General election

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak announced that a general election will take place on 4 July.

Because the UK is a parliamentary democracy, we have the right to vote for who runs the country every 5 years.

A general election is when voters decide who their member of parliament* (MP) will be. MPs belong to political parties and the party with the most MPs can form a government to make laws and other decisions to run the country.

Citizenship

What is democracy?

What is democracy? Learn more about participating in democracy.

In the UK we have political parties.

In a general election candidates from each party campaign to be elected in their own areas.

The person with the most votes in each area becomes a Member of Parliament ('MP').

The party with the most MPs in Parliament forms the Government. They are in charge.

The government leader is called the Prime Minister.

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Geography

Where is the election held?

The general election is held across the UK. This means that the nations of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland all get to vote in the general election.

The entire UK is divided into 650 small areas called constituencies. Each constituency has its own MP to represent it. As well as helping to govern the whole country, MPs represent their constituency.

Some come from cities, others from the country and different things might be important to the people in their local area.

A cartoon map of the UK showing England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales and their capital cities: London, Belfast, Edinburgh and Cardiff. It also shows the Atlantic Ocean, English Sea, Irish Sea and North Sea surrounding the UK.
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History

Who can vote in the general election?

Only adults - people aged 18 and over - can vote in a general election.

People need to register to vote to be allowed to take part.

The right to vote is called suffrage. All men got the right to vote in the UK in 1832.

Women fought hard for the right to vote, which they got in 1918. However, this only included women over 30 who owned property, while men could vote at age 21. All men and women over the age of 21 got the right to vote in 1928, making it equal.

In 1969 they lowered the voting age to 18 years old.

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English

How do politicians persuade people?

A hand holding a piece of paper with the word manifesto.

Politicians need to persuade people. This means trying to get people to agree to their point of view.

Before the election, the political parties have to tell us why it would be a good idea to vote for them. They have different ways to try and convince people.

Manifestos. A manifesto is a big collection of all the ideas the party has for the country. It might include ideas like spending more money on hospitals, or charging people less tax. All their ideas go into one big document to show what they hope to do if they win

Leaflets. Political parties make thousands of leaflets and post them through their doors. These give people information about who is trying to get voted in as the local MP and what they want to do

Debates. A debate is an organised argument. The leaders of political parties take turns answering questions and try to show us that they are right and the other parties don't have the best ideas.

A hand holding a piece of paper with the word manifesto.

What is a debate?

Learn about what a debate is with this Bitesize - KS2 English guide.

What is a debate?
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