Tomorrow’s Party: share your vision

Author:
Electoral Reform Society,

Posted on the 9th December 2013

This post was originally published by Democratic AuditContribute to our Tomorrow’s Party consultation here. 

 

Kind words are rarely spoken about political parties nowadays. If members of the public think of them at all, they tend to see them as part of the problem with politics, rather than as part of the solution. In 2010, two in three people in Britain believed political parties to be corrupt – more than any other institution. And this declining trust is reflected in ever-deteriorating membership. Since 1997, Conservative membership has fallen from 400,000 to 134,000, Labour membership from 405,000 to 193,000 and the Liberal Democrats from 87,000 members to 49,000.

This grim picture makes it hard to recall the positive case for political parties, so it is surely worth rehearsing it. Parties are essential for the health of our representative democracy. They are the necessary building blocks of governments or governments-in-waiting, and at the same time they are groups of people coming together to pursue common political goals. They are able to articulate people’s policy wishes at the national level, but also to order and prioritise them into coherent programmes of government. In theory at least, parties are not remote elites imposing their diktats on the people, but are themselves collections of people expressing their democratic will. At their best, parties can bridge the divide between people and politicians, with one foot in civil society and one in the state.

Such a positive vision is clearly a long way off from the current reality. So what can political parties do to get there? What role, realistically, can parties expect to play in the 21st century, and what reforms do they need to make now in order to reconnect with the public?

The main political parties are not blind to the urgency of reform. Recent years have seen experiments with candidate selection, membership structures and the nature of party-political activity at the local level. The Conservatives have run several open primaries, one of which resulted in the high-profile selection of Sarah Wollaston for Totnes. Labour has invested considerable resources in a new model of party activism it describes as community organising, under the auspices of the US organiser Arnie Graf. And both parties are seeking to learn lessons from the micro-targeting strategies employed by Barack Obama’s 2012 campaign.

But they need to go further, and faster. The Electoral Reform Society has launched a major new programme of work called Tomorrow’s Party. We want to provide a platform for all the parties to come into contact with bold, original ideas for reform. The first stage of our work is a public consultation. We want to hear from party activists, academic experts, politicians and members of the public about how they see the future political party.

Contribute to our consultation here

The consultation takes the form of three questions:

What are parties for?

This is designed to encourage people to think positively about the role which political parties can play in our democracy. Too often, the assumption is that parties are good for nothing.

What does the party of the future look like?

We want to encourage long-term, visionary thinking. The mainstream political parties were founded in the crucible of the 19th century. People have changed immeasurably since then, yet many of the structures and institutions which parties created in the 19th century remain unreformed to this day. What should a 21st century party look like?

What can parties do now to reconnect with people?

We are looking for specific reforms which parties should consider adopting immediately in order to address the growing divide between people and politics.

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