How Does the Government Organise its Majority -The Whips Overview
Carrots and Sticks used by the Whips
Managing your majority through Parliamentary Private Secretaries
Managing your majority by working with Party Groups
Free Votes in the House of Commons
Types of MPs – The Constituency Activist
Types of MPs – The Aspiring Minister
Types of MPs- The House of Commons Expert
Types of MPs- The Policy Entrepreneur
Controlling the Executive – Introduction
Controlling the Executive by Legislation
Controlling the Executive with Finance
Controlling the Executive through Appointments
Controlling the Executive through Questions
Controlling the Executive through Ministerial Statements
Controlling the Executive with Opposition Debates
Controlling the Executive through Select Committees
Overview of MP Expenses and Interests
The new intake of MPs in 1997, particularly the large increase in the number of women MPs, and Tony Blair’s theme of modernising Britain provided the impetus for Parliamentary Reform.
As with the introduction of Select Committees in 1979, reform requires a Leader of the House ready to promote it and a Prime Minister who is not actively against or too busy to intervene to prevent it.
A Modernisation Committee of the House of Commons was set up straight after the 1997 election, chaired by the Leader of the House. The two main changes that it made were:-
As Tony Wright MP, the Chair of the Public Administration Committee, has commented, there are two types of modernisation, that which makes it easier for the Government to get its business through and that which strengthens Parliament against the Executive. Both these changes are of the first type.
The Modernisation Committee also looked to remove archaic practices. Some survive, however, and MPs who want to submit a Ten Minute Rule Bill have to sleep all night outside the Ten Minute Rule Bill Office to be the first few in the queue the next morning.
Edwina Curry, fed up with this practice, left her teddy bear outside the office door with a note to say that it represented Edwina Curry. She arrived bright and refreshed the next morning and took her place ahead of the grumpy and tired MPs who had been there all night but they decided not to have a row with her.
Changes such as pre-legislative scrutiny and Select Committee discussion of Government Appointments have developed and made an important difference in strengthening Parliament but the main impact was caused by the expenses scandal which gave a new impetus to change.
It led to the election of a reforming Speaker, John Bercow, who has made changes such as the increased use of emergency questions by MPs to Ministers and the appointment of the Wright Committee to look at further reform. It reported in 2009 and its three main recommendations were implemented after the general election:-