Non-Partisanship in British Local Politics
- 1 March 1973
- journal article
- Published by Bristol University Press in Policy & Politics
- Vol. 1 (3) , 241-254
- https://doi.org/10.1332/030557373783259445
Abstract
There are still a large number of local councils where the majority of the seats are not held by nominees of the political parties. It is important that we should try to understand the operation of the decision-making process in these authorites as well as in those in which the party groups dominate the council chamber. Non-partisan local authorites are generally to be found in the smaller district authorities (smaller in terms of population size, that is) and in the county councils serving predominantly rural areas. Non-partisan political systems are concentrated in the smaller district authorities and the county councils serving rural areas, partly because, as Jeffrey Stanyer has pointed out, ‘in order to vote on other than party lines, an elector must know something of the personal characteristics of the candidates’ and he is more likely to have this information in a small community; and also because the difficulties of individual electioneering are greater in larger electoral areas. Of course, as the community grows larger, the local newspaper may attempt to provide relevant information. In large cities this is usually confined to brief and rather dry biographical information about the candidate and his civic activities.Keywords
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