020 beginning a transition period that was set to end on 31 December 2020 88 During the 11 month transition period the UK and EU negotiated their future relationship which resulted in the EU UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement which was agreed on 24 December 2020 just days before the end of the transition period 88 The UK ended the transition period which ended the incorporation of European Union law into UK law and ended its membership of the EU Customs Union and the European Single Market at 23 00 GMT on 31 December 2020 89 90 International organisation participation editAfrican Development Bank Asian Development Bank Australia Group Bank for International Settlements Commonwealth of Nations Caribbean Development Bank non regional Council of Europe CERN Euro Atlantic Partnership Council European Bank for Reconstruction and Development European Investment Bank European Space Agency Food and Agriculture Organization G5 G6 G7 G8 G10 Inmarsat Inter American Development Bank International Atomic Energy Agency International Bank for Reconstruction and Development International Civil Aviation Organization International Chamber of Commerce International Confederation of Free Trade Unions International Criminal Court International Criminal Police Organization Interpol International Development Association International Energy Agency International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies International Finance Corporation International Fund for Agricultural Development International Hydrographic Organization International Labour Organization International Maritime Organization International Monetary Fund International Olympic Committee IOC International Organization for Migration IOM observer International Organization for Standardization ISO International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement International Telecommunications Satellite Organization Intelsat International Telecommunication Union ITU International Whaling Commission MONUC Non Aligned Movement NAM guest North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO Nuclear Energy Agency NEA Nuclear Suppliers Group NSG Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Organization for Security and Co operation in Europe OSCE Organization of American States OAS observer The Pacific Community SPC Permanent Court of Arbitration UNESCO United Nations United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNCTAD United Nations Economic Commission for Africa associate United Nations Economic Commission for Europe United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR United Nations Industrial Development Organization UNIDO United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo UNMIK United Nations Iraq Kuwait Observation Mission UNIKOM United Nations Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina UNMIBH United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone UNAMSIL United Nations Observer Mission in Georgia UNOMIG United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus UNFICYP United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East UNRWA United Nations Security Council permanent member Universal Postal Union UPU UNTAET Western European Union World Confederation of Labour World Customs Organization World Health Organization World Intellectual Property Organization World Meteorological Organization World Trade Organization Zangger CommitteeSee also edit nbsp Politics portal nbsp United Kingdom portalPolitics of England Politics of Northern Ireland Politics of Scotland Politics of Wales Anarchism in the United Kingdom Conservatism in the United Kingdom Corruption in the United Kingdom Constitutional reform in the United Kingdom Electoral reform Electoral registration in the United Kingdom Far left politics in the United Kingdom Far right politics in the United Kingdom Islamism in the United Kingdom Labour Party leadership of Keir Starmer Liberalism in the United Kingdom Libertarianism in the United Kingdom List of elected British politicians who have changed party affiliation List of political scandals in the United Kingdom List of pressure groups in the United Kingdom Lobbying in the United Kingdom Make Votes Matter Parliament in the Making Referendums in the United Kingdom Reform Acts Socialism in the United Kingdom United Kingdom common framework policies Overviews by period edit 2010s in United Kingdom political history Premiership of Margaret Thatcher Premiership of John Major Premiership of Tony Blair Premiership of Gordon Brown Premiership of David Cameron Premiership of Theresa May Premiership of Boris Johnson Premiership of Liz Truss Premiership of Rishi SunakReferences edit two party system Features Advantages amp Problems Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 19 November 2020 General Election results through time 1945 2001 BBC News Retrieved 19 May 2006 UK election results what does it all mean As it happened The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 8 October 2016 How the independence referendum energised devolution around the UK The Guardian 11 September 2014 Retrieved 4 March 2021 Scottish independence referendum Results BBC News Retrieved 4 March 2021 Audiences royal gov uk Retrieved 23 December 2023 Dyer Clare 21 October 2003 Mystery lifted on Queen s powers The Guardian London Scottish Budget 2024 to 2025 Your Scotland Your Finances a guide Scottish Government 14 December 2023 Retrieved 23 December 2023 Structure and powers of the Assembly BBC News 9 April 1992 Retrieved 21 October 2008 The formal request from the monarch is either to a form a government capable of surviving in the House of Commons which by implication does not require a majority behind it given that skilled minority governments can and do survive for long periods or b form a government capable of commanding a majority in the Commons which by implication requires a majority behind it Bishops in the House of Lords humanists uk Retrieved 12 March 2022 Keating Michael 2 February 2021 Taking back control Brexit and the territorial constitution of the United Kingdom Journal of European Public Policy Abingdon Taylor amp Francis 28 4 6 7 doi 10 1080 13501763 2021 1876156 hdl 1814 70296 S2CID 234066376 The UK Internal Market Act gives ministers sweeping powers to enforce mutual recognition and non discrimination across the four jurisdictions Existing differences and some social and health matters are exempted but these are much less extensive than the exemptions permitted under the EU Internal Market provisions Only after an amendment in the House of Lords the Bill was amended to provide a weak and non binding consent mechanism for amendments equivalent to the Sewel Convention to the list of exemptions The result is that while the devolved governments retain regulatory competences these are undermined by the fact that goods and services originating in or imported into England can be marketed anywhere Kenny Michael McEwen Nicola 1 March 2021 Intergovernmental Relations and the Crisis of the Union Political Insight SAGE Publishing 12 1 12 15 doi 10 1177 20419058211000996 S2CID 232050477 That phase of joint working was significantly damaged by the UK Internal Market Act pushed through by the Johnson government in December 2020 the Act diminishes the authority of the devolved institutions and was vehemently opposed by them Wolffe W James 7 April 2021 Devolution and the Statute Book Statute Law Review Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 slr hmab003 Retrieved 18 April 2021 the Internal Market Bill a Bill that contains provisions which if enacted would significantly constrain both legally and as a matter of practicality the exercise by the devolved legislatures of their legislative competence provisions that would be significantly more restrictive of the powers of the Scottish Parliament than either EU law or Articles 4 and 6 of the Acts of the Union The UK Parliament passed the European Union Withdrawal Agreement Act 2020 and the Internal Market Act 2020 notwithstanding that in each case all three of the devolved legislatures had withheld consent Wincott Daniel Murray C R G Davies Gregory 17 May 2021 The Anglo British imaginary and the rebuilding of the UK s territorial constitution after Brexit unitary state or union state Territory Politics Governance Abingdon Brighton Taylor amp Francis Regional Studies Association 10 5 696 713 doi 10 1080 21622671 2021 1921613 Taken as a whole the Internal Market Act imposes greater restrictions upon the competences of the devolved institutions than the provisions of the EU Single Market which it replaced in spite of pledges to use common frameworks to address these issues Lord Hope responsible for many of the leading judgments relating to the first two decades of devolution regarded the legislation s terms as deliberately confrontational this Parliament can do what it likes but a different approach is essential if the union is to hold together Dougan Michael Hayward Katy Hunt Jo McEwen Nicola McHarg Aileen Wincott Daniel 2020 UK and the Internal Market Devolution and the Union Centre on Constitutional Change Report University of Edinburgh University of Aberdeen pp 2 3 Retrieved 16 October 2020 Dougan Michael 2020 Briefing Paper United Kingdom Internal Market Bill Implications for Devolution PDF Report Liverpool University of Liverpool pp 4 5 Retrieved 15 October 2020 12 13 14 15 16 17 Jones George 17 January 2006 Baker seeks end to West Lothian question The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 18 July 2006 Retrieved 16 May 2006 No English parliament Falconer BBC 10 March 2006 Retrieved 16 May 2006 Blair gets Cornish assembly call BBC News 11 December 2001 Prescott pressed on assembly poll BBC News 1 March 2003 including The Campaign for an English Parliament Scottish Parliament Word Bank Scottish Parliament Retrieved 14 November 2006 Scottish Parliament MSPs Scottish Parliament Retrieved 14 November 2006 The Celtic League Archived from the original on 15 June 2006 Retrieved 20 May 2006 Wales says Yes in referendum vote BBC News 4 March 2011 Constitutional reform A Supreme Court for the United Kingdom PDF Archived from the original PDF on 17 January 2009 252 KB Department for Constitutional Affairs Retrieved 22 May 2006 Keen Richard Audickas Lukas 3 September 2018 SNP membership overtakes Conservatives across UK PDF BBC British Broadcasting Company p 13 Retrieved 4 September 2018 Data from the House of Commons Library shows the SNP has just under 125 500 registered members compared to 124 000 for the Tories Mason Rowena 3 April 2015 Can I vote for the SNP if I live in England The Guardian Retrieved 30 October 2018 MP Neale Hanvey defects from SNP to new Alba Party BBC News 28 March 2021 Retrieved 27 May 2021 Pact will empower NI electorate BBC News 6 December 2008 General Election results The Co operative Party Human Rights Act 1988 overview Mind Fixed term Parliaments Act 2011 House of Commons Library Plaid Cymru Scottish National Party Parliamentary Teams Parliament of the United Kingdom Retrieved 15 August 2008 General elections UK Parliament Open Council Data UK compositions councillors parties wards elections opencouncildata co uk Retrieved 17 August 2022 Duggan Emily 8 May 2015 George Galloway defeated by Labour s Naz Shah as tactics backfire in Bradford The Independent Archived from the original on 4 August 2016 Retrieved 15 July 2016 Harrison Emma 28 January 2020 Brexit Tears and relief as the UK s MEPs bid farewell BBC News Retrieved 25 November 2020 Scottish election Scottish Socialist Party profile BBC News 13 April 2011 Retrieved 13 November 2021 Pidd Helen 2 May 2018 As the BNP vanishes do the forces that built it remain The Guardian Retrieved 23 April 2019 Congleton Town Council East Ward Results 2019 Cheshire East Council 2 May 2019 Retrieved 28 May 2019 Doncaster mayor quits English Democrats because of BNP BBC News 5 February 2013 Retrieved 26 April 2019 Gourlay Chris 8 March 2009 Tycoon finances X Factor party to clean up politics The Sunday Times London Retrieved 10 May 2009 Labour MPs pass no confidence motion in Jeremy Corbyn BBC News 28 June 2016 Retrieved 8 October 2016 Walker Peter 2 September 2016 Caroline Lucas and Jonathan Bartley voted joint Green party leaders The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 8 October 2016 The Patriotic Alliance Archived from the original on 6 May 2017 Retrieved 30 April 2017 The Patriotic Alliance Archived from the original on 1 April 2017 Retrieved 30 April 2017 Parliament suspension Queen approves PM s plan BBC News 28 August 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2019 What is prorogation and why is Boris Johnson using it The Guardian 28 August 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2019 Boris Johnson MPs will have ample time to debate Brexit despite Parliament shut down politicshome com Retrieved 31 August 2019 Sir John Major joins court case to stop Parliament suspension BBC News 30 August 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2019 Boris the dictator How Europe s newspapers reported on suspension of parliament The Independent 29 August 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2019 Phillip Lee quits Tories Boris Johnson loses working majority after Bracknell MP defects to Lib Dems Evening Standard London 3 September 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2019 Rayner Gordon Sheridan Danielle 3 September 2019 PBrexit vote result Boris Johnson demands election after rebel MPs seize control of Commons agenda The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 3 September 2019 Full list of 21 Tory rebels losing the whip in brutal no deal Brexit purge Daily Mirror 3 September 2019 Retrieved 3 September 2019 Walker Peter Murphy Simon Brooks Libby 13 December 2019 Jo Swinson quits as Lib Dem leader after losing her own seat The Guardian Leadership and Deputy Leadership election 2020 Results labour org uk Booth William 29 October 2020 Former British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn suspended over comments about anti Semitism report The Washington Post POLITICO Poll of Polls British polls trends and election news for the United Kingdom and Scotland Politico Retrieved 13 October 2021 a b Chappell Elliot Which policy motions are being backed by groups for Labour conference 2021 LabourList Retrieved 13 October 2021 Rodgers Sienna Momentum to campaign at conference for elected Labour general secretary LabourList Retrieved 13 October 2021 Majority of UK Labour Party members support indyref2 poll finds The National 18 July 2021 Democracy Index 2022 British democracy in terminal decline warns report The Guardian 6 July 2012 Our politics is bursting with life it s the parties that are dying The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Can UK political parties be saved from extinction BBC News 19 August 2011 Parliament UK Membership of British Political Parties PDF Merrick Rob 27 March 2021 Tories hail big rise in party membership because everyone loves the prime minister The Independent Archived from the original on 28 March 2021 Retrieved 30 March 2021 The numbers paying up to join the Tories were thought to have plunged as low as 70 000 but have now bounced back to 200 000 its chairman has revealed Proctor Kate 16 July 2021 The Green Party Is Tearing Itself Apart in a Furious Row Over Trans Rights Politics Home Retrieved 18 July 2021 Courea Eleni 24 July 2021 Huge legal bills leave Labour feeling the pinch The Times Archived from the original on 1 August 2021 Retrieved 31 July 2021 Liberal Democrats annual report year ended 31 December 2020 The Electoral Commission 31 December 2020 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Plaid Cymru see 25 membership boost following Adam Price s leadership victory Nation Cymru Archived from the original on 13 October 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2018 Carrell Severin 11 August 2021 Deal between Scottish Greens and SNP delayed as deadline looms The Guardian Archived from the original on 25 August 2021 Retrieved 26 August 2021 SNP says its membership has fallen to 72 000 BBC News 16 March 2023 Retrieved 16 March 2023 Brooks Libby 17 September 2020 Women s Equality party runs consultation on self identification for trans people The Guardian Retrieved 14 November 2021 Denver David Fisher Justin Ludlam Steve Pattie Charles 18 October 2013 British Elections and Parties Review Routledge ISBN 9781135255787 via Google Books United Kingdom Independence Party Limited a company limited by guarantee report and accounts 31 December 2020 The Electoral Commission 31 December 2020 Retrieved 19 October 2021 Brexit Party reveals 100 new politics MP candidates Sky News 30 June 2019 Retrieved 30 June 2019 Walker Peter 30 June 2019 Nigel Farage Brexit party is ready to fight every Westminster seat The Guardian Retrieved 30 June 2019 Browne Anthony 14 September 2005 Europe Wins The Power To Jail British Citizens The Times London Retrieved 20 October 2008 UK rebel lawmakers beaten on EU vote CNN 5 March 2008 Archived from the original on 9 March 2008 Retrieved 5 March 2008 MPs consider fallout from EU vote BBC 5 March 2008 Retrieved 9 July 2021 Blair confirms EU referendum u turn The Guardian 20 April 2004 Retrieved 6 June 2021 Brexit Theresa May to trigger Article 50 by end of March BBC News 2 October 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2016 Bloom Dan 29 March 2017 Brexit Day recap Article 50 officially triggered on historic day as Theresa May warns No turning back Daily Mirror Retrieved 29 March 2017 a b Asa Bennett 27 January 2020 How will the Brexit transition period work The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Tom Edgington 31 January 2020 Brexit What is the transition period BBC News Questions and Answers on the United Kingdom s withdrawal from the European Union on 31 January 2020 European Commission 24 January 2020 Further reading editOxford Dictionary of National Biography 2004 online short scholarly biographies of all the major people who died by 2009 Addison Paul and Harriet Jones eds A Companion to Contemporary Britain 1939 2000 2005 excerpt and text search Brown David Robert Crowcroft and Gordon Pentland eds The Oxford Handbook of Modern British Political History 1800 2000 2018 excerpt Budge Ian et al eds The New British Politics 4th ed 2007 712pp Butler David British General Elections Since 1945 1995 195pp excerpt and text search Cannon John ed The Oxford Companion to British History 2003 historical encyclopedia 4000 entries in 1046pp excerpt and text search Childs David Britain since 1945 A Political History 2012 excerpt and text search Cook Chris and John Stevenson eds Longman Companion to Britain Since 1945 1995 336pp Fairlie Henry Oratory in Political Life History Today Jan 1960 10 1 pp 3 13 A survey of political oratory in Britain from 1730 to 1960 Hennessy Peter The Prime Minister The Office and Its Holders Since 1945 2001 except and text search Attlee to Blair 688pp Jones Harriet and Mark Clapson eds The Routledge Companion to Britain in the Twentieth Century 2009 excerpt and text search King Anthony The British Constitution 2011 464pp Leventhal F M Twentieth Century Britain An Encyclopedia 2nd ed 2002 640pp short articles by scholars Marr Andrew A History of Modern Britain 2009 also published as The Making of Modern Britain 2010 popular history 1945 2005 Pugh Martin Speak for Britain A New History of the Labour Party 2011 excerpt and text search Ramsden John ed The Oxford Companion to Twentieth Century British Politics 2005 excerpt and text searchExternal links editProspect Magazine UK based political magazine focussing on British and international politics cultural essays and arguments Archived 4 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine British Politics the only academic journal devoted purely to the study of political issues in Britain Directgov main entry point for citizens to the UK government Archived 23 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Directgov Guide to Government Official UK parliament website Official UK parliamentary membership by party British Government and Politics on the Internet from the Keele University School of Politics British Politics and Policy at LSE The London School of Economics UK politics and policy blog ePolitix UK Politics news website Archived 22 November 2008 at the Wayback Machine British Government and Politics Compiled by a retired English Librarian Women s Parliamentary Radio Interviews and resources about women politicians in the UK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of the United Kingdom amp oldid 1195250452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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