There s a new force in politics. After years of involuntary silence, the people, wise or foolish, right or wrong, are demanding to be heard. Public opinion has become the giant before which all tremble , and representative democracy must adapt or die. Millions have lost faith in the educated elite who traditionally manage their democratic mandate. Instead, increasingly, elected politicians are expected to bow to the directly expressed will of the people , no matter how ill-informed or manipulated. For the first time in centuries, the legitimacy of Parliament is in doubt. In People Power, journalist Richard Askwith poses a radical but thrilling question: what if we were to remake our system of government to reflect the new world we live in? This is the story of a chamber crying out to be abolished, a chamber crying out to be created, and a people who have reclaimed the right to govern themselves. It is the story of the threats posed by populism to our most precious liberties; and of how, by conceding a little to direct democracy, Parliament could secure its future and turn people power into a force for good.
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About the Author:
Richard Askwith has been a journalist for more than thirty-five years. For the past fifteen years he has been Associate Editor of The Independent. A keen runner, he has written two previous books about running. His first, Feet in the Clouds, won Best New Writer at the British Sports Book Awards and the Bill Rollinson Prize for Landscape and Tradition. It was shortlisted for the William Hill and Boardman-Tasker prizes and was named by Runner's World as one of the three best running books of all time. His 2014 book, Running Free, was short-listed for the Thwaites-Wainwright Prize.
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- PublisherBiteback Publishing
- Publication date2018
- ISBN 10 1785903527
- ISBN 13 9781785903526
- BindingHardcover
- Number of pages128