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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. As a democracy, Britain strives to uphold the most efficient and effective election process as a way in which to provide the equitable elements so inherent to self-governing societies. While this is a commendable - if not requisite - component of any civilized global community, it has been met with tremendous challenge where the British voting process is concerned. From policy-making to special interest groups and media influence to the electoral process, Britain's election procedure has come to reflect an ever-evolving practice of political prowess. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCBritPolit.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
While this is a commendable - if not requisite - component of any civilized global community, it has been met with tremendous challenge where the British voting process is
concerned. From policy-making to special interest groups and media influence to the electoral process, Britains election procedure has come to reflect an ever-evolving practice of political prowess.
The media have a significant impact with regard to the socially psychological aspect of the overall impact of election processes, inasmuch as media influence is
fundamentally based upon the element of perception. A candidate must have a certain charisma - a public charm - in order to become a media doll. He or
she must play to the media and coddle reporters in order to be placed within the best light and, thereby, appear to favorably appeal to the constituency. While American
media infiltrate virtually every nuance of the election process and dissect it with unabashed enthusiasm not unlike that of a predator ripping apart its prey, Britain imposes strict guidelines upon
the way in which media may interact with the overall process. Where television is the end all and be all of American politics, British media are "barred from carrying
election advertising apart from brief party political broadcasts which are carried simultaneously by all principal TV channels" (UNESCO, 2005). Moreover, additional restrictions prevent the unlimited spending inherent to American
elections, which helps to maintain a semblance of control and focus on actual issues and not the sensationalism inherent to a campaign media blitz. Maintaining an almost quaint approach
to elections, "most campaigning is done by door-to-door or telephone canvassing by party workers, election rallies and leaflets through letter-boxes (UNESCO, 2005). British
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