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  • Who's in charge of Britain? Well, it's the Prime Minister, isn't it? The one we voted for?

  • Actually, no he isn't. Not only is the Prime Minister not in charge of Britain, but we didn't even vote for him.

  • The Prime Minister is officially just an adviser to the real head honcho

  • QUEEN: Me! JAY: Yes, an old lady lucky enough to be descended from a family with the most violent army is our Head of State.

  • It's officially her country and her laws.

  • Except, you know that's not really how it works.

  • Our parliament is a baffling thousands of years old institution that's been around for hundreds of years.

  • And it's changed so much that the word "officially" means diddly-squat.

  • So, how is the country actually run? What does the Prime Minister do?

  • Who does the government? Why am the there backbenchers? Government how Home Secretary the is?

  • Parliamentary where cabinet reshuffle opposition right honourable what?

  • (♪♪♪)

  • Britain is a democracy, which means we the people decide how the country is run.

  • But instead of squeezing 64 million people into the house of commons,

  • We have 650 people representing all of us.

  • How are they choosed?

  • The country has been carefully divi-eugh.. *click* Aahh, has been carefully divided into 650 constituencies

  • Each one containing roughly 70,000 voters.

  • Every 5 years there's a general election.

  • We put an 'X' next to the person we like best, then the person with the most votes becomes our constituency's Member of Parliament

  • Or 'MP'.

  • Now, even though technically anyone can put themselves up for election

  • - and they often do -

  • They're almost always a member of a political party.

  • But, what is a political party?

  • Broadly speaking, it's a group of people that all feel the same way about how the country should be run.

  • They have a party headquarters and a logo and a favourite colour.

  • If you're a member of one of these parties, you're much more likely to get voted for, because people know what you stand for.

  • And, political parties have got money to help with posters and leaflets and things.

  • There's nothing in the rule book that says there needs to be such thing as political parties.

  • They've just naturally come about. In theory, you could have a parliament made up entirely of independent party-less MPs,

  • It's just never happened, and they probably wouldn't agree on anything.

  • So that's how the House of Commons gets its 650 MPs.

  • And now this is where She comes in.

  • QUEEN: Rehh!

  • JAY: The Queen politely asks one of the MPs to be her Prime Minister.

  • This is a tradition that dates back to the years of King George I who needed an advisor to help run the country because he only spoke German.

  • Officially, the Queen can pick whomever she likes, but so far she's always gone for the leader of the party with the most MPs.

  • The Prime Minister then chooses a crack team of his best friends to form the Government.

  • A small group of people who do the actual day-to-day running of Britain.

  • As in coming up with new laws, deciding where to spend our money, deciding how to get our money etc, etc.

  • The Prime Minister's job is to decide who does what, swap them around every-so-often, and give them a massive b******ing if they f**k up.

  • But the Government can't do whatever it likes. It needs to be kept in check and challenged on every decision it makes.

  • That's mainly the job of the party that came second in the General Election.

  • They're called the 'opposition'. They pretend they've got Government jobs and show you what they would have done if they'd won instead.

  • Again, there's nothing in the rule book about any "opposition".

  • In fact, the opposition wasn't mentioned in law at all until 1937 when they had to agree how much the leader of the opposition should be paid.

  • So what about the rest of the MPs who don't get a job either in the Government or the Shadow Cabinet? They've still got a very important job to do.

  • They're called backbenchers, because they sit on the back benches, which are at the back, and are benches.

  • It's their job to represent us, the ordinary folk, in Parliament.

  • And they do this by voting on things.

  • Every time someone comes up with a potential new law, known as a bill, our MPs argue about it for ages and ages and then decide "aye" or "no" in a vote.

  • "The 'ayes' to the right: 400". They use the word 'aye' instead of 'yes' because they're pillocks.

  • In theory, the MPs decide for themselves how to vote, but the slightly depressing news is, they're normally told how to vote by the leader of their party.

  • Party leaders employ people literally called 'Whips' whose job it is to go around making threats and promises so that MPs vote as they're told.

  • It's the only way you can get more than half of the room to vote the same way.

  • It may seem like an insult to democracy, but the... (trails off).... actually that's pretty hard to justify.

  • Once a bill gets liked by the House of Commons, it gets sent on a piece of paper to the room next door: The House of Lords.

  • But they're really weird and complicated and I can't be bothered to talk about them right now.

  • So they're a story for another time.

  • Bills get sent back and forth like an onion between the two houses until ultimately, one person gets the final say on what becomes a law.

  • QUEEN: Oh, go on then!

  • Isn't that insane that we actually live in a monarchy?

  • It's 2000 and something, not 13-something!

  • Gradually over time, the Queen's role has become more and more ceremonial, and she does more and more nothing.

  • Her powers still exist, and in theory the Queen could veto any law she doesn't like.

  • But she knows full well that if she tries to exercise any of her theoretical power, and defy the MPs that we the people voted for,

  • ...there'll be an instant revolution and we'll set her palace on fire.

  • It's easy to forget all of this. When there's an election on, the media make it feel like you're choosing a Prime Minister.

  • But you're not. And you're not choosing a party either. You're choosing a person, your local MP

  • who just happens to be a member of a party, who just happens to have a party leader.

  • So who's in charge of Britain? In an official sense, her.

  • In a technical sense, him.

  • In a practical sense, them.

  • In an idealistic sense, us.

  • But the real answer? Pfft, dunno.

Who's in charge of Britain? Well, it's the Prime Minister, isn't it? The one we voted for?

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B1 中級 英國腔

政治解讀--英國民主是如何運作的? (Politics Unboringed - How does British democracy work?)

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    c_hoimantik 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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