Monday, July 29, 2019
Causes of Political Disaffection and Disengagement
Causes of Political Disaffection and Disengagement Is the British political class to blame for political disaffection and disengagement? The Founding Fathers suggested that a democracy can only come to impartial decisions if both high levels of representation and deliberation take place (Gargarella, 1998). As a result of growing political disengagement and disaffection within contemporary British politics, there is a growing, ââ¬Å"focus on the quality of representative democracy in Britain and on the quality of participatory democracyâ⬠(Kelso, 2007, p365) ââ¬â the relationship that has been recognised is that political disaffection and disengagement are not conducive with an impartial democracy. Worryingly, both the Hansard Societyââ¬â¢s annual, ââ¬Ë Audit of Political Engagementââ¬â¢ (2017), and a recent House of Commons briefing paper, ââ¬ËPolitical disengagement in the UK: who is disengaged?â⬠(2017), suggest that political disaffection and disengagement are growing issues; knowledge of politics is down six percent from the previous year (49%), the level of trust in Government ââ¬Ëto put the needs of the nation firstââ¬â¢ has dropped to 17% (2013) and trust in the credibility of MPs stands at a measly 9%. These figures indicate that there is indeed an issue of disaffection and disengagement within the UK, thus, to determine if the political class or instead, something else is responsible, it becomes necessary to investigate what the cause of disengagement and disaffection is within specific subsections of the population; especially those who are more likely to become disengaged from politics ââ¬â the ââ¬Ëdisaffected democratsââ¬â¢ (Flinders, 2015). These factions include demographics such as the ââ¬Ëworking classââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ë18-24 year oldsââ¬â¢, both of which account for low levels of knowledge in politics compared to the average mentioned above; 29% and 33% respectively (Hansard Society 2017). The term ââ¬Ëpolitical classââ¬â¢ is conten tious and, ââ¬Ëis still not thoroughly developed in literatureââ¬â¢ (Manolov 2013). Allen that the term political class is used to identify certain, ââ¬Ëflawed characteristicsââ¬â¢, that elected politicians tend to hold, those being: ââ¬Å"Limited roots in local constituencies, inexperience of the real world, inability to reï ¬âect the social background of the voting population, inability to represent devolved and English regions, and their tendency to engage in a style of politics that is off-putting to the general public.â⬠(Allen Phillips (1995), most notably suggested that the electorate tends to favour those that are, ââ¬Å"best equipped to representâ⬠(Wà ¤ngerud, 2009, p.52), their views ââ¬â those that can empathise directly with their electorate. Underrepresentation is an issue for a much wider demographic than just the working class. Just 8% of MPs identify as BME (British Future, 2017) whilst the population of BME citizens in the UK stand s at 13% (Census, 2011). Furthermore, just 2% of MPs are under the age of 30 (Total Politics, 2016) whereas those who are of voting age under 30 make up 8.4% (Census, 2011). As the political class is not representative of the working class, or if it fails to represent minorities proportionally, there is no sense of, ââ¬Ëimpartialityââ¬â¢, within the representative process (Gargarella, 1998), resulting in political disaffection and potentially even disengagement.
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