Word of the Week

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In the dim dark recesses of h2g2 history before we

moved lock, stock and barrel to our new BBC home there used

to be a front page feature The h2g2 Word

of the Day
. It was a way to highlight some of the

lesser occurring or largely obscurer words in the English

language. Sadly this feature was discontinued.

Until now...

Word for the Week

This week I've been too busy getting ready for the

Conference of the Political party of which I am a member, to

trawl through the dark recesses of h2g2 for suggestions and

archives for used words. So in honour of my activities over

the weekend I provide you with an A-Z of politics.

A for Activist: These are the little people

who post leaflets through doors, canvass residents, put up

and (hopefully) take down election posters.

B for Ballot Box: The metal box with a small

slit in the top into which your voting paper is placed once

you have decided on your vote. There are attempts to do away

with ballot boxes and introduce electronic voting, but some

argue this makes scrutiny difficult.

C for Conference: The gathering of the party

activist, elected representatives etc to discuss, vote on or

affirm party ideas and ideals. What goes on depends very much

on the party's structure and constitution.

D for Democracy: This should mean that the

people of the countries who vote actually elect the people

that they want to stand for them. See E, F and P for more

information.

E for Electoral College: A weighted form of

election. Certain groups are given weight or number of votes

according to their importance. Once used by the UK Labour

party, still used for US Presidential election. Does not

always mean that more votes means you win, see the US

presidential elections of 1960 and 2000.

F for First Past the Post: An electoral

system where each elector has one vote and the winner gets

elected. Currently used in the majority of UK elections. The

winner does not have to have the majority of voters backing

them to win.

G for General Election: An election that

takes place over the entire country either to elect a

President or a Parliament.

H for Hustings: Public meetings where all

the main contenders for an election are invited to get their,

or their party's, point of view across to the electorate.

I for Ineffective: Sometimes a party, leader

or politician who is deemed to be ineffective is not long to

getting shifted or ousted, especially in the 24/7 media

age.

J for Jobs for Boys: The elevating to key

posts of close friends and colleagues regardless of

experience. More prone to abuse happening in systems such as

the US where cabinet holders do not have to be sitting in any

elected body.

K for Kingmaker: A influential, senior

political figure whose input is important in deciding the

future leader of a political party or country.

L for Lame Duck: Where there is a gap

between elections and taking control, the Lame Duck period is

that time when an ousted leader is still in office before

handing over the reigns of power. In US presidential terms

between the elections in November and the inauguration in

January.

M for Majority: When one party has half the

seats in an elected house plus one they are deemed to have a

majority. However an overwhelming majority can be as awkward

to manage as a slim one so a medium sized one is often

desired, not too small to allow many defeats, not too large

to encourage rebellion - look at Tony Blair and John Major

for examples of the dangers in both.

N for No: A word that seems to be missing

from most politician's vocabulary, unless they are in

opposition to something very strongly. Often replaced with

'We will set up a committee to look into this' or

'I shall get back to you about that'.

O for Officials: The civil servants who will

remain in their jobs whatever the election result. Officials

offer continuity in position and, as in the BBC series Yes

Minster
, some believe it is their job to rule the place

not the politicians.

P for Proportional Representation: An

electoral system in which electors rank their preferences.

These are then distributed by ejection or transfer of

surpluses until all the available seats have been

allocated1. Seen by many to be the

fairest electoral system currently available.

Q for Queer Vote: A current major battle

ground is the gay/lesbian vote. In the UK the Conservatives

are looking at ways to encourage the pink vote to vote blue.

However a recent opinion poll showed 67% of gay men would

vote Liberal Democrat, 10% Labour and only 5%

Conservative.

R for Results: What all the hard work, long

nights and wet feet are for. Hopefully you will win but there

will another chance coming around in a few years time if you

don't.

S for Selection: Unless you stand as an

independent you have to be selected by a local party for the

chance to stand. Somehow you have to stand out from people

who broadly have similar philosophies and beliefs to

yourself.

T for Tact: Along with Diplomacy often

needed in politics to move things along and come to

agreements.

U for United Nations: An international forum

for the world's politicians to meet to discuss issues which

straddle national boundaries and affect things on a world

wide scale.

V for Vote: Your chance to change things, if

you live in a democracy. An opportunity to elected the

representatives or leaders you wish to have.

W for World Bodies: Such as the UN. Many of

these were set up after the second World War to prevent the

horrors of War affecting the World in the same way ever

again. Sadly the UN, since its formation, has been acting

mainly as referee rather than preventer of wars.

X for Xenophobia: A sadly rising trend in

Western politics where anyone who looks different is

increasingly ostracised. The rise in far right politics

hasn't been as great since the 1930s and is increasingly

being fuelled by some of the more 'mainstream' leaders

exhortations unfortunately.

Y for You: See V. The smallest unit in

politics in the individual. You vote. You can write to your

representatives. You can raise issues. You can highlight

these issues in a free press. Never underestimate the power

of one person.

Z for Zzzzzzz: Sadly most people are turned

off by politics without realising how much it affects their

daily lives.

Normal service should be resumed next week. But we

hope you enjoyed this little excursion.

How can you

contribute?

  1. Go and check out words in the archive to avoid duplication.
  2. Check out the discussion threads and nominate a word that

    you feel was overlooked before discontinuation.
  3. Suggest a new word or your forgotten word in the word of the week archive

    conversation.

The Word of the Week

Archive

Demon Drawer2

01.04.04 Front Page

Back Issue Page

1Candidates require the number of votes

divided by seats plus 1 all plus one to have a quota and

therefore be elected.
2Whose speech was

on TV on Saturday!

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