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British General Elections Since 1964: Diversity, Dealignment, and Disillusion

Online ISBN:
9780191803673
Print ISBN:
9780199673322
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

British General Elections Since 1964: Diversity, Dealignment, and Disillusion

David Denver,
David Denver

Emeritus Professor of Politics

Emeritus Professor of Politics, Lancaster University
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Mark Garnett
Mark Garnett

Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations

Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations, Lancaster University
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Published online:
10 February 2015
Published in print:
27 February 2014
Online ISBN:
9780191803673
Print ISBN:
9780199673322
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

Despite a recent decline in voter turnout, British general elections are still the centrepiece of Britain's liberal democracy and their results make a real difference to every British citizen. They command strong media interest long before their dates are announced and even uneventful campaigns dominate the headlines. The 2010 general election saw the first direct televised debates between the main party leaders, adding further interest to a battle which was always likely to be close. The result was a ‘hung parliament’ and the first British coalition government since 1945. However, as this book shows these were only the latest manifestations of a transformation in British elections which began in the early 1960s. While some election rituals remain intact — the counting of votes by hand, the solemn declaration of individual constituency results and, most importantly, the peaceful handover of power if the incumbent party loses — almost everything of significance has changed. Voters have very different attitudes; fewer of them have party loyalties which are more than skin deep, and they tend to base their choices on ‘short-term’ factors such as the perceived competence of the parties and the image of the leader. The parties themselves are barely recognisable from the institutions of 1964 — not least because their membership figures have dwindled dramatically. Election campaigns are now heavily centralised and focus obsessively on a handful of target seats.

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