1.1.1

Direct Democracy

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Direct Democracy

Voters in direct democracies make their own political decisions and are directly involved in the process of political decision making.

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Voting in a direct democracy

  • The citizens in a direct democracy vote themselves on the policies and laws which are made by the government as opposed to acting through others.
  • In a direct democracy, decisions are reached by a majority voting decision.
  • Most UK decisions are not made by direct democracy.
    • But, some important decisions are made by referendums.
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Referendums

  • Citizens directly vote on issues and the government creates policy based on the response.
  • The United Kingdom European Union referendum 2016:
    • 33 million UK citizens voted on whether to remain a member of the EU or leave, 51.89% voted to leave.
  • The Alternative Vote Referendum 2011:
    • Over 19 million citizens voted against adopting the Alternative Vote system and chose to keep the current First Past the Post (FPTP) system.
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Online petitions

  • UK Parliament has set up a platform for citizens to make and sign online petitions.
  • If a petition gains over 100,000 signatures then parliament may debate the topic.
  • But, a topic must be sponsored by the ‘Backbench Business Committee’ so it is not an entirely direct democracy.
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Examples of online petitions

  • 1.6 million people signed a petition to stop US President Donald Trump from making a State Visit to the UK.
  • MPs then debated Trump’s visit to Parliament and changed it from a ‘state visit’ to a ‘working visit’ in 2018.
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Rallies and protests

  • Groups of people concerned about the government or political actions may gather to demonstrate their support or disapproval.
  • But, governments don't have to respond to protests.
  • Examples of rallies and protests:
    • In 2017 thousands of citizens gathered to protest in London against the government’s economic and political decisions. People disapproved of austerity measures.
    • In 2010 thousands of students marched in London to protest tuition fee rises.

Jump to other topics

1Democracy & Participation

2Political Parties

3Electoral Systems

4Voting Behaviour & the Media

5Conservatism

6Liberalism

7Socialism

8The UK Constitution

9The UK Parliament

10The Prime Minister & the Executive

11Relationships Between Government Branches

12US Constitution & Federalism

13US Congress

14US Presidency

15US Supreme Court & Civil Rights

16US Democracy & Participation

17Comparing Democracies

18Feminism

19Nationalism

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