In an exploration of mass voter alignments in Great Britain,
Kenneth D. Wald illuminates the electoral consequences of major
social divisions and the relationship between social structure and
partisanship. He establishes that the transition from religion to
social class as the chief influence on British voting occurred
after World War I, as most scholars have presumed, rather than
before the War, as a number of recent revisionist discussions have
claimed.
Originally published in 1983.
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