Breaking the deadlock : Britain at the polls, 2019

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Breaking the deadlock : Britain at the polls, 2019

edited by Nicholas J. Allen and John Bartle

Manchester University Press, 2021

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

The 2019 General Election was historic. In one fell swoop it resolved the longstanding stalemate surrounding Brexit and redrew the electoral map of Britain, breaking the deadlock in Parliament and bringing about the fall of Labour's so-called 'Red Wall'. Since 2016, Members of Parliament had struggled to reconcile a contested exercise in direct democracy with the established institutions of representative government. The 2017 election was meant to bring closure to Brexit. It did not: its indecisive outcome merely exacerbated the challenges. Parliament, the courts and ultimately the Monarch herself became embroiled in the chaos of Brexit. The scale of the Conservatives' definitive victory in December 2020 was therefore a significant departure and a return to the status quo. This latest edition of a prestigious and venerable series surveys the build up to the tumultuous election and its immediate aftermath, offering reasoned conjecture about the future of British party politics and democracy. -- .

Table of Contents

Preface 1 Deadlock: minority government and Brexit - Nicholas Allen 2 The Conservative Party: the victory of the Eurosceptics - Thomas Quinn 3 The Labour Party: leadership lacking - Paul Whiteley, Patrick Seyd and Harold D. Clarke 4 The two-party system: 'all else is embellishment and detail' - John Bartle 5 A changing electorate: new identities and the British 'culture war' - Maria Sobolewska 6 Why did the Conservatives win? - Robert Johns 7 2019: A critical election? - Jane Green 8 Comparative perspectives - Sarah Birch Appendix: Results of British general elections, 1945-2019 Index -- .

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