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Party Responsibility in Britain and the United States

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

Jorgen S. Rasmussen
Affiliation:
Vanderbilt University

Extract

Political parties in representative democracies have, as two of their most significant functions, to facilitate popular participation in the decision-making process and to implement, through control of governmental organs, those policies which are popularly favoured. Judged by these criteria, American parties are dysfunctional—so one critical school argues. American parties, they charge, are responsible neither to their members nor voters and are so organized and operated that they fail to govern effectively. When, in the early 1950s, this case against American parties had its greatest acceptance in the discipline, a number of critics contrasted American parties unfavourably with British parties. As an earlier generation of political scientists had urged Americans to adopt British institutions of government, so the critics of American parties favoured reforms which they thought were characteristic of British parties. If American parties became more like British parties, they argued, those parties would be more responsible and effective. Defenders of American parties refuted the critics' diagnosis and prescription by emphasizing the many environmental and institutional differences between Britain and the United States. British experience simply was not applicable in the U.S., they maintained. As study of British parties progressed an even more devastating rejoinder to critics of American parties emerged. Various findings began to suggest that although British parties obviously were much more cohesive in the legislature than were American parties, they were not nearly as responsible as the critics had assumed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1967

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References

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page 235 note 4 A.P.S.A. Committee on Political Parties, op. cit. p. 48.

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page 246 note 2 Two of the instances of frequent mention for both parties were for general policy topics rather than for more specific issues. These and subsequent figures for the 1964 addresses are based on the information in Butler and King, op. cit. p. 143.

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page 248 note 4 Ibid. p. 126.

page 248 note 5 Sunday Telegraph, 4 October 1964, p. 7.

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page 252 note 2 Ibid. p. 89. Cf. also pp. 50–1.

page 252 note 3 Ibid. pp. 181–2. Ranney found five additional cases (pp. 161–4) in which Labour's national organization refused to endorse a candidate chosen locally compared to only one instance in the Conservative party. Yet he concludes (p. 166): ‘even in the Labour party the final word in the selection of most parliamentary candidates rests, in party law and political fact, in the constituency Labour parties, not in Transport House’.

page 252 note 4 The five Labour rebels of 1961, for example, were received back into the party without having to grovel. The Guardian, 29 May 1963, p. 1, and 30 May 1963, p. 3.

page 252 note 5 Ranney, op. cit. p. 280.

page 252 note 6 Ibid. pp. 10, 87, 89, 182–91.

page 253 note 1 McKenzie, op. cit. p. 242.

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page 253 note 3 Potter, op. cit. p. 370.

page 253 note 4 McKenzie, op. cit. p. 538.

page 253 note 5 Ibid. p. 521.

page 253 note 6 The National Executive's reports for six selected years—1952, 1953, 1955, 1960, 1963, 1965—state that it had reorganized four local parties and disaffiliated another. The disaffiliation was withdrawn without further action when the local party gave in to the National Executive.

page 254 note 1 In 1962 over a third—232—of the local Labour parties could pay no more to national headquarters than the minimum affiliation fee of $84. Fifty-three others could not pay even this much (Arnold-Forster, Mark, ‘Labour party funds’, The Guardian 7 02 1964, p. 12Google Scholar).

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