Define

Election results based on different countries

Two-party system vs. multiparty (Westminster vs. consensual)

Advantages of two-party system

Clear winner in elections (lack of ambiguity)

More stable

More effective

Disadvantage of two-party system

Less representative of population

Opposition is not effective à in UK, shadow government is not effective in introducing different lines of policy

What splits parties?

- Socioeconomic cleavage

- Social issues (abortion, gay rights)

- Religious issues

o Creates emergence of Far Right parties

Replacing prime minister in UK

- elections

- party forces him to step down (back-bench rebellion)

- can replace government without going to elections

- stability is very important

FRANCE

President can dissolve National Assembly and in effect replace Prime Minister with new elections

It is possible for Prime Minister to become it again

Germany

Bundestag can only remove Chancellor with successor in mind

German head of state can dissolve the parliament even as an apolitical figure

British head of state does not have this power

Judges

FRANCE

Constitution Court à only deals with constitutional matters before they become law

President, president of lower house of National Assembly, president of Senate appoint judges

Judges have limited term (9 years) and are dependent

Germany

Elected by parties

Oversight role

Britain

Law lords cannot abolish legislation

Declare politicians behavior invalid if their authority goes beyond allotted power

German elections

1st ballot: State elections for individuals: FPTP

2nd ballot: federal election for parties à proportional representation.

France only allows past 12.5% onto second ballot for presidential electionsl

Gets rid of majority

Does not accurately represent minority parties