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Prime minister summary

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summary notes on the role of the prime minister that I used to revise for my politics a level

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  • August 6, 2024
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The Prime Minister & The Executive: Summary
Executive: PM, cabinet ministers, junior ministers (most sit in the commons, but there are
some junior ministers in the commons – David Cameron = foreign minister), departmental
work is supported by civil servants who are not party political.
Roles: policy making, the budget (chancellor of the exchequer), day-to-day governance
Royal prerogative: constitutional monarchy – powers nominally held by the monarch not
parliament – in practise they are held by the PM (declaring war/making appointments e.g.
lords/signing treaties EU). The ability to call a general election was also a prerogative power
but given away by Cameron in the Fixed Term Parliament Act 2011.
Individual Ministerial Responsibility: by constitutional convention cabinet ministers are
expected to take responsibility for what takes place in their department – regardless of
whether they are at personal faut – as well as for their personal behaviour or failings.
 Departmental responsibility: 2018 Amber Rudd resigned as Home secretary over the
Windrush scandal
 Personal responsibility: 2017 Priti Patel resigned over meetings with Israeli officials that
hadn’t been authorised by the foreign office, 2021 Matt Hancock for kissing Gina
Coladangelo and breaking Covid rules – resignation called for by Covid-19 Bereaved
Families for Justice (pressure group)
Collective Ministerial Responsibility: once a decision has been made by the cabinet all
ministers must support it in public. If they don’t, they should resign – unanimity
 After the UK voted to leave the European Union in 2016, Theresa May’s government
struggled to uphold collective responsibility. On a number of occasions, ministers
openly voted against the government without facing any punishment. For example, in
March 2019, eight cabinet ministers voted against a government motion to request an
extension to Article 50. This included the leader of the House, Andrea Leadsom, who
remained in her post until June 2019.
 Robin Cook over the Iraq war
 David Davis over the Chequers agreement
 The convention was suspended in 2016 during the EU referendum – could express
public disagreement
Roles of the PM: head of govt, head of govt policy chairs cabinet, chief appointing officer,
chief spokesperson overseas, chief spokesperson for the government, exercise the royal
prerogative powers
Role of govt ministers: dual role as heads of their department and members of the cabinet,
responsible for policy and strategy in that area, also in cabinet they’re jointly responsible for
day-to-day governance
Selecting ministers: PM promote, demote or sack ministers, ‘big beasts’ or rivals in their
party may be better inside the cabinet rather than outside, some from lords (David Cameron).
Cabinet government: government by committee where decisions are taken on a collegiate
basis with the the PM being primus inter parus (first among equals)
 Callagham – cabinet meetings were long and regular – ministers submitted discussion
papers and the decisions were made in cabinet
 Approach was very different under Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair
 Cameron pledged to bring back cabinet government

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