ID | 144829 |
Title Proper | Wider range of friends |
Other Title Information | multi-speed organising during the 2015 labour leadership contest |
Language | ENG |
Author | Garland, Jessica |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The British Labour party's recent adoption of a partially open primary for the selection of its leader conforms to a trend seen across many European political parties of increasing rights and privileges in internal party decision-making and expanding opportunities for more loosely affiliated supporters to participate in party activity. This dual trend can be seen as a response to changes in the membership environment, greater individualisation of political participation and growth in social movement politics and online activism. Yet as much as parties are responding to a changed membership environment, they are also driving that change, increasingly blurring the distinction between members and supporters. This article examines the recent impact of this change within the British Labour party and argues that, in line with Susan Scarrow's theory of ‘multi-speed’ membership, the Labour party's experiment in expanding affiliation options has led directly to a tension in locating the source of authority within the party, creating a challenge for its new leader in accommodating his new supporters within his party's representative traditions. |
`In' analytical Note | Political Quarterly Vol. 87, No.1; Jan-Mar 2016: p.23–30 |
Journal Source | Political Quarterly 2016-03 87, 1 |
Key Words | Labour Party ; Primaries ; Party Membership ; Intra-Party Democracy ; Multi-Speed Membership |