Statistics for British Politics

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General Stats

  • This quiz has been taken 2,077 times
    (261 since last reset)
  • The average score is 30 of 90

Answer Stats

HintAnswer% Correct
The Great Charter signed in 1215 that is the cornerstone of the British constitutionMagna Carta
91%
The best known conspirator of ^Guy Fawkes
77%
Monarch who was forced to sign ^ by the BaronsKing John
77%
First female Prime MinisterMargaret Thatcher
71%
Prime Minister during the Second World WarWinston Churchill
71%
Soldier and statesman who led the armies of Parliament during the English Civil War and was Lord Protector from 1653-58Oliver Cromwell
70%
What the letters MP stand forMember of Parliament
69%
Area that an MP representsConstituency
65%
Name given to the conspiracy to assassinate King James I in 1605 by blowing up ParliamentThe Gunpowder Plot
65%
Party that won the 2019 general election, with an 80-seat majorityConservative
62%
Publicly funded healthcare system set up under the Labour Government of Clement Attlee in 1946National Health Service
62%
Name of the great bell housed in the Elizabeth TowerBig Ben
61%
Term used for when two or more parties agree to work together to form a GovernmentCoalition
61%
Current Prime MinisterRishi Sunak
59%
Early political party that played a central role in the 1688 Glorious Revolution and contested power with the rival Tory Party into the 19th CenturyWhigs
57%
Collective name for the Prime Minister and his most senior frontbench Government officials who represent the departments of stateCabinet
56%
MP who chairs debates in the House of CommonsThe Speaker
54%
Address of the Prime Minister10 Downing Street
53%
Party official appointed to help organise the party's contribution to parliamentary business and keep MPs in lineWhip
51%
^ His great rival, twice Conservative PM and a noted author, to date the only PM of Jewish birthBenjamin Disraeli, 1st Earl of Beaconsfield
50%
Traditional day when a general election is heldThursday
50%
Term used for when a Party wins an overwhelming majority in a general electionLandslide
49%
Public declaration of ideas and policies of a political party, usually introduced in an election campaignManifesto
49%
The year of the 'three-day week' and two general elections1974
48%
Term describing the to and fro of amendments to Bills between the Commons and the Lords (also an alternative name for table tennis)Ping Pong
48%
Controversial policy introduced by Margaret Thatcher which sparked riotsPoll Tax
48%
The youngest PM in British history, 24 when he came to officeWilliam Pitt the Younger
48%
Number of MPs in Parliament650
47%
King whose love for American divorcee Wallis Simpson sparked the 1936 Abdication CrisisEdward VIII
45%
Term used for when a general election returns no outright winnerHung Parliament
44%
Statesman considered Britain's first Prime MinisterSir Robert Walpole
44%
Welsh Liberal politician who was PM during the last two years of the First World WarDavid Lloyd George
43%
Hero of the Battle of Waterloo, twice Tory Prime MinisterArthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
42%
Leader of the british suffragette movementEmmeline Pankhurst
42%
Prime Minister and one of the founders of the Conservative Party who, when Home Secretary, created the Metropolitan Police Force in 1829Sir Robert Peel
42%
Year women aged 21 and over were given the vote1928
40%
Name for what takes place when a seat in the House of Commons becomes vacant between general electionsBy-election
40%
Year that men aged 21 and over were given the vote1918
39%
MPs and Lords can sit on these panels to examine the work of Government departmentsSelect Committees
39%
Name of the current Speaker of the House of CommonsSir Lindsay Hoyle
39%
Liberal politician who served as PM four seperate times in the 19th century, nicknamed the "grand old man" by his supportersWilliam Ewart Gladstone
37%
Shakespearean term coined by James Callaghan to describe the rash of rampant strike actions over the Christmas and New Year period of 1979Winter of Discontent
37%
Name of the House of Lords official who, during ^ summons the House of Commons to attend the Queen's Speech by striking the door of the Commons chamber with his staffLady Usher of the Black Rod
34%
Including the 2019 election, how many general elections there have been since the Second World War21
33%
Prime Minister of the 'National Government' of the 1930s, still considered by many in the Labour Party as a "traitor"James Ramsay Macdonald
33%
Monarchs that Parliament offered the crown to in the Glorious Revolution #1William III
30%
Year that the voting age was reduced to 181969
29%
First female Speaker of the House of CommonsBetty Boothroyd
29%
Around 500 people who have reached high office, including many MPs and Peers, are members of this assembly set up to advise the Queen in carrying out her duties as MonarchPrivy Council
29%
What the Prime Minister stands at when addressing the Speaker in the House of CommonsDespatch Box
27%
The nefarious practice of using a long speech to delay or obstruct parliamentary businessFilibuster
27%
Unpopular legislation in force until 1846 that imposed restrictions and tariffs on imported grainCorn Laws
26%
To date, the only politician to have held the four great offices of state: Prime Minister, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Home Secretary and Foreign SecretaryJames Callaghan
25%
MP, Social reformer and philanthropist who was one of the foremost leaders of the movement to abolish slavery in the British EmpireWilliam Wilberforce
23%
#2Mary II
22%
The only Prime Minister to be assassinated, in 1812Spencer Perceval
22%
Where an MP or Lord sits in their respective debating chamber if they are neither a Minister or spokesperson for their partyBackbenches
21%
Official report of proceedings in the Houses of ParliamentHansard
21%
Primary founder of the Labour PartyJames Keir Hardie
21%
Final stage of a Bill passing through ParliamentRoyal Assent
19%
Essayist and Lord Chancellor under Henry VIII who submitted the first known request for freedom of speech in ParliamentSir Thomas More
18%
Collective name given to the 26 Bishops who sit in the House of LordsLords Spiritual
17%
19th Century working class movement for political reform that pressured for manhood suffrageChartism
16%
Suffragette who hid in a broom cupboard in the Palace of Westminster the night of the 1911 Census and was later killed running into the path of a racehorse at the 1913 Epsom DerbyEmily Wilding Davison
16%
Ceremonial staff of office symbolising Royal authority that lies in the Commons when it is in sessionMace
16%
Annual event marking the commencement of a session of ParliamentState Opening of Parliament
16%
The principal area in the Palace of Westminster where constituents can meet their MPsCentral Lobby
15%
First female MP to be elected and take her seat in the House of CommonsNancy Astor
15%
Informal name for the Representation of the People Act of 1832, which introduced wide-ranging changes to the electoral system of England and WalesReform Act
15%
The oldest existing part of the Palace of Westminster which survived the fire and dates back to 1097Westminster Hall
14%
Declaration presented to ^ considered a landmark development in the civil liberties of EnglandBill of Rights
13%
Official term for the end of a Parliament, heralding a general electionDissolution
13%
Name of the meeting of MPs convened to push through an act establishing a court to try Charles IRump Parliament
13%
Year the original Palace of Westminster burnt down1834
12%
Name of the meeting of MPs convened in 1640 to dismantle the structures of personal rule under King Charles ILong Parliament
12%
Annex opened in 2001 to provide extra offices for MPsPortcullis House
12%
13th Century Nobleman who convened the first Parliament in 1265Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester
12%
Number of Peers eligible to take part in the work of the House of Lords800
11%
Officer responsible for the security of the House of Commons and the personal safety of The SpeakerSerjeant at Arms
10%
19th century constitutional theorist and former Clerk of the House of Commons who wrote the definitive guide to parliamentary procedure that is still used around the worldThomas Erskine May
8%
Principal officer of the House of Commons, the utmost authority on procedure and privilege and the CEO of the HouseClerk of the House
7%
The most prominent of the "five members" who Charles I attempted to arrest in Parliament in 1642John Pym
7%
Official term for the end of a parliamentary sessionProrogation
7%
#2Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin
6%
Part of the Palace of Westminster that houses the Parliamentary archivesVictoria Tower
6%
Name of the Lord SpeakerLord McFall of Alcluith
5%
The two architects who designed and built the new Palace that exists to this day #1Sir Charles Barry
4%
Speaker who defied Charles I when the King entered Parliament to arrest the "five members"William Lenthal
3%
Name of the tune ^ plays to announce the hourWestminster Chimes
2%
First Speaker of the House of CommonsSir Thomas Hungerford
0%

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