Executive-Parliament Flashcards

1
Q

How Parliament controls the executive?

A
  • There is natural conflict between parliament and the executive - follows two principles: Parliament is sovereign and the Government has an elected mandate to carry out ifs manifesto.
  • If Parliament exercises sovereignty, it threatens the government’s democratic legitimacy - solved as usually Govt holds a majority in the HOC; no need to exercise if Govt acts within the mandate.
  • Acts passed by the Govt to control Parli (HOL).
    + Parliament Act 1911
    + Parliament Act 1949
    + Salisbury Convention.
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2
Q

What was the Parliament Act 1911?

A

Sought to remove the power of the House of Lords to reject money bills, and to replace the Lords’ veto over other public bills with the power of delay.

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3
Q

What was the Parliament Act 1949?

A

Reducing the time that the House of Lords could delay bills from three sessions over two years to two sessions over one year.

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4
Q

How does the executive controls parliament?

A

PM’s patronage:
- Controls appointment and dismissals to govt.
- Controls MPs power and increases loyalty of their party’s MPs as those who cause trouble are unlikely to be promoted.

General dislike of elections:
- Fear of loosing their seats + the hard work.
- Passed the Fixed Parliament Act 2011 - reduce the possibility.

Party whips:
- Used to exercise control of MPs.
- MPs can be suspended from the party if they are too obstructive = damages career and increases loyalty.

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5
Q

What are some circumstances favouring executive power?

A
  • Large majority = 1983, 1987, 1997 and 2001.
  • United in a dominant ideology = Thatcherism (1983-9) and New Blarism (1997-2005).
  • Fragmented opposition = Labour (1983-92 and 2015 onwards).
  • Dominant govt leader = Thatcher (1979-89), Blair (1997-03) and to an extent Johnson (2019-22).
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6
Q

What are some circumstances favouring Parliamentary power?

A
  • Small to no majority = 2010, 2015 (12 seats).
  • Split on issues govt = Brexit (2016-onwards with three prime ministers).
  • United, strong opposition = New Labour (1994-7).
  • Unpopular leader/lost authority = Thatcher (1990), Major (1994-7), Brown (2008-10) and Johnson (2019-22) and Truss (2022).
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7
Q

Current state of relations

A
  • 2010 = no dominant govt majority - emergence of a multi-party system - difficult to control MPs.
  • Parliament - insisted on taking control of military intervention = failed legacy of Iraq 2003.
  • Lords increasingly more active and obstructive since 1999.
  • Select committees, led by a powerful chair, have good status and is more aggressive and critical.
  • Backbenchers = controls parliamentary agenda and membership - enhanced their authority.
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8
Q

Current state of relations

A
  • 2010 = no dominant govt majority - emergence of a multi-party system - difficult to control MPs.
  • Parliament - insisted on taking control of military intervention = failed legacy of Iraq 2003.
  • Lords increasingly more active and obstructive since 1999.
  • Select committees, led by a powerful chair, have good status and is more aggressive and critical.
  • Backbenchers = controls parliamentary agenda and membership - enhanced their authority.
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9
Q

Importance of governing with a majority

A

+ Most proposals negotiated individually from MPs must come from all parties to secure support. Otherwise:

  • Faces possibility of defeat.
  • Must survive votes of no confidence.
  • Struggles to gain support for the budget.
  • Imposes a leadership challenge if they resign because of low popularity from the parliament.
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