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The British Parliament How it operates. Bicameral Upper House: House of Lords  Originally co-equal except in money matters  Now a chamber of review:

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Presentation on theme: "The British Parliament How it operates. Bicameral Upper House: House of Lords  Originally co-equal except in money matters  Now a chamber of review:"— Presentation transcript:

1 The British Parliament How it operates

2 Bicameral Upper House: House of Lords  Originally co-equal except in money matters  Now a chamber of review: Can delay – important if gov’t wants bill passed Can also examine selected measures in greater detail

3 Bases of appointment Originally a hereditary body  After WWII, supplemented by life peers Following Blair reforms (phase I of an incomplete reform), largely appointed Fuses powers  Law Lords – Highest Court  Bishops of Church of England Also cross-bench peers (non-partisan)

4 House of Commons Lower House 659 members An adversarial body  Dominated by relations betweens gov’t & opposition Effectively organized by parties  impossible to understand without reference to them http://www.psr.keele.ac.uk/area/uk/uktable.htm

5 Distribution of seats 1997-2005 199720012005 Labour419413356 Cons165166198 Lib-Dem285262

6 Where the action is Committees:  Standing & Select Within each caucus:  Front bench v. backbench On the floor:  Question period Debate

7 Maintaining cohesion Complex process: Whip system  Chief Whip & deputy whips Rewards and punishment?  Prospect of advancement?  Threat of removal of the whip?  Threat of dissolution? MP’s job? The ‘payroll’ vote & collective responsibility

8 A closer look Prime Minister  Cabinet  Government Ministers without cabinet rank Parliamentary Private Secretaries Backbench

9 The distribution of power Prime Minister? Cabinet? Backbench? Changing patterns of discipline  Suppressing dissent  Tolerating dissent


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