how democracy how did britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

38
HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Upload: ralf-manning

Post on 29-Dec-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

HOW Democracy

How did Britain become more democratic between 1867

and 1928?

Page 2: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

We are learning to…

• Identify the ways in which Britain became more democratic between 1867 and 1928

• Explain the consequences of significant reform during these years

Page 3: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

I can…

• Complete a 20 mark essay on HOW Britain became more democratic

Page 4: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

There are four major ways that Reforms made Britain a

democracy…1. By extending the franchise to more

people2. By introducing a secret ballot3. By making constituencies fair4. By having representation – a choice

of MPs and parties

Page 5: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

So Four headings…

1.Extension of the Franchise

2.Secret Ballot3.Fair constituencies4.Representation

Page 6: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Britain today• Everyone aged eighteen or over can vote, except for “lunatics”, Lords and

some criminals.

• Everyone’s vote is secret. Nobody has to tell anyone else how they have voted.

• Britain is divided into 630 constituencies. They vary in geographical size but each constituency has roughly the same amount of voters. Each Constituency sends one MP (Member of Parliament) to Parliament in London.

• Each voter in a constituency votes for one person whom they want to be their MP, from the list of candidates. Most of these candidates are from a political party (Conservative, Labour, Liberal Democrat, Scottish Nationalist etc,).

• In each constituency the candidate who gets the most votes becomes MP and sits in the House of Commons.

• MPs are paid a salary.

• The Party which has the most MPs forms the Government and its leader becomes Prime Minister.

• There must be a General Election at least every 5 years.

• Parliament consists of the House of Commons and House of Lords. The House of Commons has much more power than the House of Lords.

Page 7: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• We know why we became democratic – pressure groups, industrialisation, communications etc.

• But HOW did we get here? What laws were passed which made Britain become so democratic?

Page 8: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

8

STEPS ON THE ROAD TO DEMOCRACY

1832The Middle Class get the vote

The Skilled workers get the vote

1867

The ballot is secret1872

The unskilled male worker gets the vote

1884

MPs to be paid

Power of House of Lords reduced

1911

All men over 21 and women over 30 get the vote

1918

All men and women over 21 get the vote

1928

2.5 million voters

1.43 million voters

1883

The Corrupt and Illegal Practices Act

5.5 million voters (18% of population)

1885

Redistribution of seats

Page 9: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Before 1832 –The Electoral System Depended Upon Property/Land i.e. wealth

Before 1832 you Had To Be Male And Own Property to be allowed to vote.

In Scotland, before 1832 only 6,000 men were allowed to vote.

1832 1st Great reform Bill.

Middle Classes Received, The Vote (e.g. factory owners, businessmen, professional people like lawyers, doctors etc).

Now 1 in 6 of the male population could vote but poorer men and all women were still not allowed - This Was Still Not Democracy.

Page 10: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

•Granted the vote to merchants, professionals and manufacturers.

•Only 1 in 6 adult males entitled to vote, no women

• Demands for a secret ballot refused.

•Some of worst burghs were abolished but most big cities under-represented.

The right to vote only to those who owned property of a certain value – no working class.

So which laws helped democracy grow between 1832 and today?

Page 11: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Important vocabulary

• The Franchise – The vote• Enfranchised – Given the vote• Reform – changes in the law• Legislation – a law

Page 12: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

1. Extension of the Franchise

• In 1850, political power was in the hands of a few very wealthy men who owned property, especially land.

• Very few men,1 in 6 of the male population, and no women, could vote at this time.

• By 1928, almost all adults in Britain aged 21 or older could vote. By 1928, therefore, Britain seemed to have become more democratic.

Page 13: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1832 Electoral Reform Act – enfranchised (gives vote to) better off middle class men – eg. Doctors and Lawyers.

• Roughly 1 in 6 of the male population could vote. Number of voters in Scotland rises from 5,000 to 40,000.

Page 14: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1867 Representation of the People Act – enfranchised better off and better educated working class men – eg. tradesmen, skilled workers like carpenters.

• Roughly 1 in 3 of the male population could vote. Roughly 2.5 million voters.

Page 15: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1884 Representation of the People Act – enfranchised most working class men. Roughly 2 in 3 of the male population. BUT not poorer men, lodgers, sons living at home, women.

• Roughly 5 million of the adult male population could vote.

Page 16: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1918 Representation of the People Act – enfranchised nearly all adult males over 21 (19+ if had served in army)

• But only some women aged 30+ e.g. married or held university degrees.

Page 17: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1928 Representation of the People Act – enfranchised nearly all adult males and females over 21.

• Although Britain was not a true democracy as there were some voting anomalies – eg. plural voting as students and businessmen had 2 votes – one at home and one at University/business address.

Page 18: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

18

Activity – Widening the Franchise

Act of Parliament

How it made Britain more democratic

Analysis –

1867 Representation of the People Act

1884 Representation of the People Act

1918 Representation of the People Act

1928 Representation of the People Act

Page 19: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Widening the Franchise- Analysis

Very simple for a ‘How Democracy’ essay!1. Explain how the piece of legislation made

Britain more democraticExample: The 1884 Representation of the People Act enfranchised most working class men and made Britain more democratic as now 2 in 3 of the male population in Britain could now vote.2. Explain the limitations of the legislation

(what it didn’t do).Example: However the Act did not give the vote to poorer men, lodgers, men who lived at home or any women therefore there was still a considerable way to go to make Britain democratic.

Page 20: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

20

Franchise – Overall AnalysisThe overall analysis is very simple when

discussing the franchise:• Look at the end date of the question e.g.

“How democratic was Britain by 1914?”• Explain what had been achieved by that

point i.e.• ‘On one hand, Britain had become more

democratic by 1914 because 2 in 3 men could vote and this was a vast improvement from 1 in 6 in 1832.’

• Explain what had not been achieved by this point i.e.

• ‘On the other hand, Britain was not fully democratic by 1914 because 1 in 3 men did not have the franchise and no women were able to vote.

Page 21: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

2. Secret Ballot (Fairer Elections)

• 1872 Secret Ballot Act – stress that this was viewed as one of

the most important steps towards democracy by many people at the time as it:

- Reduced likelihood of intimidation and bribery at open hustings

- Voting in secret meant breaking power of big landlords in rural areas.

Page 22: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1883 Corrupt and Illegal Practices Act – backed up the secret ballot by making it a criminal offence that was punishable by a fine, suspension from parliament or even imprisonment to try to bribe voters.

• Candidates now had to limit spending and account for spending during campaigning.

Page 23: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

23

Activity – Fairer Elections.

Act of Parliament

How it made Britain more democratic

Analysis – was Britain democratic as a result?

1872 Secret Ballot Act

1883 Corrupt and Illegal Practices Act

Page 24: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Secret Ballot- AnalysisVery simple for a ‘How Democracy’

essay!1. Explain how the piece of legislation made

Britain more democraticExample: The 1872 Secret Ballot Act made Britain more democratic because….2. Explain the limitations of the legislation

(what it didn’t do).Example: However the Act did not….

Page 25: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

25

Secret Ballot – Overall AnalysisThe overall analysis is very simple when

discussing the franchise:• Look at the end date of the question e.g.

“How democratic was Britain by 1914?”• Explain what had been achieved by that

point i.e.• ‘On one hand, Britain had become more

democratic by 1914 because …..• Explain what had not been achieved by this

point i.e.• ‘On the other hand, Britain was not fully

democratic by 1914 because…..

Page 26: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

3. Fair Constituencies• Aim – trying to make the number of

voters in each constituency roughly the same so that no constituency is more important than another.

• Corrupt constituencies known as ‘pocket’ or ‘rotten’ boroughs still existed where the local landowner nominated the MP.

• 1832 – tried to get rid of worst of “rotten” or “pocket” burghs like Old Sarum who elected two MPs

Page 27: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1867 – continued to get rid of pocket burghs. The 1867 Reform Act got rid of rotten burghs, but there were still big inconsistencies in the size of constituencies e.g. the under populated Highlands and Scottish Borders had 8 MPs each, yet a growing city like Glasgow had only 3 MPs.

• 1885 Redistribution of Seats Act – moved a lot of MPs from rural areas to the new industrial cities – eg. Glasgow increased to 7 MPs.

• Tried to make constituencies roughly 50,000 each – however, still a lot of overrepresentation in depopulated rural areas – eg. Highlands and Borders still had 8 MPs each.

Page 28: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• Truly equal constituencies really did not come until 1918 Representation of the People Act, which made all constituencies roughly equal with 70,000 people. At this time the number of MPs in Glasgow increased to 15.

• However plural voting still existed which allowed certain people more than one vote e.g. a businessman who lived in Motherwell and had his business in Glasgow could vote in both areas or students could vote in their home constituency and university constituency.

Page 29: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

29

Activity – Equal votes/constituencies.

Act of Parliament How it made Britain more democratic

Analysis – was Britain truly democratic as a result?

1867 Reform Act

1885 Redistribution of Seats Act

1918 Representation of the People Act

Page 30: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Fair constituencies - Analysis

Very simple for a ‘How Democracy’ essay!

1. Explain how the piece of legislation made Britain more democratic

Example: The 1867 Reform Act made Britain more democratic as….2. Explain the limitations of the legislation

(what it didn’t do).Example: However the Act did not….

Page 31: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

31

Fair constituencies– Overall AnalysisThe overall analysis is very simple when

discussing the franchise:• Look at the end date of the question e.g.

“How democratic was Britain by 1914?”• Explain what had been achieved by that

point i.e.• ‘On one hand, Britain had become more

democratic by 1914 because …..• Explain what had not been achieved by this

point i.e.• ‘On the other hand, Britain was not fully

democratic by 1914 because…..

Page 32: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

4. Representation

• Aim – elected representatives should be representative of the voters.

• Before 1867 voters were wealthy landowners or middle class in towns and so were most MPs. Half of all MPs were the children of the aristocracy.

Page 33: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• It was also thought that MPs should not be paid so that they would be the right type of person – eg. self-sufficient in and not in politics for the money.

• It was also felt that the landowners and upper classes in the House of Lords had a right to speak out or block new laws from the elected House of Commons.

Page 34: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1911 Parliament Acts- Tried to allow poorer men to become

MPs by paying them £400 per year, which allowed more of the working class to become MPs.

- Example – Keir Hardie was the illegitimate son of a Lanarkshire miner.

Page 35: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

• 1911 Parliament Act also severely limited the powers of the unelected House of Lords.

• House of Lords could no longer outright reject a money bill (new law re. taxation/economy).

• Could only delay non-money bills 2 years (cut to one year in 1949).

Page 36: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

36

Activity – Representation/Participation.

Act of Parliament

How it made Britain more democratic

Analysis – was Britain truly democratic as a result?

1911 Parliament Acts

Page 37: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

Fair constituencies - Analysis

Very simple for a ‘How Democracy’ essay!

1. Explain how the piece of legislation made Britain more democratic

Example: The 1911 Parliament Acts made Britain more democratic as….2. Explain the limitations of the legislation

(what it didn’t do).Example: However the Act did not….

Page 38: HOW Democracy How did Britain become more democratic between 1867 and 1928?

38

Fair constituencies– Overall AnalysisThe overall analysis is very simple when

discussing the franchise:• Look at the end date of the question e.g.

“How democratic was Britain by 1914?”• Explain what had been achieved by that

point i.e.• ‘On one hand, Britain had become more

democratic by 1914 because …..• Explain what had not been achieved by this

point i.e.• ‘On the other hand, Britain was not fully

democratic by 1914 because…..