Democracy in the UK means rule by the people, built on political equality — every vote counts the same. It works through two systems: representative democracy (we elect MPs to decide for us) and direct democracy (we decide some questions ourselves through referendums and petitions). The franchise — who has the vote and who does not — has driven democratic reform for two centuries.
Three ways the people get their decisions made. Burkean (rep uses own judgement), Delegate (rep does what voters said), Direct (no middleman). The Burkean / Delegate split is the standard A-level exam distinction.
An MP votes the way they think is right, even when their party has whipped them to vote the other way. This is the standard A-level model and the formal position of every UK MP under our constitution.
The pure delegate model is rare in Westminster - UK MPs are formally trustees. But the model appears in several places, and the argument that MPs should be delegates is part of the modern democratic-reform debate.
The UK uses direct democracy on big constitutional questions - mainly through referendums. It is not the default in UK politics but it has decided the biggest questions of the last 30 years.
How to use it: Pick this LoA for the "democracy in crisis" question. Use the three criticism pillars (non-elected institutions, electoral systems, executive power) as the three themes. Pick a sharper "franchise should be extended" line if the question is about specific franchise reform.
Read the scenario. Tap the option that names the democracy type in play. Six questions.