This is a 12-mark Section A comparative question, marked AO1 (knowledge) and AO2 (analysis) only - there are no AO3 evaluation marks. You are not arguing which set of groups is more powerful. You identify and explain clear, developed similarities.
Aim for three or four developed similarities. Each follows the same shape: state the similarity, give accurate knowledge of both the US and UK side (AO1), then explain what the similarity means (AO2). A bare list scores in the lower band.
US interest groups are organisations that seek to influence public policy without seeking to win office themselves. That is the line that separates them from parties.
The codified system gives groups many access points: federalism, the separation of powers and an elected, independent judiciary all create places to apply pressure.
UK pressure groups are likewise organisations that seek to influence policy without standing for office.
The UK offers fewer formal access points than the US, but devolution, the courts and Parliament still give groups several routes.
Set the two systems side by side on the points that genuinely match.
| Similarity | US interest groups | UK pressure groups |
|---|---|---|
| Core purpose | Influence policy without seeking office | Influence policy without seeking office |
| Types of group | Sectional (economic) and promotional (cause) | Sectional (interest) and promotional (cause) |
| Range of methods | Lobbying, litigation, election spending, grassroots action | Lobbying, judicial review, media campaigns, direct action |
| An insider tier | Well-connected groups gain privileged access to officials | Insider groups gain privileged access to government |
| Drivers of success | Wealth, expertise, membership and connections | Wealth, expertise, membership and connections |
Choose three or four of the similarities above. For each, write one developed paragraph.