Unit 2 quick notes Flashcards
(58 cards)
4
Parliament and Representation
Women in Parliament: 41% of MPs; 28% of peers. UK population: 51%.
BAME Representation: 14% of MPs; 6% of peers. UK population: 18%.
Age: Only 2% of MPs are under 30; 52% over 50.
Education:
- 85% of MPs have degrees (vs 33% of English population).
- 23% of MPs privately educated (46% Tories, 15% Labour).
- 23% went to Oxbridge.
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Misconduct, Scandals & Resignations
- Aaron Stelmach-Purdie (MoD clerk) defrauded £911,677 from 2014–2016; kept £557,093.
- Craig Williams (ex-Conservative MP, Sunak’s PPS) charged with insider betting on 2024 election date, with 14 others.
- Amber Rudd: Resigned (2018) for misleading select committee on deportation targets.
- Louise Haigh: First Labour cabinet resignation in 2024 over past conviction.
- Paul Bristow: Sacked (2023) for calling for Gaza ceasefire.
- 13 ministers broke collective responsibility over No-Deal Brexit.
- William Wragg (2024): Leaked MPs’ numbers on Grindr; stood down.
Rishi Sunak denied peerage to Stanley Johnson; peerages also scandalised by Tory donors like Peter Cruddas who donated 500,000 to the party
3
Legislation & Bills
Parliament Acts used 3 times under Blair (e.g. Hunting Act 2004).
Safety of Rwanda Bill (2024): Underwent “ping-pong” between HoC & HoL.
PMBs: Only 8/163 passed (2016–17) vs 25/28 government bills.
- Take <5% of Commons time; gov bills take ⅓.
- Most PMBs that pass are from governing parties (e.g. 41/42 during coalition were Con/Lib Dem).
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Key PMBs Passed:
- Carer’s Leave Act (2023) – Wendy Chamberlain (Lib Dem)
- Worker Protection Act (2023) – Wera Hobhouse (Lib Dem); weakened by Lords
- 2024 Assisted Dying Bill: Introduced by Labour MP Kim Leadbeater.
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Rebellions & Backbench Influence
- Theresa May: Lost 33 votes as PM; heavy Brexit rebellions.
- 2019: 21 Conservative MPs (e.g. Clarke, Stewart, Hammond) removed for opposing Brexit deal.
- Heathrow: Zac Goldsmith (2016) & Greg Hands (2018) resigned over third runway.
- Labour/Con MPs (2019): 11 MPs left to form Independent Group for Change.
- 2023: 22 Tory MPs rebelled over contaminated blood compensation.
- 2024: 40 Tory MPs forced gov U-turn on criminalising homelessness.
30 MPs rebelled on Rwanda Bill.
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Committees & Oversight
- Defence Committee (2010–15): 83% turnover weakened effectiveness.
- Exiting EU Committee (2018): Led by Hilary Benn (Lab), criticised by Tory Brexiteers as being too pro-remain, according to Jenkyns only 7 of the 21 committee members voted leave.
- Wendy Chamberlain & Wera Hobhouse: Successful PMBs as Lib Dem backbenchers.
- In June 2023, the Commons Privileges Committee found that PM Boris Johnson knowingly misled Parliament over Partygate; recommended his suspension. Johnson quickly resigned as MP rather than risk a recall petition. Police investigations and fines over Partygate are ongoing. 99 Tories rebelled against Covid passports under Johnson; influenced by the Covid Recovery Group.
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PMQs & Scrutiny
- Rachel Reeves criticised Jeremy Hunt (2023) for freezing tax thresholds, despite 2% NIC cut. Jermey Hunt has reduced the rate for employees from 12% to 10%. It means that people will have to pay extra hundreds of pounds which will amount to £27 million. This illustrates that the shadow ministers are able to scrutinise the government in the house of commons and are allowed to challenge the government and hold them to account for the actions that they take.
- Lindsay Hoyle: PMQs is “pure theatre”; David Cameron’s aides planted questions for backbenchers.
- Sir Gerald Kaufman: PMQs = “useless declamations”.
‘punch and judy politics’
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Votes of No Confidence
- Theresa May: Jan 2019 – Survived by 19 votes.
- Boris Johnson: June 2022 – Survived 211–148 (58.8% support).
- James Callaghan: 1979 – Lost no-confidence vote; triggered election.
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Cabinet, Patronage & Power
- Liz Truss & Kwasi Kwarteng (Sept 2022): Mini-budget led to market collapse.
- Sunak’s Cabinet Reshuffle (Nov 2023):
Sacked Braverman (over Rwanda & police comments)
Appointed James Cleverly as Home Sec
Brought David Cameron back as Foreign Sec (now Lord Cameron)
- Dominic Cummings appointed by Boris due to shared Brexit views.
- Sunak (2024) backtracked student visa limits after pushback from Cleverly, Hunt, Keegan & Cameron.
House of Lords
- Government defeats (May 2017–2019): Only 69 times, shows limited opposition.
- Baroness Morgan of Cotes: Amended Domestic Violence Bill (expertise from Equalities Minister).
- Lord Dannatt (Crossbencher, ex-senior military): Advocated for UK troops to fight ISIS (2015–16).
- Non-active members who don’t attend - Lord Sugar
- Cost is huge - between Feb 2014-Jan 2015 - £21M spent on HOL allowances and expenses, with the average peer receiving £25,826
Lords
- Robert Winston, developed IVF - allowed symptoms to be diagnosed
- War Powers Act 1991 - they are ‘ping-ponged’ till there is an agreement
- Only 41% of Lord defeats were completely overturned in the Commons - 59% of cases had the Lord’s input in the final outcome
- Bills with the most gov defeats between 1999 and 2023 - Environment Bill, Health and Care Bill
- New Zeal and Denmark and other countries function without a second chamber, so can we
Liason Committee
Made in 2002, 34 members, Made up of chairs of Select Committees, Bernard Jenkins is the Liason Committee Chair
- Take evidence from PM on policy x3 a year
- Considers general scrutiny of gov
- Debates reports from various committees
- Oversees work from Select Committees
Ineffective - before 2019 - chairsperson chosen amongst the ranks not partisan -
Effective - scrutiny has foused more but members tend to ask questions but members tend to ask questions focused in their area
Sunak 2022 confronted for failure to attend PMQs, evasive on boat policies and inflation halving, defensive
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Whip scandals
- Assisted Dying Bill 2024 - SNP unwhipped - only affected England and Wales, some SNP chose to abstain from voting - also example of west lothian
- From 2016-17, 25 out of 28 government bills that were introduced managed to gain royal assent, however only 8 out of 163 PMBs succeeded in the same way.
Public Accounts Committee
- Examines public finances
- High profile in media - can call witnesses who HAVE to do
Professor Lord Peter Hennessy - ‘the queen of select committees’
Current Affairs and Reports - HS2 and Euston - 4B of unusable PPE burnt for power -
Backbench business Committee
Part of the Wrights reform 2010 - made of elected backbench MPs - main role is to determine what issues should be debated on the one day a week allocated to backbench business - before this, most parliamentary agenda was controlled by gov and the main opposition party leadership
Subject matter of these debates come from several sources:
- 100K signature e petition
- Inittaive of departmental select committee
- Request from MP or group of MPs
- Requests from local or national campaigns
Debates 2014-2015 parl session included:
- Human slaughter of animals for food (e petition)
- Future of the BBC (Culture, Media and Sport Select C)
Urgent questions
When an MP believes to require an immediate answer from a government minister - they can apply to ask an urgent question
Bercow’s speakership (2009-14) reveals he approved 159 of them, markedly more than his predessecor Michael Martin, who granted 42
In the 2017-19 extended parl, there were 307!
The role of the official opposition
Labour Party March 2022 on the cost of living crisis
House is concerned that older people and pensioners risk being at the sharp end of the cost of living crisis as a result of spiralling inflation, a lack of Government action on household energy bills, a poorly thought-through tax rise on older people in work and a real-terms reduction to the state pension
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Public Sector Pressures & Workforce Morale
- Saffron Cordery highlights NHS staff burnout and low morale.
- Dr Geoffrey Searle criticizes long-term “efficiency savings” in public services.
- University and College Union warns 10,000 academia job losses in 2024.
- Jobs often low-paid admin roles, disproportionately done by women.
Parliament has more power than executive
- Weak gov majority - makes it harder to get bills through Parl - after 2017, May was 9 seats short of an overall majority and relied on DUP to pass laws - gave her a working maj if DUP voted with her of just 13 votes
- Free votes - MPs can vote on issues without whips. Marriage (same sex couple) act 2013 allowed 1/2 of Con Mps to vote against proposed legislation (136 MPs)
- Rebel MPs - Corbyn rebelled 400 times against Blair and Brown (1997-2010)
- Party disunity - March 2016, 27 Con MPs rebelled against bill to extend Sunday trading hours - 317/286 votes - gov overruled by Parl
Windrush Scandal consequences
Jones, former Sainsbury’s manager, used Windrush compensation to start a youth-focused studio.
But he felt so traumatised by the experience of being wrongly classified as an immigration offender and locked out of the country that had been his home for 32 years that, even after the government had apologised for the Windrush scandal, he almost didn’t apply for compensation. Initially, he felt too frightened to contact the Home Office to try to get documentation proving his immigration status, because he thought there was a risk he would be arrested.
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Prime Ministerial Power & Cabinet Relationships - Blair
- Dominant PM; rarely defeated in HoC (only 3 times pre-2005).
- Controlled media via Alastair Campbell’s weekly press grid.
- Suffered 4 defeats from Nov 2005–July 2006 as his majority shrank, no defeats in HOC in his first 8 years
- Used patronage and political allies (e.g., Mandelson).
- Overseas: led UK into Afghanistan, Iraq, Kosovo, Sierra Leone.
- Controversy: Iraq invasion; Robin Cook resigned; 84 Labour MPs rebelled.
- Internal tension: Granita deal with Brown; internal opposition grew and gathered around brown until party fell apart - blair agreed to only run or 2 terms if brown didnt do leadership contest, broke it and ran for 3 2006 “Curry House coup.” 50 mainly backbench mps called for resignation - brown backed by reid - home sec but said he would ‘end debilitating leadership speculation’ - walston, a close brown ally orchestrated this
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Boris Johnson
- Reshuffled Cabinet post-Rudd/Jo Johnson resignations.
- Suspended Parliament (Aug 2019); move later ruled unlawful. 3rd sep 2019 drew whip from 21 mps who where remainers - allow hoc to undertake eu proceedings prorogation crisis
28 aug 2019 - uk forced to be prorogued by queen elizabeth on the advice of johsnon - advice was ruled unlwafyl - went against convention to stop people debating brexit, controversial longest period of prorogation prevented parl from debate - extreme scrutiny from supreme court - ‘like it never happened at all’ - Expelled 21 MPs opposing Brexit policy.
- Personal controversies: Cummings’ lockdown breach, Partygate, Pincher scandal, Northern Research group
- Achievements: Brexit done (Jan 2020), housing pledge nearly met. pledges:- 300k new homes - missed target by 5k despite peak of housing
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Theresa May
- Weak leadership 2017–2019.
- Couldn’t control Brexit factions or enforce unity.
- Select ministers like Davis (Brexit) or Gove (Brexiteer rep) to manage factions.
- Rudd resigned over Windrush scandal (2018).
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Rishi Sunak
- Restored stability post-Truss; Windsor Framework March 2024. lee anderson and brendan clarke smith resigned deputy chairs of the con party after defying sunak by backing right wing challengers to harden rwanda deportation bill
- party support - 26 feb 2024 - 25% whilst lab is 44% - theyre united - starmer threatening to remove whip from corbyn
- Economic calm post-Covid; Ukraine support continued.
- Weaknesses: net-zero U-turns, HS2 cancellation, junior doctor strikes.
- Internal challenges: rebellion over Rwanda bill; right-wing pressure from Truss faction. truss formed faction popular con to unify right wing of party and pressure sunak - ‘giving freedom back’
- Resigned ministers: Lee Anderson, Brendan Clarke-Smith.