Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2014
REPRESENTATIVES ARE RARELY REPRESENTATIVE OF THOSE THEY represent. The most widely bruited cause of this paradox is the difference in social class; almost every study of legislators in Western democracies shows that they come from more well-todo backgrounds, are drawn from more prestigious and intellectually satisfying occupations, and are much better educated than their electors. Such contrasts alone would make for a formidable divide between representatives and the represented; but more significant than these external signs is the psychological gulf between politicians and ordinary citizens. For a few, politics consumes the greater part of their lives; for the many, politics is a matter taking up little time and absorbing little emotional energy. The belief systems of the politically active few will usually be complex and highly articulated; of the passive many, shallow and indistinct.
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2 Parl. Debs. (Commons), 6th Series, Vol. 249, 25 October 1994, col. 758.
3 Nolan Report: Letter from Lord Nolan to Prime Minister.
4 ibid. ch. 2, para. 24.
5 ibid. ch. 2, para. 25.
6 ibid. ch. 2, para. 26 and First Report, Committee of Privileges 1970–71, Appen dices to Minutes of Evidence.
7 ibid. ch. 2, paras 27 and 28.
8 ibid. ch. 2, para. 43.
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58 Author’s italics.
59 ibid.
60 See e.g., the letter from Sir Nicholas Fairbairn about the tactics of the Whips on the Maastricht Treaty Paving Motion debate, The Times, 10 November 1992.
61 Nolan Report, Summary, para. 2