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Paper 1 · P1.4.1 · Element 1 of 8

Voting behaviour - core

What the topic is, in two sentences

Voting behaviour is about why people vote the way they do - the CAGER long-term factors (Class, Age, Gender, Ethnicity, Region) and the CLIMP short-term factors (Campaign events, Leadership, Issues, Manifesto, Polls). The spec asks you to know three case-study general elections in depth: one from 1945-92, the 1997 election, and one since 1997.

1979 vs 2024 - which CAGER factor mattered most?

Tap a year. Watch which factor lights up - and which one fades. That swap is the realignment story in a single picture.

CLASS AB/C1 → Con C2/DE → Lab Pulzer's "basis of politics" DOMINANT AB/C1 split Lab / Lib Dem C2/DE split Lab / Reform WEAK AGE Small Con lean >65 ~10pp gap young vs old WEAK <30 Lab/Grn >65 Con/Reform Tipping point ~age 50 DOMINANT GENDER Slight Con female lean ~5pp gap WEAK Women lean Labour Gen Z gap widening MODEST ETHNICITY ~80% Labour but small share of electorate SMALL N ~70% Labour Hindu voters less so since 2019 MODEST REGION N/S divide forming Scotland still Labour (pre-SNP) MODEST Scotland Lab (SNP collapse) Red Wall partly back to Lab MODEST
👆 Tap 1979 or 2024. Watch CLASS shrink and AGE light up. That swap IS the story of dealignment.

1979 - Class is king

Pulzer's line "class is the basis of British politics, all else is embellishment" still holds. AB/C1 voters back the Conservatives; C2/DE voters back Labour. Age, gender and region produce small differences but Class is the master predictor.

Thatcher's breakthrough: she breaks the C2 skilled working-class vote, the so-called "C2 swing", but the underlying model is still class-based.

Why this matters for exam answers: "Voting was class-aligned" is the default story for any 1945-92 case study. Partisan alignment + class voting were the same thing.

2024 - Age is king

Class has fragmented. Working-class voters split between Labour and Reform. Middle-class voters split between Labour and Lib Dem. Class no longer predicts party choice.

The dominant cleavage is now age: under-30s lean Labour/Green by 40+ points; over-65s lean Conservative/Reform by 30+ points. The tipping point is around age 50.

Region has scrambled: Scotland is back to Labour after the SNP collapse; the Red Wall mostly returned to Labour but Reform won 5 seats in former Labour heartlands.

2024 EXAM POINT: the realignment story is age-based, not class-based. If you write "Britain is still a class-voting country" without qualifying it heavily, you are arguing against 2017, 2019 and 2024.

Spec sub-sections (Paper 1, P1.4.1)

The three most-asked exam questions on this topic

Question type 1
Evaluate the view that age has overtaken class as the most important factor in UK voting behaviour.
Predicted 2026 Q1(a). The signature post-2017 question.
Question type 2
Evaluate the view that short-term factors are more important than long-term factors in determining UK general election outcomes.
2024 Q2(b), 2020. The CAGER vs CLIMP question.
Question type 3
Evaluate the view that the 1979 / 1997 / 2024 election was a critical realignment.
Election-case study question. Tests the spec's three-election requirement.

The default line of argument

LoA: Age has replaced class as the dominant cleavage in UK voting since 2017. The Brexit referendum exposed the age divide; the 2019 election entrenched it; the 2024 result confirmed it (under-35s overwhelmingly Labour / Green; over-65s split Conservative / Reform). Class voting persists but no longer maps onto the two main parties in the way it did 1945-1997.

How to use it: Pick this LoA for the age-vs-class question type. Pick the CAGER/CLIMP balance line for the long-vs-short-term question.

The 8 things you need to be able to name in your sleep

Test yourself - which CAGER factor?

Read the scenario. Tap the bubble that best explains it. Seven questions, mixed eras.

Question 1 of 7
Score: 0
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CLASS AB/C1, C2/DE AGE under-30s, over-65s GENDER men, women ETHNICITY minority groups REGION N/S, devolved nations

Mini-checklist - tick each as you cover it

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The three case-study elections live in the four-elections pack next.
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