Zusammenfassung der Ressource
(5) How effective are the functions of
Parliament? Continued
- Scrutiny & oversight
- Strengths
- Parliament does not govern the UK, but it checks
and constrains the government – referred to as
‘calling the government to account’.
- Ultimately this creates a ‘responsible government’ and so
Parliament identifies any mistakes the government may make.
- The oversight is underpinned by conventions of
individual and collective responsibility (e.g. Ministerial
Code, 1999 & Cabinet Manuel, 2011).
- Ministerial Code 1999
- Cabinet Manuel,
2011).
- Weakness
- Majority of MPs in the Commons belong to the
majority party and so their primary role is to support
the government of the day rather than scrutinise it.
- Question time is often weak – oral questions often lead to short responses
which are aimed at embarrassing ministers rather than careful scrutiny of
their policy or actions. Prime Minister’s questions is often a party-political
battle between PM and leader of the opposition.
- Select Committees are seen as more effective than Question time – but, the
government has a majority on each committee. Individual committee appointments
are influenced by the whips who ensure that loyal backbenchers sit on key
committees BUT – committee chairs have been elected by the Commons since
June 2010;
- Select Committees have no executive power – they can criticise
government, but they cannot change government policy
- Recruitment and
training of ministers
- Weakness
- Ministers are recruited from a limited
pool of talent: mainly MPs of the
largest party in the Commons.
- Parliamentarians require speech-making skills and
learn how to deliver sound bites, but the not
necessarily acquire the bureaucratic and
management skills to run a government
- Fewer ministers have experienced
a career outside of politics.
- Strengths
- Parliament acts a major channel of
political recruitment. In the UK, all
ministers MUST be MPs or peers.
- Before becoming frontbenchers, they must be backbenchers
so that they experience debating, asking parliamentary
questions and sitting on committees to learn their political trade.
- This helps ministers to understand how
government works and how policy is developed.
- Legitimacy
- Strengths
- When governments govern through Parliament, their actions
are seen as ‘rightful’ and to be obeyed. This is for two reasons:
- the first, Parliament, in a sense, stands for the
‘public’ as a representative assembly and as such,
when a measure is approved, there is the sense
that this has been approved by the people.
- Secondly, Parliament’s approval leads
one to assume that government’s actions
have been debated and scrutinized and
weaknesses have been exposed.
- Weakness
- House of Lords is not elected
and therefore has no
democratic legitimacy.
- Parliament has been undermined by
scandals ‘cash for honours’ and ‘cash for
questions’