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The Two-Party System in British Politics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
Extract
Britain may fairly be called the classic home of two-party government. This claim is justifiable because of some characteristics for which the system, as employed in Britain, is distinctive. Chief among these is its long duration. Although there is room for disagreement among historians about the time and circumstances of its birth, it would be difficult to deny that two-party government was established earlier, has lasted longer, and at the present time is probably more firmly rooted there than in any contemporary state. Indeed, the practice of simplifying the complexities of politics into a contest for office between a pair of major claimants has endured in Britain through a catalogue of changes which would assuredly have wrecked a less effective system. In that country it has survived the evolution from an oligarchy of aristocrats to a democracy of the whole people; the transfer of power from monarchy to parliament and then from parliament to cabinet; the rise of large-scale industry with its social aftermath; the switch in economic policy from mercantilism to laissez faire and from this to state planning; and withal, the expansion and subsequent shrinkage of Britain's international might.
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- Copyright © American Political Science Association 1953
References
1 In suggesting that British politics are characterized by a two and a half party system, Carl J. Friedrich overemphasizes the deviations. Constitutional Government and Democracy (rev. ed., Boston, 1950), p. 414Google Scholar.
2 (Boston and New York, 1896), Vol. 1, pp. 71–72. My italics.
3 The Government of England (New York, 1912), Vol. 1, pp. 457, 458Google Scholar. My italics. See also Vol. 2, p 86.
4 “The party bond introduced a principle of unity among Cabinet Ministers other than that of mere individual obedience to the orders of the King. For that reason, party is the real secret of the step upwards from Cabal to Cabinet. The mutual loyalty of members inside the Cabinet was a reflection of the habit of party loyalty among the same persons in the world outside.” The Two-Party System in English Political History, Romanes Lecture, (Oxford, 1926)Google Scholar.
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6 It is worth noticing that though the intervals between British elections are irregular, the average length of Parliaments corresponds to the term of the President. Between 1832 and 1952, there were thirty general elections in one hundred and twenty years. Moreover, the change from the Septennial Act of 1715 to the quinquennial term provided under the Parliament Act of 1911 made no difference in this respect. From 1832 through 1910 twenty elections occurred in almost eighty years; from 1911 to 1952, ten were held in four decades.
7 Article 5.
8 Article 51.
9 As defined in the Constitution, ibid.
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12 As happens in the election of the President of the United States through the electoral college. Only once since the adoption of the Twelfth Amendment has the party system failed to produce this majority.
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15 See his How Britain Is Governed (4th ed., London, [1940])Google Scholar, Chs. 4–5.
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26 In recent British censuses less than 20% of the population are classified as rural. About 5% of the gainfully-employed are engaged in farming.
27 Op. cit., p. 413.
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