In the period from 1945 to 1992, the average turnout reaimed
above 75% and in 1950 there was a post war high of 84%
In 1997 labour victory 71% voted but half a million
fewer votes than john 1992 election victory
2001 general election recored 59%,
the lowest figure since 1918
2005 turnout rose marginally to 61%, party due to the
postal vote, the second lowest turnout since 1918
In 2010 turnout was 65% and occurred dispite the closeness
of the contest and the first use of televised leaders' debates
membership of the UK's
main political partes
Labour Party membership has fallen from more than 1
million in the mid 1950's to around 166,000 in 2009
Conservative Party membership has fallen from an estimated
2.8 million in the mid -1950's to around 250,000 in 2009
in 2007 1% of people belonged to a politicla
party down from 7 percent some 50 years before
There was also been a
decline in voters' loyalty
towards political party and
the extent to which they
'identify' with them
the voters have been more partisan dealignment. There has
been a shift from regular and habitual voting pattens in the
UK to more volatile and less predictable ones.
There may justed be a shift from
one kind of participation to
another
There has been an upsurge of interest in
pressure-groups politics and protest
movments
Explain decline participation
Blame the public
'SOCIAL CAPITAL' has declined
The level of trust and sense of social
connectedness that help to promote stability,
cohesion and properit; that turns the 'I' into 'we'
People are more concerned about
themselves and their family and frien, and
less concerned about the larger society
This is certainly by the fact that in rent years almost all
mature democracies have, to a greater or lesser extent,
experienced diffiulites in mobilizing their electorates
Blame the media
The mass media is sometimes charged with having created a climate of cynicism
amongst the public, leading to a growing popular disen-chantment with politics
generally, and a lack of trust in goverment and politicians of all complexions
UK most advanced
example of 'culture of
contempt'
This has occurred becasue there are intense
commercial pressures have forced the media to make
their coverage of politics 'sexy' an dattention - grabbing.
Scandals, incompetence, policy
failure are focus on more than
political debate and policy
analysis
Blame the politians
Lack of vision
It is often argued that modern politicians and
political parties now believe in nothing except
getting elected
Politics has become an end in itself,
and being a politicians has become just
another professional career
Modern politicians lack vision, a sense
of moral purpose and direction
Lack of choice
Interest in politics generally, and in voting in
particular may be influenced by political and
ideological divide between the major parties
'Consensus politics' - this happened as both the Labour
and conservative parties have distanced themselves from
their traditional ideologies and increasingly respond to
the same group of 'Middle England' voters
Electoral strategies
The growing tendency for political
parties to 'target' key voters and key
seats in an election may also have
contributed to declining overall levels
of turnout
Age of 'spin'
One of the consequences of the modern media -
obsessed age is that politicians have become
over-concerned about communication ans news
management
This is reflected in
the growth of the
so-called 'SPIN'.
A biased portrayal of an event or
information designed to elicit a
favourable or unfavourable response
Modern politics is therefore all about
presentation - how things appear, not how
they are
This creates the impression
that politicians are less
trustworthy, more willing to be
'economical with the truth'