Cabinet ministers fill gaps left by Downing Street
Opening up with market for policymaking
Shuffling and reshuffling accountability
6. The Limbs of A Disunited Kingdom
Multiple Identities
A unitary Crown without uniformity
Four national party systems
The contingency of consent
7. An Unbalance Constitution
Politicians are the judges of what they can do
Constitutional rights are not politics as usual
Constitutional disputes need political resolution
8. Limits on Democratic Sovereignty
Governance creates interdependence
No island is an island unto itself
Brexit: a domestic foreign policy
9. A Mixed Bill of Health for British Democracy
What Britons think of democracy
Diagnosis: Intermittent ills, none fatal
Prescriptions for treatment
Coda
Richard Rose is Professor of Public Policy at the University of Strathclyde, UK, and a Visiting Fellow at the European University Institute Florence, Italy, and the Science Centre Berlin, Germany. He has been writing award-winning studies of British politics and democracy in comparative perspective for more than half a century.
Forecasts of the death of democracy are often heard and the United Kingdom is on the death watch list. This book challenges such a gloomy view by carefully examining the health of the British body politic from Tony Blair’s time in Downing Street to the challenges of Brexit and the coronavirus pandemic. It finds some parts are in good health, for example, elections are free and losers as well as winners accept the results, unlike the United States. Other parts show intermittent symptoms of ill health, such as Cabinet ministers avoiding accountability. There is also a chronic problem of managing the unity of the United Kingdom. None of the symptoms is fatal. The book identifies effective remedies for some symptoms, placebos that offer assurance without cure, and perennially popular prescriptions that are politically impossible. Being a healthy democracy does not promise effectiveness in dealing with economic problems, but a big majority of Britons do not want to trade the freedom that comes with democracy for the promises of undemocratic leaders.
Richard Rose is Professor of Public Policy at the University of Strathclyde, UK, and a Visiting Fellow at the European University Institute Florence, Italy, and the Science Centre Berlin, Germany. He has been writing award-winning studies of British politics and democracy in comparative perspective for more than half a century.