Mr. Hutchings History

UK Explained: AP Comparative Government (Parliament, Prime Minister, FPTP Elections + Devolution)

March 2, 2026·2 min
Episode Description from the Publisher

When people hear “United Kingdom,” they often think the King or Queen runs the country—but in AP Comparative Government, the UK is the key case for understanding how a democracy can work without a single written constitution and why real power comes from Parliament, political parties, and the Prime Minister.In this video, you’ll learn:The UK basics: England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern IrelandWhat it means to have an uncodified constitution (rules come from laws, courts, and conventions)Head of State vs Head of Government (Monarch vs Prime Minister)How Parliament works: House of Commons (elected, most powerful) vs House of Lords (unelected review)The idea of parliamentary sovereignty and why Parliament matters so muchFusion of powers: why the executive comes from the legislature and why the PM needs a Commons majorityUK elections: First Past the Post (FPTP) and single-member districts—and how that shapes partiesWhy parties matter: Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, plus regional partiesDevolution and why regional governments reshape power inside the UKRule of law and the role of courts (including a UK Supreme Court)A quick CER practice prompt to help you think like AP Comp GovMr. Hutchings History | AP Comp Gov Country Explainers

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