British Government and Politics (JN302) Prime Minister, Cabinet and Government
1. Office of Prime Minister 2. Cabinet and Government 3. Collective Responsibility and Ministerial Code 4. Civil Service 5. Executive Agencies and Quangos 6. Coalition Agreement Lecture Outline
1. Office of Prime Minister Office only arose with need to chair Cabinet with German-speaking George I in First PM Sir Robert Walpole. Office only publicly popularised at start of 20 th century.
1. Office of Prime Minister Powers of PM: Appoint cabinet members and fellow ministers Chair Cabinet meetings Keep the sovereign informed Declare war and peace Recommend passage of Bills to Royal Assent Recommend dissolution and prorogation of Parliament Draw up Queen’s speech (usually from contents of the manifesto) Recommend appointments Recommend honours Answer for policies at PMQ’s, make statements to the House.
Prime Ministers are ‘primus inter pares’ – first among equals. Elected as MP with the responsibilities that entails. Leader of the party. Becomes Prime Minister (we don’t elect a PM). Recent more ‘presidential’ status of position. Also has titles of First Lord of the Treasury and Minister for Civil Service (serviced by the Cabinet Office). 1. Office of Prime Minister
Presidential Style: By-passing and or downgrading the role of the Cabinet in devising policy Announcing policies to the media before announcing them to Parliament Ignoring popular opinion and protest Grandstanding on the international stage. 1. Office of Prime Minister
PM has great power and needs to be held to account: Public (elected as an MP) Press (allies and foes) Parliament (question time) also twice yearly Commons Liaison Committee made up of chairs of the select committee question the PM Votes of No Confidence (James Callaghan Labour PM was defeated in 1979 on a no confidence vote) Party (Tory 1922 Committee). 1. Office of Prime Minister
“His or her power varies from time to time according to the extent their Cabinet colleagues permit them to have that power, depending on whether the Cabinet is split, depending also on the strength of the Government majority in the House of Commons and also popular opinion in the electorate and attitudes in the Party”. (Sir Richard Wilson former Cabinet Secretary giving evidence to the Public Accts Committee 2002) 1. Office of Prime Minister
Enhancing power Large parliamentary majority Unified cabinet Recent election victory High opinion poll ratings Competence and integrity of ministerial colleagues Clear objectives and strategy Supportive media Strong, stable economic situation International crisis, well handled Weak, ineffective Opposition Constraining power Small parliamentary majority Divided cabinet Division among backbenchers Mid term blues Low opinion poll ratings Incompetence or scandals involving ministerial colleagues Limited grasp of policy details Recession/economic crisis International crisis, poorly-handled Strong, credible Opposition Party Press public (From Dorey – Policy Making in Britain)
The Prime Minister’s Office Policy unit only established Provides PM with independent source of policy advice. Staffed by about 100 people. Works in conjunction with Cabinet Office – indicative of growing executive government. Blair in 1997 introduced Strategic Communications Unit to co-ordinate media relations of departments and ministers. 1. Office of Prime Minister
2. Cabinet and Government Cabinet is sub-set of government, comprised of senior ministers (usually 20-25). Cabinet ministers generally referred to as Secretaries of State. ws/uk-politics ws/uk-politics
The Cabinet is made up of the senior members of government. Every Tuesday during Parliament, members of the Cabinet (Secretaries of State from all departments and some other ministers) meet to discuss what are the most important issues for the government. Cabinet committees – chaired by PM or senior Cabinet ministers. 2. Cabinet and Government
Prime Minister and his Chancellor 2. Cabinet and Government Cutting the deficit - coalition partnership of Osborne and Alexander
Power of Cabinet has declined in recent decades. Blair’s first Cabinet secretary Robin Butler said: “From the start the proceedings were very informal. Tony Blair wasn’t interested in setting an agenda and working through the items...cabinet ministers were not encouraged to raise issues themselves.” 2. Cabinet and Government
More power located in informal collections of close, sometimes unelected (special advisers – spin doctors), colleagues: kitchen cabinets, sofa government. For Blair, Alistair Campbell (Press Secretary) and Jonathan Powell, (Chief of Staff who played significant role in Good Friday agreement) For Thatcher, Charles Powell (Foreign Adviser) and Bernard Ingham, (Press Secretary)
2. Cabinet and Government For Cameron, Andy Coulson, Press Secretary (had to leave when he became the story), Craig Oliver current Director of Communications; and Steve Hilton, Director of Strategy (went to US but still in touch). oices/commentators/andrew- grice/andrew-grice-relations- between-the-pms-two-closest- aides-go-from-bad-to-worse html oices/commentators/andrew- grice/andrew-grice-relations- between-the-pms-two-closest- aides-go-from-bad-to-worse html
Cabinet Office – civil service of the Cabinet et-office et-office Cabinet Secretariat – group of about 30 seconded senior civil servants. Secretariat made up of six separate departmental secretariats, including Economic and Domestic Affairs Secretariat, European Secretariat, Intelligence Support Secretariat. 2. Cabinet and Government
Governments can number between 80 and 100 plus ministers. Most junior ministerial post is parliamentary under- secretary, ranking below secretaries of state and ministers. Parliamentary private secretaries are junior posts often ascribed to ambitious MPs who aspire to become Ministers. Gordon Brown brought in outsiders and made them peers to join the government - undemocratic 2. Cabinet and Government
Government departments crucial area of government – headed by ministers with civil servant permanent secretary who provides policy advice and in charge of the daily work of the department. Ministers make policy and civil servants implement policy. New Labour introduced idea of ‘joined-up government’ with greater co-ordination between departments and agencies, private and voluntary sectors, and public. 2. Cabinet and Government
Ministers are bound by collective responsibility – they publicly endorse Cabinet decisions after debate and decisions taken (even if they disagree). Sometimes, disagreements are too strong and Minister resigns. Robin Cook former Labour Foreign Secretary resigned over the war in Iraq. Coalition agreement allows for some Cabinet dissent between Conservatives and Lib Dems in some areas. 3. Collective Responsibility and Ministerial Code
Ministerial responsibility doctrine – Ministers should resign if serious error or scandal occurs in their Departments. Occurs less so now. Jeremy Hunt defied calls for resignation as Culture Secretary about News Corp’s takeover bid for BSkyB. But Liam Fox resigned as Defence Secretary in 2011 over links with his friend and corporate lobbyist Adam Werritty. Collective Responsibility and Ministerial Code
Ministerial code redrafted in Coalition agreement. Principles include: Provision of accurate and truthful information to Parliament, require no conflict between public duties and private interests, must not accept gifts or hospitality that compromises their judgement, not use government resources for party political purposes, etc. Register of Members’ Financial Interests: 82/Shareholding-not-recorded-in-the-Ministerial-List-of- Interests.html 82/Shareholding-not-recorded-in-the-Ministerial-List-of- Interests.html 3. Collective Responsibility and Ministerial Code
4. Civil Service Professional civil service serve the government - political neutrality - non partisan, does not change with change of government Cabinet Secretary – Sir Jeremy Heywood Permanent Secretaries – serve his/her secretary of state or minister. Senior civil servants known as ‘mandarins’. Collective term for the administrative structure Also known as ‘Whitehall’
In 2009 total civil service staff numbered just under 490,000. Their numbers have declined from 735,000 in Contra Whitehall image, only about 16% of UK-based civil servants work in London. 4. Civil Service
Politicians and civil servants need to work together but the relationship can be tense. -credit-iain-duncan-smith -credit-iain-duncan-smith New Labour were suspicious of the Civil Service. They were wary of civil servants who had prospered under the preceding Conservative government. Special advisers are party appointments and not civil servants. They leave position if Minister resigns or sacked. 4. Civil Service
4 Civil Service Civil servants resources Anonymity Experience Expertise Knowledge Permanence Time Whitehall network Minister’s resources Access to Cabinet Access to media Alternative source of advice Authority Political alliances Political support/legitimacy Prime Ministerial backing
Executive agencies are subsets of government departments that focus on delivery of policy rather than formulation of policy. Can allow Ministers to escape ministerial responsibility. Biggest executive agency is Jobcentre Plus. Now employs about 100,000 staff with annual budget of £4 billion. 5. Executive Agencies and Quangos
Quangos (Quasi autonomous non governmental organisations) are often confused with executive agencies. They are non-departmental public bodies. Examples: Arts Council England. Comparatively high levels of autonomy (with criticisms of lack of accountability) issues-for-the-new-parliament/decentralisation-of-power/quangos/ issues-for-the-new-parliament/decentralisation-of-power/quangos/ full-list.html full-list.html finance-regulators finance-regulators 5. Executive Agencies and Quangos
2010 election resulted in hung parliament with no single party emerging with an overall majority in the House of Commons, for the first time since Coalition Agreement coalition-documentation coalition-documentation Mid-term Review: Mid-term review press conference: Coalition Agreement
Fragile state of Coalition: lib-dem-split-tories-danny-alexander lib-dem-split-tories-danny-alexander 6. Coalition Agreement