6.2.6   Political Parties and Policies

Previous sections in this chapter have identified different ideologies and implementation approaches to government, categorised as four possible directions away from the status quo (6.2.1).  They correspond to different ideas about the political structures that enable people to live together peaceably, although there can be a broad consensus on many issues. 

Politicians Diagram

Description automatically generatedwith strong views try to shift public opinion towards their own convictions, as illustrated, but they risk alienating large numbers of people if they adopt extreme positions.

Political parties are formed around shared ideas in representative democracies.  The following sub-sections examine how party policy is formed, both at the time of an election and subsequently as circumstances change:

·     Parties must make tactical decisions about which groups of voters they need to attract, before setting out overarching policies before each election: published in the form of a manifesto or party platform document.  Individual voters can then choose which party they will vote for (6.2.6.1).

·     Governments, and opposition parties, have to react as situations develop; they must adjust their direction if necessary, as if they were piloting an aeroplane (6.2.6.2).  The population can influence such adaptive policy-making in some political systems: having a hand on the ‘joystick’, as it were.

·     A government knows that some people will have supported a different party at the last election.  It ought to try to persuade people with different views to accept the way it handles political issues (6.2.6.3).  It can do this by examining each possible policy perspective before taking a decision, to adopt a centrist stance.

(This is an archived page: a later version than the one published in Patterns of Power Edition 3a.  The latest versions are at book contents).