Editorial

AuthorPeter Geoghegan
DOI10.1111/j.2041-9066.2011.00046.x
Date01 April 2011
Published date01 April 2011
Subject MatterEditorial
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Editorial
Back in 2008, Barack Obama won the US presidency on a promise of ‘Change we can believe in’. Since
then that simple six-letter word – ‘change’ – has become a mantra for politicians and political parties
around the world.
In the UK, during the 2010 general election campaign, the Conservatives asked us to ‘Vote for change’,
while the Liberal Democrats pledged ‘Change that works for you’. More recently, Fine Gael employed the
rhetoric of change and reform to win the Irish election.
Change has been the watchword of 2011 so far, too. Revolts have swept across the Middle East,
while closer to home on-going budget cuts have introduced new political dynamics. In this issue’s lead
article, Patrick Dunleavy investigates one notable change in recent years: the emergence of visceral anti-
government sentiment on the right in the wake of the f‌inancial crisis.
Meanwhile, the UK could be about to witness a signif‌icant change to its election system. On May 5,
a referendum on changing the system for electing MPs from f‌irst-past-the-post to the Alternative Vote will be put before the
public. In this issue, Michael Pinto-Duschinsky debates the merits of the proposed switch to AV with Iain McLean and Guy
Lodge.
Whatever the decision in May, the redrawing of the UK’s electoral map could have even greater long-term import than the
adoption of AV. Under a coalition bill passed by Parliament in February, the number of MPs will be reduced from 650 to 600,
quotas will be increased and traditional boundaries revised. Here Ron Johnston reviews these changes and considers what they
might mean for electoral politics in Britain.
One change that was met with little fanfare or media spectacle was the establishment of a Supreme Court for the UK.
Comparing the British Supreme Court with its American counterpart, Mark Garnett argues that, despite its relatively inauspicious
beginnings, the new Supreme Court could have a signif‌icant lasting impact on British politics.
Budget cuts have been a key theme of the coalition’s f‌irst year – with one notable exception, international development
spending. Molly Dunne, David Hall-Matthews and Simon Lightfoot examine why international aid remains a government
priority. Elsewhere, Michael Hallsworth looks at the challenges facing policy-makers, while Stuart Wilks-Heeg revisits another
old chestnut, party funding, and asks who should pay for these crucial, though often unpopular, organisations.
Looking beyond the UK, Mahrukh Doctor reports from Brazil, where new president Dilma Rousseff will be hoping to build
on Lula’s remarkable legacy. Brazil’s annual growth stands at a vertiginous 7.5 per cent and employment is soaring, but political
reform will be needed if this success is to be maintained.
Change is not a word many would associate with the European Union and its institutions, however, with the Euro in serious
trouble and disquiet in the region’s periphery, these are trying times for the European project. Michelle Cini looks at where
power lies in the polycentric EU, while George Irwin analyses the options for saving the embattled single currency.
This is only issue one of 2011, but the winds of change seem unlikely to abate anytime soon. It promises to be a very
interesting year for politics across the globe. If would like to join the debates or contribute to Political Insight please drop me an
email (address on the opposite page) or log on to www.politicalinsightmagazine.com.
Peter Geoghegan
Editor
Cover: Protesters shout and waves f‌lags on the south steps of the Oklahoma state Capitol, as part of a National Tax Day Tea Party to protest excessive
government spending, in Oklahoma City, Wednesday, April 15, 2009. Press Association Images

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