There is a perceived North-South divide in British politics. In
this study, William Field points out that this divide marks the
resurgence of a core-periphery cleavage which was also dominant in
British politics in the years before 1914. He shows how similar the
geographical pattern of the vote was in the general election of
1989 to that in the two general elections of 1910, the last before
the outbreak of World War I. Many of the same constitution issues -
devolution and reform of the second chamber were coming to the fore
then.
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